By Chris Hedges
February 13, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
David Morales,
the indicted owner of the Spanish private
security firm Undercover Global, is being
investigated by Spain’s high court for allegedly
providing the CIA with audio and video recordings of
the meetings WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange had
with his attorneys and other visitors when the
publisher was in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.
The security firm also reportedly photographed the
passports of all of Assange’s visitors. It is
accused of taking visitors’ phones, which were not
permitted in the embassy, and opening them,
presumably in an effort to intercept calls. It
reportedly stole data from laptops, electronic
tablets and USB sticks, all required to be left at
the embassy reception area. It allegedly compiled
detailed reports on all of Assange’s meetings and
conversations with visitors. The firm even is said
to have planned to steal the diaper of a baby —
brought to visit Assange — to perform a DNA test to
establish whether the infant was a secret son of
Assange. UC Global, apparently at the behest of the
CIA, also allegedly spied on Ecuadorian diplomats
who worked in the London embassy.
The probe by the court, the Audiencia Nacional,
into the activities of UC Global, along with leaked
videos, statements, documents and reports
published by the Spanish newspaper El País as
well as the
Italian newspaper La Repubblica, offers a window
into the new global security state. Here the rule of
law is irrelevant. Here privacy and attorney-client
privilege do not exist. Here people live under
24-hour-a-day surveillance. Here all who attempt to
expose the crimes of tyrannical power will be hunted
down, kidnapped, imprisoned and broken. This global
security state is a terrifying melding of the
corporate and the public. And
what it has done to Assange it will soon do to
the rest of us.
The publication of classified documents is not
yet a crime in the United States. If Assange is
extradited and convicted, it will become one.
Assange is not an American citizen. WikiLeaks, which
he founded, is not a U.S.-based publication. The
extradition of Assange would mean the end of
journalistic investigations into the inner workings
of power. It would cement into place a terrifying
global, corporate tyranny under which borders,
nationality and law mean nothing. Once such a legal
precedent is set, any publication that publishes
classified material, from The New York Times to an
alternative website, will be prosecuted and
silenced.
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The flagrant defiance of law and international
protocols in the
persecution of Assange is legion. In April 2019,
Ecuadorian President Lenín Moreno capriciously
terminated Assange’s right of asylum at the London
embassy, where he spent seven years, despite
Assange’s status as a political refugee. Moreno
authorized British police to enter the embassy —
diplomatically sanctioned sovereign territory — to
arrest a naturalized citizen of Ecuador. (Assange
retains his Australian citizenship.) The British
police seized Assange, who has never committed a
crime, and the British government keeps him
imprisoned, ostensibly for a bail violation.
Assange is being held in the notorious
high-security HM Prison Belmarsh. He has spent much
of his time in isolation, is often heavily sedated
and has been denied medical treatment for a variety
of physical ailments. His lawyers say they are
routinely denied access to their client.
Nils Melzer, the United Nations’ special
rapporteur on torture who examined Assange with two
physicians, said Assange has undergone prolonged
psychological torture. Melzer has criticized what he
calls the “judicial persecution” of Assange by
Britain, the United States, Ecuador and Sweden,
which prolonged an investigation into a sexual
assault case in an effort to extradite Assange to
Sweden. Assange said the case was a pretext to
extradite him to the United States. Once Assange was
arrested by British police the sexual assault case
was dropped.
Melzer says Assange would face a politicized show
trial in the United States if he were extradited to
face
17 charges under the Espionage Act for his role
in publishing classified military and diplomatic
cables, documents and videos that exposed U.S. war
crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan. Each of the counts
carries a potential sentence of 10 years, and an
additional charge that Assange conspired to hack
into a government computer has a maximum sentence of
five years. A hearing to determine whether he will
be extradited to the United States starts Feb. 24 at
London’s Woolwich Crown Court. It is scheduled to
last about a week and then resume May 18, for three
weeks more.
WikiLeaks released
U.S. military war logs from Afghanistan and
Iraq, a cache of 250,000 diplomatic cables and 800
Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs along with
the 2007 “Collateral
Murder” video, in which U.S. helicopter pilots
banter as they gun down civilians, including
children and two Reuters journalists, in a Baghdad
street. The material was given to WikiLeaks in 2010
by Chelsea Manning, then Bradley Manning, a
low-ranking intelligence specialist in the U.S.
Army. Assange has been accused by an enraged U.S.
intelligence community of causing “one
of the largest compromises of classified information
in the history of the United States.” Manning
was convicted of espionage charges in August 2013
and sentenced to 35 years in a military prison. She
was granted clemency in January 2017 by President
Barack Obama. Manning was
ordered back to prison last year after refusing
to testify before a grand jury in the WikiLeaks
case, and she remains behind bars. No one was ever
charged for the war crimes WikiLeaks documented.
Assange earned the enmity of the Democratic Party
establishment by publishing 70,000 hacked emails
belonging to the Democratic National Committee and
senior Democratic officials. The emails were copied
from the accounts of John Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s
campaign chairman. The Podesta emails exposed the
donation of millions of dollars to the Clinton
Foundation by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two of the
major funders of Islamic State. It exposed the
$657,000 that Goldman Sachs paid to Hillary Clinton
to give talks, a sum so large it can only be
considered a bribe. It exposed Clinton’s repeated
mendacity. She was caught in the emails, for
example, telling the financial elites that she
wanted “open trade and open borders” and believed
Wall Street executives were best positioned to
manage the economy, a statement that contradicted
her campaign statements. It exposed the Clinton
campaign’s efforts to influence the Republican
primaries to ensure that Donald Trump was the
Republican nominee. It exposed Clinton’s advance
knowledge of questions in a primary debate. It
exposed Clinton as the principal architect of the
war in Libya, a war she believed would burnish her
credentials as a presidential candidate.
