Must Read By Oscar Grenfell
July I5, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "WSWS"
-- Last week’s ruling by the British High
Court allowing prosecutors to appeal an earlier
judgment blocking Julian Assange’s extradition,
poses the very real danger that the WikiLeaks
publisher will be dispatched to his American
persecutors in the not-too-distant future.
The ruling is a microcosm of the Assange case as
a whole. As they have for the past decade, the
British courts have thrown aside the WikiLeaks
founder’s legal and democratic rights. They have
granted a US appeal that is both duplicitous and
irregular under conditions in which the entire
attempt by the American state to prosecute Assange
has been exposed as an illegal frame-up.
The corporate media remains silent, or presents
the latest travesty against Assange as fair play.
The major political parties in the US, Britain and
Australia, which have orchestrated the campaign
against the WikiLeaks founder, give their tacit
stamp of approval declaring, along with the official
politicians who have occasionally voiced “concern”
over Assange’s persecution, that the British “legal
process” must be “respected.”
The US appeal is a damning refutation of those,
including among Assange’s own supporters, who have
peddled dangerous illusions that the US
administration of President Joe Biden may drop the
prosecution if a sufficient number of moral pleas
are addressed to the new occupant of the White
House.
The appeal was first issued in the dying days of
the Trump administration but it was continued, honed
and argued for by Biden’s Justice Department.
Assange remains in London’s maximum-security
Belmarsh Prison and faces the prospect of lifetime
incarceration in the US because Biden is determined
to press ahead with the prosecution of a journalist
and publisher for exposing American war crimes,
human rights violations and illegal spying
operations.
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That is because the Assange prosecution is viewed
as a crucial precedent by the imperialist powers for
the suppression of dissent and anti-war opposition
amid a ratcheting up of the preparations for
military conflict, including the Biden
administration’s threats and provocations against
China, and the first signs of a resurgence of
working-class struggle.
The appeal also confirms the warnings made by the
World Socialist Web Site about January’s
British District Court decision that barred
extradition.
Judge Vanessa Baraitser accepted all the
substantive arguments of the US prosecutors,
including their right to try a publisher under the
Espionage Act. Her ruling, prohibiting extradition,
was framed in the narrowest terms. Its purpose was
to defuse a groundswell of opposition to the
prospect of Assange’s extradition and to provide the
US with ample scope for appeal.
Baraitser ruled that extradition would be
“oppressive.” Assange’s compromised health and the
conditions of his imprisonment in the US would
likely result in his suicide.
The deliberate consequence of that judgment was
that there was only a legal sliver between Assange
and extradition.
The US has exploited this with its appeal
claiming that the conditions of imprisonment would
not be so oppressive. It has proposed worthless
assurances that Assange would not be held under
Special Administrative Measures (SAM), regulations
that impose almost total isolation on a prisoner,
and that he could serve out his sentence in
Australia.
The extradition hearing had heard harrowing
testimony about the dire psychological consequences
of SAMs and conditions at the supermax ADX Florence
prison where they are frequently imposed.
The US arguments, accepted as a legitimate basis
of appeal by the British court, were demolished by
Stella Moris, Assange’s partner and an international
human rights lawyer.
In a statement issued on Friday, Moris wrote:
“Reports about US undertakings are grossly
misleading. On any given day 80,000 prisoners in US
prisons are held in solitary confinement. Only a
handful are in ADX/under special administrative
measures. ADX is just one of dozens of
self-described supermax prisons in the United
States. The US government also says it may change
its mind if the head of the CIA advises it to do so
once Julian Assange is held in US custody.
“With regard to the supposed concession of
allowing Julian to serve jail time in Australia, it
was always his right to request a prisoner transfer
to Australia to finish serving his sentence because
he is an Australian. It is no concession at all.
There are existing agreements between the US and
Australian authorities. What is crucial to
understand is that prisoner transfers are eligible
only after all appeals have been exhausted. For the
case to reach the US Supreme Court could easily take
a decade, even two.
“What the US is proposing is a formula to keep
Julian in prison effectively for the rest of his
life. The only assurance that would be acceptable
would be for the Biden Administration to drop this
shameful case altogether, once and for all. He
should not be in prison for a single day, not in the
UK, not in the United States, not in
Australia—because journalism is not a crime.”
As Moris noted, the US appeal itself reserved the
“right” to impose SAMs once Assange is on US soil.
Testimony at the extradition hearing, including from
a former US prison warden, established that the
imposition of SAMs is essentially extra-judicial,
often being introduced at the say-so of the
intelligence agencies, and with no genuine means of
appeal.
