Cook on the Assange decision

4 Jan

Jonathan Cook, today in CounterPunch:

Assange Wins. The Cost: The Crushing of Press Freedom

The unexpected1 decision by Judge Vanessa Baraitser to deny a US demand to extradite Julian Assange, foiling efforts to send him to a US super-max jail for the rest of his life, is a welcome victory, but one swamped by larger lessons that should disturb us deeply.

Those who campaigned so vigorously to keep Assange’s case in the spotlight, even as the US and UK corporate media worked so strenuously to keep it in darkness, are the heroes of the day. They made the price too steep for Baraitser or the British establishment to agree to lock Assange away indefinitely in the US for exposing its war crimes and its crimes against humanity in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Perverse as Vanessa Baraitser’s procedural rulings have been, she’s a minnow. Meet Emma Arbuthnot, her boss in a chain that runs far higher. What’s that? Ruling class? Nonsense! Ours is a democracy, informed by independent media and with clear separation of judiciary from executive. All voices – yours and mine, Arbuthnots’ and have-nots’ – carry equal weight!

But we must not downplay the price being demanded of us for this victory.

We have contributed collectively in our various small ways to win back for Assange some degree of freedom, and hopefully a reprieve from what could be a death sentence as his health continues to deteriorate in an overcrowded Belmarsh high-security prison in London that has become a breeding ground for Covid-19.

For this we should allow ourselves a moment of celebration. But Assange is not out of the woods yet. The US has said it will appeal the decision. And it is not yet clear whether Assange will remain jailed in the UK – possibly in Belmarsh – while many months of further legal argument about his future take place.

The US and British establishments do not care where Assange is imprisoned – be it Sweden, the UK or the US. What has been most important to them is that he continues to be locked out of sight in a cell somewhere, where his physical and mental fortitude can be destroyed and where he is effectively silenced, encouraging others to draw the lesson that there is too high a price to pay for dissent.

The personal battle for Assange won’t be over till he is properly free. And even then he will be lucky if the last decade of various forms of incarceration and torture he has been subjected to do not leave him permanently traumatised, emotionally and mentally damaged, a pale shadow of the unapologetic, vigorous transparency champion he was before his ordeal began.

That alone will be a victory for the British and US establishments who were so embarrassed by, and fearful of, Wikileaks’ revelations of their crimes.

Rejected on a technicality

But aside from what is a potential personal victory for Assange, assuming he doesn’t lose on appeal, we should be deeply worried by the legal arguments Baraitser advanced in denying extradition.

The US demand for extradition was rejected on what was effectively a technicality. The US mass incarceration system is so obviously barbaric and depraved that, it was shown conclusively by experts at the hearings back in September, Assange would be at grave risk of committing suicide should he become another victim of its super-max jails.

One should not also discard another of the British establishment’s likely considerations: that in a few days Donald Trump will be gone from the White House and a new US administration will take his place.

There is no reason to be sentimental about president-elect Joe Biden. He is a big fan of mass incarceration too, and he will be no more of a friend to dissident media, whistleblowers and journalism that challenges the national security state than was his Democratic predecessor, Barack Obama. Which is no friend at all.

But Biden probably doesn’t need the Assange case hanging over his head, becoming a rallying cry against him, an uncomfortable residue of the Trump administration’s authoritarian instincts that his own officials would be forced to defend.

It would be nice to imagine that the British legal, judicial and political establishments grew a backbone in ruling against extradition. The far more likely truth is that they sounded out the incoming Biden team and received permission to forgo an immediate ruling in favour of extradition – on a technicality.

Keep an eye on whether the new Biden administration decides to drop the appeal case. More likely his officials will let it rumble on, largely below the media’s radar, for many months more.

Journalism as espionage

Significantly, Judge Baraitser backed all the Trump administration’s main legal arguments for extradition, even though they were comprehensively demolished by Assange’s lawyers.

Baraitser accepted the US government’s dangerous new definition of investigative journalism as “espionage”, and implied that Assange had also broken Britain’s draconian Official Secrets Act in exposing government war crimes.

She agreed that the 2007 Extradition Treaty applies in Assange’s case, ignoring the treaty’s actual words that exempt political cases like his. She thereby opened the door for other journalists to be seized in their home countries and renditioned to the US.

Baraitser accepted that protecting sources in the digital age – as Assange did for whistleblower Chelsea Manning, an essential obligation on journalists in a free society – now amounts to criminal “hacking”. She trashed free speech and press freedom rights, saying they did not provide “unfettered discretion by Mr Assange to decide what he’s going to publish”.

She appeared to approve of the ample evidence showing that the US spied on Assange inside the Ecuadorian embassy, both in violation of international law and his client-lawyer privilege – a breach of his most fundamental legal rights that alone should have halted proceedings.

