Times-Call (Longmont)

End the persecutio­n of Julian Assange

- Paul Dougan is a writer and humanitari­an activist. He resides in Longmont.

As Americans, we should be angry and disgusted that our government, and now the Biden administra­tion, has been engaged in the persecutio­n of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. Assange is a political prisoner. He has never endangered the lives of Americans, and there is no evidence otherwise. “He went to extraordin­ary lengths to anonymize the sources and protect the sources at the same time. He was extremely responsibl­e in his journalist­ic approach to this,” says Jeremy Corbyn, former leader of UK’S Labor Party. When Wikileaks source Chelsey Manning was tried, she was acquitted of “Aiding the enemy.” If she’s not guilty of it, how can Assange be?

Yet, the U.S. security-state crowd vengefully want him punished — silenced. His “crime” has been to embarrass the powers that be by publishing accounts — confession­s, really — voluntaril­y given him by former U.S. military personnel (whistleblo­wers), who have committed war crimes in Iraq, Afghanista­n and elsewhere. By the way, you can’t rape someone in self-defense, and you can’t rationaliz­e it as “collateral damage.” You don’t promote democracy, human rights and U.S. national security by using Black Ops death squads against innocent civilians. You don’t protect America by recklessly killing dozens of civilians in mistargete­d and then covered-up drone strikes that make the locals hate us.

We the people, in whose name and with whose tax dollars these wars are waged, have the right to know, the need to know. Through Wikileaks, Assange has helped the public learn about the dirty secrets, the crimes, of the powerful. His work has been heroic as is the work of all responsibl­e journalist­s who do the same things when they are truly doing their difficult job. That is why major newspapers around the world — the New York Times (USA), El País (Spain), The Guardian (UK), Le Monde (France) and Der Spiegel (Germany) — along with Internatio­nal PEN and the presidents of several nations, have asked that these spurious charges against Assange be dropped.

A free and independen­t press is supposed to act as a Fourth Estate in a democracy, a watchdog of the other branches of government. For there to be real democracy, with real freedom of speech as guaranteed by the First Amendment, the press must be allowed to do its job. If that means embarrassi­ng the powerful by exposing the truth about them and their policies, so be it. Democracy requires that. This agenda of suppressin­g free speech, of harassing and persecutin­g journalist­s, is a shameless catering to those whose real agenda is a national-security state, a place where democracy, dissent and a free press have been replaced by Orwellian repression, where people like Assange can be convicted in secret National Security courts. Yet, American presidents, including Obama, seem to feel the need to let the dictatoria­l dictate their policies — afraid that if they don’t, they’ll be called weaklings and traitors, that perhaps, like JFK, they’ll end up dead. But the national-security-state mentality that’s behind the Assange prosecutio­n isn’t about protecting the nation, it’s about crushing dissent and crippling democracy.

We can’t let ourselves be intimidate­d by bullies. Around the world, the free press is under siege. News reporters are being jailed and murdered. Moving in the opposite direction is the right thing to do, the American thing to do. That means ending the persecutio­n of Julian Assange and the war on journalism in general. Email the White House and your Congress people today.

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