Share
Email This Page
add comment
Print

Intro: "Washington's enemy is not 'terrorism' but the principle of free speech and voices of conscience within its militarist state."

First day of hearing into extradition of WikiLeaks founder to Sweden centers on issue of Swedish prosecutor's impartiality. (photo: Guardian UK)
First day of hearing into extradition of WikiLeaks founder to Sweden centers on issue of Swedish prosecutor's impartiality. (photo: Guardian UK)



In the Assange Case We Are All Suspects Now

By John Pilger, The New Statesman

02 February 12

 

his month's Supreme Court hearing in the Julian Assange case has profound meaning for the preservation of basic freedoms in western democracies. This is Assange's final appeal against his extradition to Sweden to face allegations of sexual misconduct that were originally dismissed by the chief prosecutor in Stockholm and constitute no crime in Britain.

The consequences, if he loses, lie not in Sweden but in the shadows cast by America's descent into totalitarianism. In Sweden, he is at risk of being "temporarily surrendered" to the US, where his life has been threatened and he is accused of "aiding the enemy" with Bradley Manning, the young soldier accused of leaking evidence of US war crimes to WikiLeaks.

The connections between Manning and Assange have been concocted by a secret grand jury in Virginia that allowed no defence counsel or witnesses, and by a system of plea-bargaining that ensures a 90 per cent conviction rate. It is reminiscent of a Soviet show trial.

Moral Choice

The Obama administration's determination to crush Assange is revealed in secret Australian government documents, released under Freedom of Information, which describe Washington's pursuit of WikiLeaks as "unprecedented". It is unprecedented because it subverts the First Amendment of the US constitution, which protects truth-tellers such as WikiLeaks. In 2008 Barack Obama said, "Government whistleblowers are part of a healthy democracy and must be protected from reprisal." Obama has since prosecuted twice as many whistleblowers as all previous US presidents.

With US courts demanding to see the worldwide accounts of Twitter, Google and Yahoo, the threat to Assange, an Australian, extends to any internet user anywhere. Washington's enemy is not "terrorism" but the principle of free speech and voices of conscience within its militarist state and those journalists brave enough to tell their stories.

“How do you prosecute Julian Assange and not the New York Times?" a former administration official told Reuters. The threat is well understood by the New York Times, which in 2010 published a selection of the WikiLeaks cables. The editor at the time, Bill Keller, boasted that he had sent the cables to the state department for vetting. His obeisance extended to his denial that WikiLeaks was a "partner" - which it was - and to personal attacks on Assange. The message to all journalists was clear: do your job as it should be done and you are traitors; do your job as we say you should and you are journalists.

Much of the media's depiction of Bradley Manning illuminates this. The world's pre-eminent prisoner of conscience, Manning remained true to the Nuremberg principle that every soldier has the right to a "moral choice". But according to the New York Times, he is weird or mad, a "geek". In an "exclusive investigation", the Guardian reported him as an "unstable" gay man who got "out of control" and who "wet himself" when he was "picked on". Such psycho-hearsay serves to suppress the truth of the outrage Manning felt at the wanton killing in Iraq, his moral heroism and the criminal complicity of his military superiors. "I prefer a painful truth over any blissful fantasy," he reportedly said.

The treatment handed out to Assange is well documented, though not the duplicitous and cowardly behaviour of his own government. Australia remains a colony in all but name. Australian intelligence agencies are branches of the main office in Washington. The Australian military has played a regular role as US mercenary. When Prime Minister Gough Whitlam tried to change this in 1975 and secure Australia's partial independence, he was dismissed by a governor general using archaic "reserve powers" who was revealed to have intelligence connections.

Don't Explain

WikiLeaks has given Australians a rare glimpse of how their country is run. In 2010, leaked US cables disclosed that top government figures in the Labor Party coup that brought Julia Gillard to power were "protected" sources of the US embassy: what the CIA calls "assets". Kevin Rudd, the prime minister Gillard ousted, apparently had displeased Washington by being disobedient, even suggesting that Australian troops withdraw from Afghanistan.

In the wake of her portentous rise to power, Gillard attacked WikiLeaks's actions as "illegal" and her attorney general threatened to withdraw Assange's passport. Yet the Australian Federal Police reported that Assange and Wiki­Leaks had broken no law. Freedom of Information files have since shown that Australian diplomats have colluded with the US in its pursuit of Assange. This is not unusual. The government of John Howard ignored the rule of law and conspired with the US to keep David Hicks, an Australian citizen, in Guantanamo Bay, where he was tortured.

Australia's principal intelligence organisation, Asio, is allowed to imprison refugees indefinitely without explanation, prosecution or appeal.
Every Australian citizen in grave difficulty overseas is said to have the right to diplomatic support. The denial of this to Assange, bar the perfunctory, is an unreported scandal. Last September his London lawyer, Gareth Peirce, wrote to the Australian government warning that Assange's "personal safety and security has become at risk in circumstances that have become highly politically charged". Only when the Melbourne Age reported that she had received no response did a dissembling official letter turn up. In November, Peirce and I briefed the Australian consul general in London, Ken Pascoe. One of Britain's most experienced human rights lawyers, Peirce told him she feared a unique miscarriage of justice if Assange was extradited and his government remained silent. The silence remains.

See Also: Julian Assange Extradition Breaches Legal Principle, Lawyer Claims

 

Comments  

We are concerned about a recent drift towards vitriol in the RSN Reader comments section. There is a fine line between moderation and censorship. No one likes a harsh or confrontational forum atmosphere. At the same time everyone wants to be able to express themselves freely. We'll start by encouraging good judgment. If that doesn't work we'll have to ramp up the moderation.

