Thursday, April 11, 2019

Initial Thoughts On the Julian Assange Arrest

The right-wing nature of the corporate Democrats was on full display today as many liberals are openly celebrating the brazen arrest in the wee hours, USA time, of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange within his legal sanctuary of the Ecuadorean embassy in London.

Investors in the #Russiagate propaganda franchise may have been embarrassed and their narrative debunked, but the damage it has done survives. Here's the top-rated reader comment from the New York Times article on Assange's arrest, on one charge of criminal conspiracy to hack a computer:

A Russian propaganda tool, that's all he is, and Wikileaks as well. Assange has severely harmed the United States and other western democracies at the bidding of Russia. Read Wikileaks if you don't believe me, try to find anything other than information harmful to the west. Wikileaks may have started as a legitimate sunlight tool, but was early on compromised and subverted to Russian interests.
This person and the nearly 800 liberal readers who approved this comment apparently believe that we should not be aware of the false pretenses under which the US invaded Iraq, and that we should have remained blissfully and serenely unaware of the film footage which showed American helicopter troops shooting journalists and civilians to death, just for the sheer sadistic fun of it.

I don't know what frightens me more: the Trump administration, or the fake #Resistance to it.


Here's my own published Times comment:

The press should not be breathing its sigh of relief that the Assange indictment is limited to an accusation of conspiracy to commit computer hacking, rather than charges of publishing stolen material. It seems that journalists covering this story and printing the leaked or stolen docs were worried that they'd be called as witnesses in this case and might even be deemed culpable themselves by our authoritarian, right-wing federal justice department.
But what is to prevent the lawless Trump administration from prosecuting the New York Times or any other media outlet with a similar "hacking" conspiracy in the future, based on a similarly evidence-free accusation that said outlet was not only the publisher of stolen documents but the actual thief of same? We're in the digital age now.
If you're celebrating Assange's arrest today on the grounds of some kind of vindication of the victimized Clinton campaign, you're siding with the authoritarian Trump regime and tacitly agreeing that the First Amendment isn't worth the parchment it's written on.
This has nothing to do with Julian Assange's personality or his motives. This has to do with the death of what is still left of both domestic and global democracy.
 Be careful what you cheer for. Your reliable sources of information are not as safe from the dangerous Trump regime as you might think they are.
The Times had approvingly noted that Assange was not charged, as many had feared, under the draconian Espionage Act, which could drag everybody who cooperatively published WikiLeaks documents down with Assange, but only with "egging on" Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence private, to download them.  If the media think they;re off the hook, they should have another think coming. 

There are some silver linings to Assange's arrest. First, the US and global corporate media will be forced to admit where their true allegiances lie. Will they start raising a stink about Chelsea Manning's cruel imprisonment for refusing to implicate Assange? Will they cover the story if Assange's rights to habeas corpus and a speedy trial are infringed upon, or worse, if he is "extraordinarily renditioned" to a CIA black site prison? Assange at least has the benefit of being a high profile figure, unlike hundreds or even thousands of previous nameless and faceless "enemy combatants."

 Second, Assange will presumably finally receive the medical and dental care that he needs. His life was definitely being shortened the longer that he stayed holed up in his virtual embassy prison.


 Third, any trial will require evidence. Although the Trump campaign itself has carefully been exempt from the indictment, which stems from alleged 2010 activities during the Obama administration, propagandists might actually have to admit that there is yet to be any concrete evidence that the DNC and Clinton campaign computers were "hacked" - either by Russia or by anybody else. The documents could simply have been downloaded and then leaked. The Clintonites, remember, refused to grant the FBI access to their servers, instead using a private security company to make their claims of Russian culpability.


Fourth, it forces public attention on legalized bribery as practiced by the US government and the International Monetary Fund which it controls to enforce its privatization and austerity regimens on poor countries. The current far-right corrupt government of Ecuador sold out Assange to the United States and the United Kingdom just weeks after receipt of a hefty IMF loan.


Assange could very well end up a free man. Extradition to the United States is not even a done deal, with some British media outlets like The Guardian already editorializing against it. Justice has been known to prevail at times, especially when the whole world is watching, and especially when much of the world is already adamantly opposed to Donald Trump and all he stands for.


This isn't over. 

4 comments:

Will said...

We knew this was coming. Doesn't make it suck any less, though. Great post as usual, Karen. Here's another by Caitlin Johnstone:

https://medium.com/@caityjohnstone/assange-has-been-arrested-for-us-extradition-the-time-to-act-is-now-aad3578ee82d

Jay–Ottawa said...


Throughout the Obama Administration, the whistleblower protection laws, the First Amendment, and judges guided by justice alone seem not to have engaged to save whistleblowers of the State Department, Defense Department or NSA.

Can whistleblowers, real journalists and political prisoners expect better from the Trump Administration? Didn't the Trump Gang recently rejail the once-pardoned Chelsea Manning?

Finally, can we expect anything better on the international front from other members of the Five Eyes club, like the UK? As mentioned early in Karen's report, the crème-de-la-crème of liberals who dominate the NYT comment board are still Russia blaming and otherwise delighted to learn that agent Julian Assange has finally been put on the conveyor belt to a federal prison. The American spirit of "my country right or wrong" never fails.

You know the world is upside down when criminals are elected to office and revel in the power to punish the just to the applause of the many.

voice-in-wilderness said...

At all levels of government -- community, state, and national -- there is secrecy and the right to know and FOIA laws seem ineffectual in providing access. Our local newspaper sometimes tries to get the state to disclose information, but there seem to be no consequences groups do not. And parts of the federal government either just ignore the FOIA requests or fulfill them at slug-like speed.

Jay–Ottawa said...


La Jornada (The Working Day) is a widely-distributed Mexican newspaper published both in print and on line under the wing of UNAM, the National Autonomous University of Mexico. UNAM might be viewed as the Harvard of Mexico (tuition free). According to Noam Chomsky La Jornada is "maybe the only real independent newspaper in the hemisphere." BTW, no paywall, not even to probe the archives.

Don't read Spanish? No problem. Just copy the story you want, paste it into Google Translate and ¡Listo! 92.5% perfect, certainly enough to understand one of those independent views seldom found in the MSM of El Norte.

Here's a story with more detail on how and why the current president of Ecuador, Lenin Moreno, the former V-P under Rafael Correa, undid Correa's shielding of Assange. Moreno is very smart, has done some good things for handicapped people like him, but is otherwise a crook and turncoat. Contrary to his campaign rhetoric, Moreno has dragged Correa's center-left party several notches to the right. Suddenly he's good with Brazil's Bolsonaro, the Trump gang, and the IMF.
https://www.jornada.com.mx/2019/04/14/opinion/010o1pol

The writer of this piece, Alfredo Jalife-Rahme, is an op-ed regular. His column appears weekly on Sunday. Lee bien!