Baraitser argued that Assange would receive a fair trial in the US, even though it was almost certain to take place in the eastern district of Virginia, where the major US security and intelligence services are headquartered. Any jury there would be dominated by US security personnel and their families, who would have no sympathy for Assange.

So as we celebrate this ruling for Assange, we must also loudly denounce it as an attack on press freedom, as an attack on our hard-won collective freedoms, and as an attack on our efforts to hold the US and UK establishments accountable for riding roughshod over the values, principles and laws they themselves profess to uphold.

Even as we are offered with one hand a small prize in Assange’s current legal victory, the establishment’s other hand seizes much more from us.

Vilification continues

There is a final lesson from the Assange ruling. The last decade has been about discrediting, disgracing and demonising Assange. This ruling should very much be seen as a continuation of that process.

Baraitser has denied extradition only on the grounds of Assange’s mental health and his autism, and the fact that he is a suicide risk. In other words, the principled arguments for freeing Assange have been decisively rejected.

If he regains his freedom, it will be solely because he has been characterised as mentally unsound. That will be used to discredit not just Assange, but the cause for which he fought, the Wikileaks organisation he helped to found, and all wider dissidence from establishment narratives. This idea will settle into popular public discourse unless we challenge such a presentation at every turn.

Assange’s battle to defend our freedoms, to defend those in far-off lands whom we bomb at will in the promotion of the selfish interests of a western elite, was not autistic or evidence of mental illness. His struggle to make our societies fairer, to hold the powerful to account for their actions, was not evidence of dysfunction. It is a duty we all share to make our politics less corrupt, our legal systems more transparent, our media less dishonest.

Unless far more of us fight for these values – for real sanity, not the perverse, unsustainable, suicidal interests of our leaders – we are doomed. Assange showed us how we can free ourselves and our societies. It is incumbent on the rest of us to continue his fight.

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  1. Actually Baraitser’s ruling, or rather that negotiated by her superiors on both sides of the Atlantic, wasn’t entirely unexpected. (Win or lose, the US appeal against it has to be seen in the context of maintaining a semblance of ‘due process’.) In August, as a footnote to Our Beautifully Democratic Wars, I wrote: It’s mooted by some that all charges against Assange may be dropped. It’s too early to call but I see the logic. Mission accomplished: a chilling message sent to the world. Fuck with the US Empire at your peril.”

6 Replies to “Cook on the Assange decision

  1. The door has been opened and the worst may now follow and my thinking is that this charade by the pandering British establishment cronies set has achieved what it intended. Not only have we been reduced to a Third World standing with regards are judiciary, but the precedent that has been set lowers the bar to the point that it would be sheer hypocrisy to offer criticism of any other country the elites so despise, like China and Russia, Iran, Libya, Iraq, Venezuela etc. for their court dealings. To the extent that I would ask the question “how far removed are we really, from what should be despised, Sharia Law Courts? These Courts are referred to as being unrepresentative, dishonest, and disgracefully unfair. In what way has the British Washington pandering judiciary distanced itself from those same criticisms, no matter the cultural differences?
    Just saying/asking.

    • Agreed Susan. And as you say:

      it would be sheer hypocrisy to offer criticism of any other country the elites so despise, like China and Russia, Iran, Libya, Iraq, Venezuela etc. for their court dealings

      Though I’m afraid that won’t stop them!

    • Nice of you to say so Susan. Yes, I’m well and hope that goes for you too. I’d say “let’s hope for 2021 being better than 2020” but I fear that’s highly unlikely.

  2. While this is a welcome turn of events for Assange, the US have expressed their satisfaction with the verdict’s criminalisation of investigative journalism. Little enough space for this remains.

    It is instructive to contrast the media’s hyena like hounding of the mildly reformist Corbyn, with the tolerance exhibited towards Johnson’s murderous mishandling of the Covid pandemic. As Pilger states, his consignment of 18.5 thousand elderly hospital patients to die in care homes was a criminal act.

    However there is room for optimism. The staff in the military and intelligence agencies are drawn from the general population, people like Manning, Snowden, Clive Ponting, who leaked the truth about the sinking of the Belgrano, and Katharine Gun, who revealed that the US and UK were blackmailing UN representatives to support aggression against Iraq. No wonder the ruling class are vicious towards such people; they feel nervous with good cause.

    • Well said – though you have to be an old timer to remember Clive Ponting. I relished the jury’s verdict in that case. From a narrowly technical standpoint, Ponting’s ‘guilt’ was a slam dunk – but for an Official Secrets Act loophole, removed later as a direct result of the case, allowing the release of secrets if it was “in the interests of the state” – but the jury gave a heroic ‘fuck you’ to the incensed trial judge.

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