General guidelines: Avoid personal attacks on other forum members; Avoid remarks that are ethnically derogatory; Do not advocate violence, or any illegal activity.

Remember that making the world better begins with responsible action.

- The RSN Team

 
+52 # Erdajean 2012-02-02 08:37
Is anyone else out there sick to death of being considered a criminal because we care about this country and what it is doing to us, and the world? Because we do not -- CANNOT -- just "go along" and accept whatever atrocity our politicians and bureaucrats are committing in OUR name, with OUR money, at any given minute? We overhear Obama threatening to "crush" Julian Assange because Assange has made it possible for all of us to know the truth. This is the same Obama who has appointed a Monsanto lobbyist to oversee our food "safety" at the FDA, and who is willing to put ANY of us (except bankers and oil barons) under the jail forever, at his whim.
Point is, we have a bully thug in the White House, and a set of conscienceless half-wits running against him. And every day on the Internet shows us a new bag of vile crises, to try to combat -- which of course makes us enemies to be disposed of somehow.
Whatever we are to do, friends, it is TIME.
 
 
+23 # nice2blucky 2012-02-02 09:18
Clearly, besides a class war -- or part of the class war -- is an international political war.

Whether the U.S. is training South American thug-dictators at the College of the Americas or engaged in international diplomatic agreements (conspiratorial negotiations), their agenda is to ensure that the "right" people are at the political forefront or in leadership roles.

And it all eats away at essential liberties and freedoms.

Their justifications are always couched in patriotic or noble terms: as in for peace and prosperity, or for freedom, or for safety, etc. Every concern is rationalized. Bad choices or decisions are either necessary evils or honest mistakes, impossible circumstances, or the best decision given the information at hand. But what is concerning is the consistency, the consistency that seems to always win out, and to the benefit of whom; and what's worse is the disregard for reasoned voices and of consequences.

It's as if "they" are the only ones who maintain both relevant and necessary information and understanding of global dynamics that they must shoulder the burden of consequential political decisions, as well as maintaining social order, "they" commit, facilitate, or stand idly by -- strategically positioning themselves to benefit or reap rewards -- while numerous hideous atrocities are carried out, all rationalized as the greater good and endlessly perpetuated.

Right or wrong, they win (out).
 
 
+24 # dloehr 2012-02-02 09:42
The Bush-Obama aims seem to include building a 1984 style country of True Believers. Our leaders -- who aspire to rule rather than serve us -- are in a house of mirrors like the one described by Albert Speer, the only Nazi to confess:

"In normal circumstances, people who turn their backs on reality are soon set straight by the mockery and criticism of those around them, which makes them aware they have lost credibility. In the Third Reich there were no such correctives, especially for those who belonged to the upper stratum. On the contrary, every self-deception was multiplied as in a hall of distorting mirrors, becoming a repeatedly confirmed picture of a fantastical dream world, which no longer bore any relationship to the grim outside world. In those mirrors I could see nothing but my own face reproduced many times over."
 
 
+20 # CandH 2012-02-02 10:01
Happy to see Pilger's work again. Thought he too was being permanently "censored" after the debacle with his film, "The War You Don't See" released in 2010, but censured across the international "liberal-elite" divide.

"Obama has since prosecuted twice as many whistleblowers as all previous US presidents." Literally, our STFU President.

"The message to all journalists was clear: do your job as it should be done and you are traitors; do your job as we say you should and you are journalists." Or, known in other parts as Intelligence Agents.

"Australia remains a colony in all but name. Australian intelligence agencies are branches of the main office in Washington." Shins, what shins?
 
 
+12 # Torvus 2012-02-02 11:06
It seems to me that our leaders write the rules as they go along, never mind tradition/history/law or even public opinion. If something doesn't suit them, bypass/ignore it. If it does suit them, wring it out to its maximum force. Why should we be bothered keeping to such plasticine laws? Now you see them, now you don't. The Law is obviously an illusion. I for one have been disillusioned.
 
 
+16 # jwb110 2012-02-02 11:48
There is an old adage about attracting more flies with honey than with vinegar, that applies here. Trying to "control" internet information will be the downfall of all who try. SItes like WikiLeaks are to agile and too valuable to make an enemy of and any attack will create backlash and justifiably so.
The Manning information wasn't about putting the US at risk. It was about holding those in the Diplomatic Corp and the Military up to ridicule because they are so unrelentingly stupid and inept.
There is no reason to throw out the First Amendment or go on a witch hunt because you got caught looking like a blithering idiot.
 
 
+14 # ozken 2012-02-02 15:27
Everything this article says about Australia is unfortunately all too true. No Prime Minister since Gough has had the guts to stand up to America. Why? The reasoning goes that we are an isolated outpost of the west surrounded by a sea of Asians and one day we 'might' need America protection.
 
 
+6 # Robyn 2012-02-03 02:20
As an Australian I feel the need to comment. I remember Whitlam's dismissal By Governor General John Kerr. I can even recall the famous Kerr's cur speech. It was a sickening act of betrayal on the Australian public, something that has remained with us ever since.
In nearly all my fifty years on this Earth I have seen nothing but cowardice from Australian governments. Howard, Gillard, they have all in one way or another betrayed this nation; and why, to please the American government. Fromm dragging us into a war that we really don't believe in and denying David Hicks or Mamdouh Habib any kind of assistance to legal council to allowing Julian Assange to be railroaded like this.
I wish this was not true, but sadly it is as Julia Gillard is now proving.
 

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.