Journalists can argue that this information, like
the war logs, should have remained hidden, but they
can’t then call themselves journalists.
The Democratic and Republican leaders are united
in their crusade to extradite and sentence Assange.
The Democratic Party, which has attempted to blame
Russia for its election loss to Trump, charges that
the Podesta emails were obtained by Russian
government hackers. However, James Comey, the former
FBI director, has conceded that the emails were
probably delivered to WikiLeaks by an intermediary,
and Assange has said the emails were not provided by
“state actors.”
WikiLeaks has done more than any other news
organization to expose the abuses of power and
crimes of the American empire. In addition to the
war logs and the Podesta emails, it made public the
hacking tools used by the CIA and the National
Security Agency and their interference in foreign
elections, including French elections. It disclosed
the
internal conspiracy against British Labour Party
leader Jeremy Corbyn by Labour members of
Parliament. It intervened to save Edward Snowden,
who made public the wholesale surveillance of the
American public by our intelligence agencies, from
extradition to the United States by helping him flee
from Hong Kong to Moscow. (The Snowden leaks also
revealed that Assange was on a U.S. “manhunt target
list.”)
The inquiry by the Spanish court is the result of
a criminal complaint filed by Assange, who accuses
Morales and UC Global of violating his privacy and
client-attorney confidentiality rights. The
WikiLeaks founder also says the firm is guilty of
misappropriation, bribery and money laundering.
Morales, according to El País, “stated both
verbally and in writing to a number of his employees
that, despite having been hired by the government of
then-Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, he also
worked ‘for the Americans,’ to whom he allegedly
sent documents, videos and audios of the meetings
that the Australian activist held in the embassy.”
“Despite the fact that the Spanish firm — which
is headquartered in the southern city of Jerez de la
Frontera — was hired by Senain, the Ecuadorian
intelligence services, Morales called on his
employees several times to keep his relationship
with the US intelligence services a secret,” the
paper reported.
“The owner of UC Global S. L. ordered a meeting
between the head of the Ecuadorian secret service,
Rommy Vallejo, and Assange to be spied on, at a time
when they were planning the exit of Assange from the
Ecuadorian embassy using a diplomatic passport in
order to take him to another country,” according to
El País. “This initiative was eventually rejected by
Assange on the basis that he considered it to be ‘a
defeat,’ that would fuel conspiracy theories,
according to sources close to the company consulted
by this newspaper. Morales called on his employees
to keep his relationship with the US intelligence
services a secret.”
The Vallejo-Assange meeting, which included
Assange’s lawyers, took place Dec. 21, 2017. The
security firm made audio and video recordings
through microphones and cameras installed in the
embassy. The CIA was immediately made aware of the
plan, perhaps through an “external streaming access
point” installed in the embassy, according to El
País. The next day the United States issued an
international arrest warrant for Assange.
Microphones were implanted in fire extinguishers
and a women’s restroom where Assange’s lawyers would
cloister themselves with their client in an effort
to avoid being recorded. The windows in the embassy
were given a treatment that provided better audio
quality for the laser microphones that the CIA was
using from exterior locations, the paper reported.
When Moreno was elected to the presidency in
Ecuador, replacing Rafael Correa, who had granted
Assange asylum in the embassy, an intense campaign
was launched to force the publisher from the
embassy. It included daily harassment, cutoff of
internet access and the termination of nearly all
visits.
UC Global, which provides personal security for
casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and protection for
his company Las Vegas Sands, apparently used Adelson,
a friend of President Trump and one of the largest
donors to the Republican Party, to lobby the Trump
administration and then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo to
make Assange a priority target.
La Repubblica, like El País, obtained important
files, recordings and other information stemming
from the UC Global surveillance at the embassy. They
include photos of Assange in the embassy and
recordings of conversations he had with doctors,
journalists, politicians, celebrities and members of
his legal team.
“The videos and audio recordings accessed by the
Repubblica reveal the extreme violations of privacy
that Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks journalists,
lawyers, doctors and reporters were subjected to
inside the embassy, and represent a shocking case
study of the impossibility of protecting
journalistic sources and materials in such a hostile
environment,” the Italian newspaper wrote. “This
espionage operation is particularly shocking if we
consider that Assange was protected by asylum, and
if we consider that the information gathered will be
used by the United States to support his extradition
and put him in prison for the crimes for which he is
currently charged and for which he risks 175 years
in prison: the publication of secret US government
documents revealing war crimes and torture, from
Afghanistan to Iraq to Guantanamo.”
Chris Hedges, spent
nearly two decades as a foreign
correspondent in Central America, the Middle
East, Africa and the Balkans. He has
reported from more than 50 countries and has
worked for The Christian Science Monitor,
National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning
News and The New York Times, for which he
was a foreign correspondent for 15 years.
https://www.truthdig.com/author/chris_hedges/
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==See Also==
UN Special
Rapporteur on Torture Demolishes The Fake Claims
Targeting Julian Assange
Watch: UK:
Labour MP : Don't Extradite Assange
Assange Trial
in US Would Mean End of 'Investigative Journalism
Anywhere in the World' - Activists
‘Coup of the
century’: Countries bought rigged CIA encryption
device