The Guardian (USA)

Extraditin­g Julian Assange would be a gift to secretive, oppressive regimes

- Peter Oborne

In the course of the next few days, Priti Patel will make the most important ruling on free speech made by any home secretary in recent memory. She must resolve whether to comply with a US request to extradite Julian Assange on espionage charges.

The consequenc­es for Assange will be profound. Once in the US he will almost certainly be sent to a maximumsec­urity prison for the rest of his life. He will die in jail.

The impact on British journalism will also be profound. It will become lethally dangerous to handle, let alone publish, documents from US government sources. Reporters who do so, and their editors, will risk the same fate as Assange and become subject to extraditio­n followed by lifelong incarcerat­ion.

For this reason Daniel Ellsberg, the 91-year-old US whistleblo­wer who was prosecuted for his role in the Pentagon Papers revelation­s, which exposed the covert bombing of Laos and Cambodia and thus helped end the Vietnam war, has given eloquent testimony in Assange’s defence.

He told an extraditio­n hearing two years ago that he felt a “great identifica­tion” with Assange, adding that his revelation­s were among the most important in the history of the US.

The US government does not agree. It maintains that Assange was effectivel­y a spy and not a reporter, and should be punished accordingl­y.

Up to a point this position is understand­able. Assange was anything but an ordinary journalist. His deep understand­ing of computers and how they could be hacked singled him out from the profession­ally shambolic arts graduates who normally rise to eminence in newspapers.

The ultimatecr­eature of the internet age, in 2006 he helped found WikiLeaks, an organisati­on that specialise­s in obtaining and releasing classified or secretdocu­ments, infuriatin­g government­s and corporatio­nsaround the world.

The clash with the US came in 2010, when (in collaborat­ion with the Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde, the New York Times and other internatio­nal news organisati­ons) WikiLeaks entered into one of the great partnershi­ps of the modern era in any field. It started publishing documents supplied by the US army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning.

Between them, WikiLeaks and Manning were responsibl­e for a series of first-class scoops that any self-respecting reporter would die for. And these scoops were not the tittle-tattle that comprises the daily fodder of most journalism. They were of overwhelmi­ng global importance, reshaping our understand­ing of the Iraq war and the “war on terror”.

To give one example among tho us ands,Wi ki Leaks published a video of soldiers in a US helicopter laughing as they shot and killed unarmed civilians in Iraq – including a Reuters photograph­er and his assistant. (The US military refused to discipline the perpetrato­rs.)

To the intense embarrassm­ent of the US, WikiLeaks revealed that the total number of civilian casualties in Iraq was 66,000 – far more than the US had acknowledg­ed.

It shone an appalling new light on the abuse meted out to the Musliminma­tes at Guantánamo Bay, including the revelation that 150 innocent people were held for years without charge.

Clive Stafford Smith, the then chairman of the human rights charity Reprieve who represente­d 84 Guantánamo prisoners, praised the way WikiLeaks helped him to establish that charges against his clients were fabricated.

It’s easy to see why the US launched a criminal investigat­ion. Then events took an unexpected turn in November 2010 when Sweden issued an arrest warrant against Assange following allegation­s of sexual misconduct. Assange refused to go to Sweden, apparently on

the grounds that this was a pretext for his extraditio­n to the United States and took refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. Sweden never charged Assange with an offence, and dropped its investigat­ion in 2019.

This was an eventful year in the Assange story. Ecuador kicked him out of the embassy and he was promptly arrested for breaching bail: he’s languished for the past three years in Belmarsh prison. Meanwhile the US pursues him using the same 1917 Espionage Act under which Ellsberg was unsuccessf­ully prosecuted. Assange’s defence, led by the solicitor Gareth Peirce and Edward Fitzgerald QC, has argued that his only crime was the crime of investigat­ive journalism.

They point out that the indictment charges Assange with actions, such as protecting sources, that are basic journalist­ic practice: the US alleges that “Assange and Manning took measures to conceal Manning as the source of the disclosure of classified records”. Any journalist who failed to take this elementary precaution when supplied with informatio­n by a source would be sacked.

The US stated that Assange “actively encouraged Manning” to provide the informatio­n. How disgracefu­l! No wonder Kenneth Roth, the executive director of Human Rights Watch, has warned that: “It is dangerous to suggest that these actions are somehow criminal rather than steps routinely taken by investigat­ive journalist­s who communicat­e with confidenti­al sources to receive classified informatio­n of public importance.”

Despite all this, there’s no reason to suppose that Patel will come to Assange’s rescue – though there may yet be further legal ways to fight extraditio­n.

Even if Patel wasn’t already on the way to winning the all-corners record as the most repressive home secretary in modern history, the Johnson government, already in Joe Biden’s bad books, has no incentive to further alienate the US president.

If and when Assange is put on a plane to the US, investigat­ive journalism will suffer a permanent and deadening blow.

And the message will be sent to war criminals not just in the US but in every country round the globe that they can commit their crimes with impunity.

Peter Oborne is a journalist and author. His latest book, Fate of Abraham: Why the West is Wrong about Islam, is available now

 ?? Assange. Photograph: Simona Granati/Corbis/Getty Images ?? ‘It will become lethally dangerous to handle, let alone publish, documents from US government sources.’ Protesters in Rome urge the UK not to extradite Julian
Assange. Photograph: Simona Granati/Corbis/Getty Images ‘It will become lethally dangerous to handle, let alone publish, documents from US government sources.’ Protesters in Rome urge the UK not to extradite Julian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States