After 7 Years of Deceptions About Assange, the US Readies for Its First Media Rendition
Jonathan Cook • April 12, 2019 • from the Unz Review
For
seven years, from the moment Julian Assange first sought refuge in the
Ecuadorean embassy in London, they have been telling us we were wrong,
that we were paranoid conspiracy theorists. We were told there was no
real threat of Assange’s extradition to the United States, that it was
all in our fevered imaginations.
For
seven years, we have had to listen to a chorus of journalists,
politicians and “experts” telling us that Assange was nothing more than a
fugitive from justice, and that the British and Swedish legal systems
could be relied on to handle his case in full accordance with the law.
Barely a “mainstream” voice was raised in his defence in all that time.
From
the moment he sought asylum, Assange was cast as an outlaw. His work as
the founder of Wikileaks – a digital platform that for the first time in
history gave ordinary people a glimpse into the darkest recesses of the
most secure vaults in the deepest of Deep States – was erased from the
record.
Assange
was reduced from one of the few towering figures of our time – a man
who will have a central place in history books, if we as a species live
long enough to write those books – to nothing more than a sex pest, and a
scruffy bail-skipper.
The political and media class crafted a narrative of half-truths
about the sex charges Assange was under investigation for in Sweden.
They overlooked the fact that Assange had been allowed to leave Sweden
by the original investigator, who dropped the charges, only for them to
be revived by another investigator with a well-documented political
agenda.
They
failed to mention that Assange was always willing to be questioned by
Swedish prosecutors in London, as had occurred in dozens of other cases
involving extradition proceedings to Sweden. It was almost as if Swedish
officials did not want to test the evidence they claimed to have in
their possession.
The
media and political courtiers endlessly emphasised Assange’s bail
violation in the UK, ignoring the fact that asylum seekers fleeing legal
and political persecution don’t usually honour bail conditions imposed
by the very state authorities from which they are seeking asylum.
The
political and media establishment ignored the mounting evidence of a
secret grand jury in Virginia formulating charges against Assange, and
ridiculed Wikileaks’ concerns that the Swedish case might be cover for a
more sinister attempt by the US to extradite Assange and lock him away
in a high-security prison, as had happened to whistleblower Chelsea
Manning.
They belittled the 2016 verdict of a panel of United Nations legal scholars that the UK was “arbitrarily detaining” Assange. The media were more interested in the welfare of his cat.
They
ignored the fact that after Ecuador changed presidents – with the new
one keen to win favour with Washington – Assange was placed under more
and more severe forms of solitary confinement. He was denied access to
visitors and basic means of communications, violating both his asylum
status and his human rights, and threatening his mental and physical
wellbeing.
Equally,
they ignored the fact that Assange had been given diplomatic status by
Ecuador, as well as Ecuadorean citizenship. Britain was obligated to
allow him to leave the embassy, using his diplomatic immunity, to travel
unhindered to Ecuador. No “mainstream” journalist or politician thought
this significant either.
They
turned a blind eye to the news that, after refusing to question Assange
in the UK, Swedish prosecutors had decided to quietly drop the case
against him in 2015. Sweden had kept the decision under wraps for more
than two years.
It was a freedom of information request
by an ally of Assange, not a media outlet, that unearthed documents
showing that Swedish investigators had, in fact, wanted to drop the case
against Assange back in 2013. The UK, however, insisted that they carry
on with the charade so that Assange could remain locked up. A British
official emailed the Swedes: “Don’t you dare get cold feet!!!”
Most
of the other documents relating to these conversations were
unavailable. They had been destroyed by the UK’s Crown Prosecution
Service in violation of protocol. But no one in the political and media
establishment cared, of course.
Similarly,
they ignored the fact that Assange was forced to hole up for years in
the embassy, under the most intense form of house arrest, even though he
no longer had a case to answer in Sweden. They told us – apparently in
all seriousness – that he had to be arrested for his bail infraction,
something that would normally be dealt with by a fine.
And
possibly most egregiously of all, most of the media refused to
acknowledge that Assange was a journalist and publisher, even though by
failing to do so they exposed themselves to the future use of the same
draconian sanctions should they or their publications ever need to be
silenced. They signed off on the right of the US authorities to seize
any foreign journalist, anywhere in the world, and lock him or her out
of sight. They opened the door to a new, special form of rendition for
journalists.
This
was never about Sweden or bail violations, or even about the
discredited Russiagate narrative, as anyone who was paying the vaguest
attention should have been able to work out. It was about the US Deep
State doing everything in its power to crush Wikileaks and make an
example of its founder.
It
was about making sure there would never again be a leak like that of
Collateral Murder, the military video released by Wikileaks in 2007 that
showed US soldiers celebrating as they murdered Iraqi civilians. It was
about making sure there would never again be a dump of US diplomatic
cables, like those released in 2010 that revealed the secret
machinations of the US empire to dominate the planet whatever the cost
in human rights violations.
Now
the pretence is over. The British police invaded the diplomatic
territory of Ecuador – invited in by Ecuador after it tore up Assange’s
asylum status – to smuggle him off to jail. Two vassal states
cooperating to do the bidding of the US empire. The arrest was not to
help two women in Sweden or to enforce a minor bail infraction.
No,
the British authorities were acting on an extradition warrant from the
US. And the charges the US authorities have concocted relate to
Wikileaks’ earliest work exposing the US military’s war crimes in Iraq –
the stuff that we all once agreed was in the public interest, that
British and US media clamoured to publish themselves.
Still
the media and political class is turning a blind eye. Where is the
outrage at the lies we have been served up for these past seven years?
Where is the contrition at having been gulled for so long? Where is the
fury at the most basic press freedom – the right to publish – being
trashed to silence Assange? Where is the willingness finally to speak up
in Assange’s defence?
It’s
not there. There will be no indignation at the BBC, or the Guardian, or
CNN. Just curious, impassive – even gently mocking – reporting of
Assange’s fate.
And
that is because these journalists, politicians and experts never really
believed anything they said. They knew all along that the US wanted to
silence Assange and to crush Wikileaks. They knew that all along and
they didn’t care. In fact, they happily conspired in paving the way for
today’s kidnapping of Assange.
They
did so because they are not there to represent the truth, or to stand
up for ordinary people, or to protect a free press, or even to enforce
the rule of law. They don’t care about any of that. They are there to
protect their careers, and the system that rewards them with money and
influence. They don’t want an upstart like Assange kicking over their
applecart.
Now
they will spin us a whole new set of deceptions and distractions about
Assange to keep us anaesthetised, to keep us from being incensed as our
rights are whittled away, and to prevent us from realising that
Assange’s rights and our own are indivisible. We stand or fall together.
Jonathan
Cook won the Martha Gellhorn Special Prize for Journalism. His books
include “Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan
to Remake the Middle East” (Pluto Press) and “Disappearing Palestine:
Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair” (Zed Books). His website is www.jonathan-cook.net.

• Category: Foreign Policy • Tags: American Media, American Military, Censorship, Julian Assange, Wikileaks

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