Albuquerque Journal

Tribunals demand justice for Wikileaks’ Julian Assange

- AMY GOODMAN & DENIS MOYNIHAN Columnists

“The first casualty when war comes is truth,” U.S. Sen. Hiram W. Johnson of California said in 1929, debating ratificati­on of the Kellogg-Briand Pact, a noble but ultimately failed attempt to ban war. …

Time and again, Johnson has been proven right. Our government’s impulse to control informatio­n and manipulate public opinion to support war is deeply ingrained. The past 20 years, dominated by the so-called “War on Terror,” are no exception. Sophistica­ted PR campaigns, a compliant mass media and the Pentagon’s pervasive propaganda machine all work together. …

One publisher consistent­ly challengin­g the pro-war narrative pushed by the U.S. government, under both Republican and Democratic presidents, has been the whistleblo­wer website Wikileaks. Wikileaks gained internatio­nal attention in 2010 after publishing a trove of classified documents leaked from the U.S. military. Included were numerous accounts of war crimes in Iraq and Afghanista­n, the killing of civilians, and shocking footage of a helicopter gunship in Baghdad slaughteri­ng a dozen civilians, including a Reuters journalist and his driver, on the ground below. …

The New York Times and other newspapers partnered with Wikileaks to publish stories based on the leaks. This brought increased attention to the founder and editor-in-chief of Wikileaks, Julian Assange. In December 2010, … then-Vice President Joe Biden, appearing on NBC, said Assange was “closer to being a hi-tech terrorist than the Pentagon papers.” Biden was referring to the 1971 classified document release by Daniel Ellsberg, which revealed years of Pentagon lies about U.S. involvemen­t in the war in Vietnam.

With a secret grand jury empaneled in Virginia, Assange, then in London, feared being arrested and extradited to the United States. Ecuador granted Assange political asylum. Unable to make it to Latin America, he sought refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London. He lived inside the small, apartment-sized embassy for almost seven years. In April 2019, after a new Ecuadorian president revoked Assange’s asylum, British authoritie­s arrested him and locked him up in London’s notorious Belmarsh Prison, often called “Britain’s Guantanamo.” He has been held there, in harsh conditions and in failing health, for almost four years, as the U.S. government seeks his extraditio­n to face espionage and other charges. If extradited and convicted in the U.S., Assange faces 175 years in a maximum-security prison.

While the Conservati­veled UK government seems poised to extradite Assange, a global movement has grown demanding his release. The Progressiv­e Internatio­nal, a global pro-democracy umbrella group, has convened four assemblies since 2020 called The Belmarsh Tribunals. Named after the 1966 Russell-Sartre Tribunal on the Vietnam War, convened by philosophe­rs Bertrand Russell and Jean-Paul Sarte, The Belmarsh Tribunal has assembled some of the world’s most prominent, progressiv­e activists, artists, politician­s, dissidents, human rights attorneys and whistleblo­wers, all speaking in defense of Julian Assange and Wikileaks.

“We are bearing witness to a travesty of justice,” Jeremy Corbyn, a British member of Parliament and a former leader of the Labour Party, said at the tribunal. “To an abuse of human rights, to a denial of freedom of somebody who bravely put himself on the line that we all might know that the innocent died in Abu Ghraib, the innocent died in Afghanista­n, the innocent are dying in the Mediterran­ean, and innocents die all over the world, where unwatched, unaccounta­ble powers decide it’s expedient and convenient to kill people who get in the way of whatever grand scheme they’ve got. We say no. That’s why we are demanding justice for Julian Assange.”

Corbyn is joined in his call by The New York Times, the Guardian, Le Monde, El País and Der Spiegel — major newspapers that published articles based on the leaked documents. “Publishing is not a crime,” the newspapers declared.

Never before has a publisher been charged under the U.S. Espionage Act. The Assange prosecutio­n poses a fundamenta­l threat to the freedom of speech and a free press. President Biden, currently embroiled in his own classified document scandal, knows this and should immediatel­y drop the charges against Julian Assange.

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