The Assange precedent: Journalists in Britain threatened with Official Secrets Act
By Robert Stevens and Laura Tiernan
WSWS,
16
July 2019
London’s
Metropolitan Police threatened journalists with prosecution under the
Official Secrets Act last Friday in an unprecedented attack on media
freedom.
Assistant
Commissioner Neil Basu announced that Counter Terrorism Command would
investigate alleged breaches of the Official Secrets Act over
publication of leaked diplomatic telegrams written by Sir Kim
Darroch.
Darroch
resigned last week as Britain’s ambassador to the US after his
damning confidential assessments of President Donald Trump were
published by the Mail on Sunday. Trump had publicly reprimanded
Darroch over descriptions of his administration as “uniquely
dysfunctional” and “inept.”
Speaking
outside New Scotland Yard, Basu stated, “Given the widely reported
consequences of that leak, I am satisfied that there has been damage
caused to UK international relations, and there would be clear public
interest in bringing the person or people responsible to justice.”
He
told the leaker, “Turn yourself in at the earliest opportunity,
explain yourself and face the consequences.”
Basu’s
statement also targeted journalists and media organisations: “The
publication of leaked communications, knowing the damage they have
caused or are likely to cause may also be a criminal matter.
“I
would advise all owners, editors and publishers of social and
mainstream media not to publish leaked government documents that may
already be in their possession, or which may be offered to them, and
to turn them over to the police or give them back to their rightful
owner, Her Majesty’s Government.”
A
storm of protest followed Basu’s threats, as newspaper editors
weighed in to oppose what Sunday Times political editor Tim Shipman
described as his “sinister, absurd, anti-democratic statement.”
On
Saturday afternoon, Basu issued a follow-up statement widely
described in the media as a “row-back.” It was not.
He
declared, “The Metropolitan Police respects the rights of the media
and has no intention of seeking to prevent editors from publishing
stories in the public interest in a liberal democracy. The media hold
an important role in scrutinising the actions of the state.”
He
continued, “However, we have also been told the publication of
these specific documents, now knowing they may be a breach of the
Official Secrets Act, could also constitute a criminal offence and
one that carries no public interest defence.”
In
other words, any journalist or media organisation publishing the
leaked material after the Met’s announcement would be committing a
criminal offence. “We know these documents and potentially others
remain in circulation,” he warned.
Facing
opprobrium from major news outlets, Conservative Party leadership
contenders Boris Johnson and Jeremy Hunt both felt it necessary to
condemn the Met’s threats as an “infringement on press freedom.”
But
this was a transparent cover-up. According to a report in the
Guardian, the Met’s investigation was launched under a “Gateway
Process” following discussions between “Senior Cabinet Office
officials” and Met Deputy Assistant Commissioner Dean Haydon, who
is “the senior national coordinator at Scotland yard’s SO15.”
SO15
is the Met’s Counter Terrorism Command (CTC) unit and is the police
body charged with national responsibility for investigating
allegations of criminal breaches of the Official Secrets Act.
What
the Met proposed was the de facto criminalisation of journalism so
that it could be bracketed within terrorist activity.
Statements
such as those made by former Tory Chancellor and current Evening
Standard editor George Osborne, portraying Basu as a bumbling
incompetent, were an attempt at damage control. Osborne described
Basu’s statement as “very stupid and ill-advised,” the work of
“a junior officer who doesn’t appear to understand much about
press freedom.”
But
the sinister import of the Met’s investigation was made clear by
the intervention of former defence secretary, Sir Michael Fallon.
Speaking to BBC Radio Four’s “Today” programme on Saturday,
Fallon insisted journalists should be subject to the Official Secrets
Act. He described Basu’s attack on the media as “quite logical,”
adding, “If they [newspapers] are receiving stolen material then
they should give it back to the rightful owner and should be aware of
the huge damage done and potential greater damage by further breaches
of the Official Secrets Act.”
Asked
whether journalists should comply with the act he replied, “I don’t
think anyone can entirely absolve themselves of the need to avoid
damage to this country. … We have press freedom … but we also
have laws. We have the Official Secrets Act and it is important that
law is upheld.”
Fallon
was backed up by Security Minister Ben Wallace who tweeted that
“members of the general public are also bound by a part of the
Act.”
The
Official Secrets Act has been on the statute books since 1911 and was
adopted in its current form in 1989. Under it, “disclosing
information, documents or other articles relating to” security or
intelligence, defence, and international relations is an offence.
Currently, only serving or former civil servants, government
contractors, or members of the security and intelligence services can
be prosecuted for committing offences under the act. Those found
guilty face fines or a jail sentence of between two and 14 years.
Speaking
on Friday, Executive Director of the Society of Editors Ian Murray
condemned the Met’s invocation of the Act against journalists,
“Frankly it is the kind of approach we would expect from
totalitarian regimes where the media are expected to be little more
than a tame arm of the government.” The Met’s dictatorial edicts
show the Assange precedent in action. The decision of the US
government, with the backing of outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May
and Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt, to prosecute the WikiLeaks founder
under the Espionage Act for publishing leaked government documents
has opened the floodgates.
Passed
in 1917, the Espionage Act was heavily modelled on the original UK
Official Secrets Act of 1889 that was updated just three years prior
to the outbreak of World War I.
Friday’s
threats by the Met follow raids by the Australian Federal Police
(AFP) on the headquarters of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
and the home of Sunday Telegraph political editor Annika Smethurst.
AFP officers seized hundreds of files relating to articles exposing
government spying and war crimes committed by Australian troops in
Afghanistan.
The
growing state suppression of core journalistic activity takes place
amid an escalating drive to war. Britain is working to assist US war
plans against Iran, staging provocations in Gibraltar and the Strait
of Hormuz in the past fortnight that have been used to ratchet up
tensions.
Fallon’s
involvement and his demand that journalists be subject to the
Official Secrets Act is aimed at concealing from the public the
advanced preparations for war. According to last week’s Foreign
Policy magazine, the UK and France have agreed behind closed doors to
bolster their ground forces in Syria by 10-15 percent, with the UK
sending more Special Forces troops.
If
the provisions threatened by the British state are enacted,
journalists will face years in prison for bringing to light the
intrigues of those preparing new wars and other anti-democratic
measures.
The
call by the World Socialist Web Site and the International Committee
of the Fourth International for a global campaign to stop Assange’s
extradition to the US warned that his persecution “is the spearhead
of a massive assault on democratic rights, aimed at destroying
freedom of speech, illegalizing investigative journalism,
intimidating and terrorizing critics, preventing the exposure of
government crimes and suppressing mass popular opposition to social
inequality and war.” Heeding this warning means joining the global
campaign today.
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