Otago Daily Times

Assange unattracti­ve but world needs more whistleblo­wers

- Gwynne Dyer is an independen­t London journalist.

JULIAN Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, is an unattracti­ve character, and he also has very poor judgement. He should have gone to Sweden seven years ago and faced the rape charges brought against him by two Swedish women. Even if he had been found guilty, he would probably be free by now under Swedish sentencing rules, since no violence was alleged in either case.

His explanatio­n for taking refuge in Ecuador’s London embassy instead was that he feared that once in Sweden, he would be extradited to the United States — and the US government wanted to try him on

charges that could involve a life sentence or even the death penalty.

What had so angered official Washington was WikiLeaks’ spectacula­r 2010 dump of 725,000 classified cables from American embassies around the world. The most damaging revelation was an official video in which the crew of a US Apache helicopter over Baghdad machinegun­ned innocent civilians while making remarks like ‘‘Oh yeah, look at those dead bastards’’ and ‘‘It’s their fault for bringing their kids into battle.’’

(Donald Trump, then completing his transition from Democrat to Republican, condemned Assange, as his new guise required. ‘‘I think it’s disgracefu­l,’’ he said. ‘‘I think it should be like death penalty or something.’’)

In fact, Assange faced no immediate threat of extraditio­n in 2012, because President Obama had not encouraged the relevant American officials to make such a request. Indeed, in 2017, just before leaving office, Obama pardoned Assange’s source for the leaked cables, former US army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning, after she had served only four years of her 35year prison sentence.

Maybe, when Assange sought diplomatic asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in 2012, he feared that there would be a different administra­tion in Washington after the US election that November. He should still have gone to Sweden, because the Swedes would have been less likely to grant an extraditio­n request than the British government under Conservati­ve prime minister David Cameron. Poor judgement.

Fast forward four years, and there is another WikiLeaks dump, this time of Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails that seriously embarrass Hilary Clinton on the eve of the Democratic presidenti­al convention.

‘‘WikiLeaks — I love WikiLeaks,’’ says Donald Trump at a rally in Pennsylvan­ia. ‘‘This WikiLeaks is a treasure trove,’’ he says at another. In fact, he cites WikiLeaks 141 times at 56 different events during the campaign, according to a count by NBC News. This is known in the philosophy trade as ‘‘situationa­l ethics’’.

It isn’t really OK with him at all, because who knows what Assange might reveal if he were brought to trial? But what else could Trump say?

The US intelligen­ce community is known for its vindictive­ness towards those who reveal its secrets, and a sealed request for Assange’s extraditio­n was delivered to the British Government a year ago.

It has now been seven years, and the Ecuadorian government has changed. The new president, Lenin Moreno, wants to mend relations with the United States (and he is quite cross about a picture WikiLeaks released of him eating lobster in bed in a luxury hotel). So he withdraws diplomatic protection from Assange, and invites the British police into the embassy to arrest him.

The sole charge laid against Assange at present is carefully written to avoid a British refusal to extradite him — no death penalty is involved — and to get around the guarantee of freedom of the press in the First Amendment to the US Constituti­on, which says ‘‘Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom . . . of the press’’.

Instead, Assange is charged with conspiracy to commit a computer crime: helping

Chelsea Manning crack a password to gain access to the classified documents she gave to WikiLeaks. The evidence for this is scanty, but Manning has been jailed as a ‘‘recalcitra­nt witness’’ for refusing to answer questions about her conversati­ons with Assange. She can be held for 18 months.

The maximum penalty for the charge Assange now faces is five years’ prison, but of course ‘‘new evidence’’ can be discovered once he is in the United States, and other charges brought that would involve a far longer sentence.

In fact, we can safely predict that it will be discovered. And Donald Trump now says ‘‘I know nothing about WikiLeaks. It’s not my thing’’.

Assange is not an honourable whistleblo­wer like Daniel Ellsberg of ‘‘Pentagon Papers’’ fame, who released hugely embarrassi­ng documents about the US war in Vietnam but stayed in the US and faced his accusers down. Neither is he like Edward Snowden, another honourable man (still in exile in Moscow), who alerted the world to the scale of the US global electronic surveillan­ce operation.

Assange is an unpleasant narcissist, but the world needs more whistleblo­wers, not fewer. He still deserves protection under the US First Amendment, but it’s doubtful that he will get it.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
PHOTO: REUTERS WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
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