Why
Assange’s plea deal is bad news for investigative journalism
The
WikiLeaks co-founder didn’t just have his case dropped – it does not bode well
for the future of truth-telling
WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange. © Daniel LEAL/AFP
Julian
Assange, the co-founder of WikiLeaks, has agreed to plead guilty to one count
of violating the Espionage Act for his role in collecting and publishing
top-secret military and diplomatic documents from 2009 to 2011. What does this
verdict mean for media freedom around the world?
While it’s
certainly positive news that the US Department of Justice is apparently closing
the book on the tragic Assange saga, it’s shocking that the administration of
President Joe Biden demanded a guilty plea for the alleged crime of obtaining
and publishing government secrets. After all, this is the crucial task that
investigative journalists perform on a regular basis.
“The
plea deal won’t have the precedential effect of a court ruling, but it will
still hang over the heads of national security reporters for years to come…
It’s purely symbolic,” Seth Stern, the director of advocacy for Freedom of the Press
Foundation (FPF), said in a statement. “The administration could’ve
easily just dropped the case but chose to instead legitimize the
criminalization of routine journalistic conduct and encourage future
administrations to follow suit.”
Assange
rose to international fame in 2010 after WikiLeaks published a series of leaks
from US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. He was granted asylum by
Ecuador in August 2012 on the grounds of political persecution and fears he
might be extradited by the UK to the US. He remained in the Ecuadorian Embassy
in London until April 2019, and then was imprisoned in Belmarsh Prison until
June 2024, as the US government’s extradition effort was contested in the
British courts.
While a
plea deal would avoid the worst-case scenario for media liberties, it cannot be
ignored that Assange was incarcerated for five years for activities that
journalists engage in every day. There is good reason why the US waged a
massive smear campaign against Assange, who was blessed with courage rarely
seen in journalism.
As the late
journalist John Pilger wrote of his beleaguered colleague,
who viewed his work as a moral duty: “Assange shamed his persecutors.
He produced scoop after scoop. He exposed the fraudulence of wars promoted by
the media and the homicidal nature of America’s wars, the corruption of
dictators, the evils of Guantanamo.”
The
question that must be asked now is: How long can Julian Assange continue with
his crusade on behalf of truth? The sole purpose for WikiLeaks is the pursuit
of justice. It is about achieving justice by letting the public know what is
going on, letting the average person on the street know what those who have
power over their lives are conspiring to do. To say this seldom-seen method of
journalism is a courageous act is the greatest understatement.
Case in
point was the murder of 27-year-old Seth Rich, a former member of the
Democratic National Committee who was shot and killed on the street in
Washington, DC on July 10, 2016, just weeks before the presidential election
between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. In an interview with the Dutch news
program Nieuwsuur, Assange insinuates that Rich was responsible for the leak of
DNC emails to WikiLeaks, not the Russians, as the entire US media complex had
been reporting.
“There’s
a 27-year-old, he works for the DNC, who was shot in the back, murdered, just a
few weeks ago for unknown reasons as he was walking down the street in
Washington,” Assange
said. “I am suggesting that our sources take risks and they become
concerned to see things occurring like that… We have to understand how high the
stakes are in the United States and our sources take serious risks and that’s
why they come to us so we can protect their anonymity.”
In an
interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, he was asked: “So in other
words, let me be clear... Russia did not give you the Podesta documents or
anything from the DNC?”
“That’s
correct,” Assange
responded.
To better
appreciate the severity of the leak, the information found in the emails caused
major harm to the Clinton campaign, and has been cited as a potential
contributing factor to her loss in the general election against Trump.
It’s worth
pondering at this point in Assange’s life whether he will continue fighting the
powers that be, or take a long and much-needed vacation from the dangerous
world of truth-telling.
Time will
tell, but I’ve got a hunch that Julian Assange has only just begun to fight.
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