The hearings, moreover, heard evidence of a case
in which similar assurances were immediately thrown
out the door once extradition was secured. Lawyers
for terrorist leader Abu Hamza had argued that his
extradition would be oppressive because he would
likely be held under SAMs, despite severe health
issues, including that he is missing both hands. US
prosecutors guaranteed that this would not be the
case stating that if he were, it would only be for a
short time. Once they had their hands on Hamza, they
placed him under SAMs in ADX Florence, where he
remains.
Aside from the wilful credulity of the British
court, the US assurances contradict affidavits
presented by Assistant US Attorney Gordon Kromberg
to the extradition hearings which indicated that
SAMs would be considered as an option for Assange’s
imprisonment. Because of this, the High Court would
have been within its rights to deem the assurances
new evidence, not applicable in an appeal hearing
because they were not presented to the lower court
where the matter was first heard.
The decision to hear the appeal creates a highly
dangerous situation for Assange. Nick Vamos, a
partner at the Peters & Peters law firm and a former
head of extradition at the Crown Prosecution
Service, told the Guardian that the appeal
process could proceed “quite quickly.” He added:
“There’s also a longstanding history of our courts
accepting the assurances from requesting states.”
In the immediate future, the decision means that
Assange will remain indefinitely imprisoned in
Belmarsh Prison, where he has been incarcerated for
more than two years. More broadly, the appeal
demonstrates that the US government is planning to
continue its persecution of the WikiLeaks founder
for decades to come.
The suggestion that Assange could serve out a
sentence in Australia recalls a scenario outlined by
Fred Burton, chief security officer of Stratfor,
which is often described as a “shadow CIA.” In a
2010 email to a colleague, subsequently published by
WikiLeaks, Burton said the US strategy against
Assange was: “Pile on. Move him from country to
country to face various charges for the next 25
years. But, seize everything he and his family own,
to include every person linked to Wiki.”
That strategy was initiated by the Obama
administration in which Biden served as
vice-president. Obama empanelled a Grand Jury to try
and concoct charges against Assange. Parallel with
this, his administration was involved in numerous
dirty-tricks operations against Assange including
discredited Swedish allegations of sexual
misconduct.
Only when these extra-judicial operations had
succeeded in depriving Assange of his liberty by
forcing him to seek political asylum in Ecuador’s
London embassy, did the Obama administration
apparently drop its plans for a formal prosecution.
A report in the Stundin newspaper
earlier this month shed further light on the
Obama-Biden campaign, demonstrating the extent to
which the US collaborated with an Icelandic conman
and paedophile Sigurdur Thordarson to violate
Iceland’s sovereignty and frame Assange as a
computer hacker, under Obama’s administration. This
included taking possession of files stolen by
Thordarson from WikiLeaks, lying to Iceland’s
government about why FBI agents were flown to the
country in 2011, and ferrying the Icelandic criminal
around Europe.
Thordarson was later picked up by the Trump
Justice Department as it publicly-unveiled charges
against Assange in 2019. His claims were prominently
featured in a superseding indictment, issued by US
prosecutors in June 2020, which is the basis of the
extradition request.
Thordarson has now admitted, however, that almost
all his testimony consisted of lies proffered in
exchange for immunity from US prosecution. The
American government thus submitted a false
indictment to the British courts.
Baraitser’s January judgment, upholding the
substantive arguments of US prosecutors, cited
Thordarson some 22 times. His claims of hacking,
since withdrawn, were presented as proof that the
prosecution had met the test of dual criminality,
requiring that offences be illegal in both Britain
and the US for extradition to be granted.
The dependence of the prosecution case on
Thordarson’s lies should have meant that it was
summarily dismissed. The same is true of
well-documented allegations that the CIA illegally
spied on Assange, including his privileged
discussions with attorneys, when he was a political
refugee in the Ecuadorian embassy. Despite all of
this, the attempted prosecution continues.
The latest High Court ruling again demonstrates
that the fight for Assange’s freedom cannot be based
upon moral appeals to his persecutors, or any
section of the political establishment, from the
Biden administration, to the British judiciary, the
Australian authorities and the corporate media. All
of them nailed their colours to the mast long ago.
The constituency for the defence of Assange and
the defeat of state frame-ups is the international
working class. It is being propelled into struggle
against the very political forces that have pursued
Assange as they carry out the homicidal policy of
“herd immunity” on the pandemic, preside over
ever-greater social inequality, and escalate their
reckless drive to war. Every effort must be made to
apprise the working class of Assange’s plight and to
mobilise it in his defence.
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