s
The press still has the power to challenge and
prevent U.S. wars. However, this power hangs in
the balance in the form of Julian Assange's
fate.
By Sam Carliner
October 24, 2021 -- "Information
Clearing House -
"Common
Dreams "-
Within just
a few days, the United States will once
again make its case in a UK court that it has a
right to extradite WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
to be tried under the Espionage Act, in what remains
this century's most dangerous attack on global press
freedom.
These hearings, taking place on October 27 and
28, are an attempt to appeal the decision that Judge
Vanessa Baraitser made earlier this year to not
extradite Assange to the United States because it is
likely he will commit suicide if subjected to the
inhumane conditions of the U.S. prison system.
However, while this decision was focused on his
health, these hearings are really about what the
Assange case has always been about: the United
States' determination to silence anyone who exposes
the crimes of the U.S. empire.
Leading press freedom and human rights
organizations have been clear about the implications
of a potential Assange extradition and have called
on President Biden to drop the case. If there were
still any doubts that the Department of Justice's
focus on Assange was corrupt and politically
motivated, those who remain skeptical should
consider two major revelations about the U.S.
campaign against Assange since the last hearing.
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Earlier this year the Icelandic news outlet
Stundin reported that a key witness in the
prosecution against Assange admitted to lying in his
indictment. This witness was Sigurdur Ingi
Thordarson, a convicted pedophile and fraudster. The
FBI promised Thordarson immunity from prosecution
under the condition that he lie about his
relationship with WikiLeaks in an indictment which
would strengthen the DOJ's conspiracy charge against
Assange. Along with the debunked claim that Assange
pressured whistleblower Chelsea Manning into hacking
a U.S. government computer, Thordarson's indictment
was supposed to paint Assange as having a pattern of
pressuring sources to commit cyber crimes. The
Stundin article should put to rest any belief that
the United States is being honest about its stated
reasons for going after Assange.
But the Stundin article is not even the most
concerning glimpse into the prosecution's true
character. Just this month, Yahoo News reported that
Mike Pompeo, the main force behind Trump's decision
to pursue extradition, was obsessed with punishing
Assange for publishing the Vault 7 documents which
revealed the CIA's activities of electronic
surveillance and cyber-warfare. Though The Grayzone
initially broke this news in May 2020, the recent
Yahoo News report includes additional details of
Pompeo's obsession. Most shockingly, Pompeo held
such a vendetta against Assange that he considered
arranging a shootout in the streets of London with
the British government to assassinate Assange.
It is still unclear if either of these facts will
be considered in the UK court's upcoming hearings.
There remains a dangerous lack of solidarity with
Assange from the press, which is exactly why it is
so important that this extradition not happen. As
mainstream news outlets become increasingly
complacent, and even supportive of pro-war policies,
it becomes more essential that anti-war voices, and
anti-war journalists in particular, resist the
attempt by the United States to set the precedent
that the act of publishing war crimes is a
punishable offense.
After 20 years of the United States military
destroying entire countries under the guise of
fighting terrorism, there is finally a partial
reckoning with U.S. warmongering around the world.
It cannot be said that Americans are particularly
anti-war now, but at the very least, Biden's
decision to pull U.S. troops from Afghanistan was
widely popular across the political spectrum. Yet,
many news outlets instead chose to emphasize the
minority position on Afghanistan by prioritizing
commentary from interventionists and weapons
lobbyists over anti-war scholars and activists, and
by falsely representing the U.S. occupation of
Afghanistan as a positive. This sudden emphasis on
the supposedly positive role of U.S. occupation in
Afghanistan is a particularly dangerous line for
journalists to push considering how little effort
the U.S. media placed on covering the conflict prior
to withdrawal. One study found that in 2020, three
major news outlets gave the conflict a combined
coverage of less than five minutes.
In contrast to publications that take such a
careless or outright supportive stance on the
irreparable harm of U.S. foreign policy are
WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange. Following
his view that "if wars can be started with lies,
they can be stopped by truth," Assange has published
some of the most vital information on U.S. foreign
policy of the 21st century with perfect accuracy.
Some of the information provided to the public
(thanks to the anonymous online source submission
system developed by Assange) includes the CIA
rendition program, detainee abuse at Guantanamo Bay,
and U.S. war crimes in Iraq, Afghanistan, Yemen, and
more. It is this view on publishing which
understands war as something to be exposed and
resisted that has made Assange such a hated figure
by warmongers in the United States.
However, as every Assange supporter knows, a
potential extradition of Assange will not just stop
with Assange. The fear is that the torture he has
endured and a possible extradition and even
sentencing under the Espionage Act would enable the
U.S. government to do the same to anyone else who
exposes the crimes of the U.S. military. Even if the
United States cannot successfully imprison every
journalist who exposes its crimes, such a precedent
would likely scare publications into even greater
submission to the state. The desired outcome is the
complete neutering of anti-war journalism.
Despite the many problems with the mainstream
press, journalism as an institution remains one of
the most effective methods of resisting, and at
times, ending wars. Even those distrustful of the
press should be willing to oppose attacks on the
right to a free press when such attacks occur. It is
the guarantee of press freedom that enables anti-war
reporting to make its way into the mainstream at
times, shifting people's understanding of what their
government does.
One recent example of the power of the press is
the reporting that the New York Times and Washington
Post did on the U.S. military's drone strike of an
Afghan aid worker, Zemari Ahmadi, and his family.
Though these two publications are often the
principal cheerleaders of U.S. foreign policy, their
recent independent investigations into Biden's drone
strike brought the U.S. drone program to the
attention of the American public. As a result, the
Pentagon had to admit it not only killed a civilian
and his loved ones, but knowingly lied to the public
by falsely claiming they had proof that this man was
an ISIS-K operative. That admission of guilt and
dishonesty may not have come if not for the power
that the reporters at the Times and the Post chose
to wield over the warmongers in the Pentagon.
One has to wonder: if these publications chose to
routinely use their immense resources and platforms
to scrutinize the military, rather than provide PR
for it, would the drone program even still be
operating? Would the war in Afghanistan have ended
much sooner? Could the invasion have been avoided
entirely?
These are questions that cannot be answered, but
they should be asked of journalists as the U.S.
continues to prioritize military spending and beat
the drum for a new war with China. The press still
has the power to challenge and prevent U.S. wars.
However, this power hangs in the balance in the form
of Julian Assange's fate. Recent coverage of the
Afghanistan withdrawal shows the potential for two
types of press. One which sees its role as the
mouthpiece for the most war-hungry members of a
global empire or one that shows the true nature of
war to the public, enabling them to oppose it and
giving its victims some justice. For anti-war
advocates who would rather see the latter option
covering foreign policy, it is essential to show
strong support for Julian Assange and demand the
charges against him be dropped immediately.
Sam Carliner is a
journalist based in New Jersey. His writing
focuses on US imperialism and the climate
crisis. He is also the Weekend Social Media
Manager at CodePink.
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