The Guardian (USA)

US government lawyers deny charges against Julian Assange politicall­y motivated

- Haroon Siddique Legal affairs correspond­ent

Criminal charges were brought against Julian Assange because he named sources and encouraged theft and hacking, not because of politics, lawyers for the US government have claimed at a critical extraditio­n hearing.

The WikiLeaks founder could be extradited to the US within days to face prosecutio­n on espionage charges relating to the publicatio­n of thousands of classified military and diplomatic documents concerning the Afghanista­n and Iraq wars if the high court in London refuses him permission to appeal against his removal from the UK.

On Wednesday, lawyers for the US government sought to rebut the arguments made by the WikiLeaks founder’s counsel the day before, when they claimed the US was seeking politicall­y motivated retaliatio­n for his exposure of state criminalit­y, including torture, rendition and extrajudic­ial killings.

Assange is being supported by organisati­ons including Reporters Without Borders and the National Union of Journalist­s, and his lawyers described his prosecutio­n as “unpreceden­ted”. However, Clair Dobbin KC said the charges against him were not political but were brought because he went “far beyond the acts of a journalist who was merely gathering informatio­n”.

She told the court: “His prosecutio­n is based upon the rule of law and evidence. The appellant’s prosecutio­n might be unpreceden­ted but what he did was unpreceden­ted.”

Dobbin said Assange had not merely published material but had conspired with and aided and abetted Chelsea Manning in stealing and disclosing classified informatio­n. He is also alleged to have sought to recruit other hackers and leakers of classified informatio­n.

She said Assange also “knowingly and indiscrimi­nately published to the world the names of individual­s who acted as sources of informatio­n to the

United States”.

The lawyer added: “It is these core facts which distinguis­h the position of the appellant from the New York Times and other media outlets.

“It is this which forms the objective basis for his prosecutio­n. It is these facts which distinguis­h him, not his political opinions.”

On Tuesday, Mark Summers KC argued that the publicatio­n of unredacted cables was inadverten­t but that, even if it were deliberate, the public interest could have outweighed the naming of individual­s. He also said that that no harm to any of the named individual­s had been proven.

But Dobbin told the court there were people “who had to leave their homes, flee their homelands, because they had been identified in the state diplomatic cables”. She said others lost jobs, had assets frozen or “disappeare­d”, although their disappeara­nce could not be proved to be as a result of having been named. Dobbin said those affected included individual­s in Ethiopia, China, Iran and Syria. “The material that [Assange] published unredacted attracts no public interest whatsoever,” she said. “That’s the weakness at the centre of the appellant’s case.”

Responding on Wednesday, Summers said there was overwhelmi­ng public interest in the publicatio­ns that exposed US war crimes and that the sources named were all “agents in the criminalit­y that has been exposed”.

Assange’s lawyers said he faces a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison but a “likely” sentence of 30 to 40 years. Joel Smith, for the US, said that none of the potential sentences would be “grossly disproport­ionate” given Assange’s alleged offending “beyond the scope that any of the criminal courts in this country have had to grapple with”.

Assange is hoping the two judges hearing his case will grant his request for a full appeal hearing. If they do not, he will have exhausted all legal challenges in the UK and his only remaining legal avenue will be to apply to the European court of human rights to order the UK not to extradite him while it considers his case. However, if that applicatio­n is refused he could be removed from the country by US marshals within days.

Assange had been granted permission to attend the two-day hearing but he was said to be too ill to go to the Royal Courts of Justice or to follow the proceeding­s online.

His supporters protested outside the court for a second day.

The judges will give their decision at a later date.

 ?? Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA ?? Julian Assange could be extradited to the US within days to face prosecutio­n on espionage charges.
Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA Julian Assange could be extradited to the US within days to face prosecutio­n on espionage charges.

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