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The Assange Saga: Practicing Real Journalism Is Criminally Insane

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Synchronicity is definitely fond of mirror wonderwalls. The Julian Assange saga seemed to have entered a new chapter as he was, in thesis, on his way to – conditional – freedom this past Monday, only one day after the first anniversary of the start of the Raging Twenties: the assassination of Maj Gen Qassem Soleimani.

The fate of the journalist the Empire seeks to terminate was just juxtaposed to the fate of the warrior/diplomat the empire already terminated.

Two days later, Julian Assange was de facto re-incarcerated exactly as the Empire was hit by an “insurrection” which, whenever instigated in that distant “Third World”, is celebrated in Exceptionalistan as “people power”.

The invaluable Craig Murray, from inside Westminster Magistrates Court No. 1 in London, meticulously presented the full contours of the insanity this Wednesday.

Read it in conjunction with the positively terrifying judgment delivered on Monday in the United States government case against Julian Assange.

The defining issue, for all those who practice real journalism all across the world, is that the judgment affirms, conclusively, that any journalist can be prosecuted under the US Espionage Act. Since a 1961 amendment, the Espionage Act carries universal jurisdiction.

The great John Pilger memorably describes “judge” Vanessa Baraitser as “that Gothic woman”. She is in fact an obscure public servant, not a jurist. Her judgment walks and talks like it was written by a mediocre rookie hack. Or, better yet, entirely lifted from the US Department of Justice indictment.

Julian Assange was – at the last minute – discharged on theoretically humanitarian grounds. So the case had, in effect, ended. Not really. Two days later, he was sent back to Belmarsh, a squalid maximum security prison rife with Covid-19. So the case is ongoing.

WikiLeaks editor Kristinn Hrafnnson correctly noted, “It is unjust and unfair and illogical when you consider her ruling of two days ago about Julian’s health in large part because he is in Belmarsh prison (…) To send him back there doesn’t make any sense.”

It does when one considers the real role of Baraitser – at a loss to juggle between the imperatives of the imperial agenda and the necessity of saving the face of British justice.

Baraitser is a mere, lowly foot soldier punching way above her weight. The real power in the Assange case is Lady Emma Arbuthnot, forced out of a visible role because of very compromising, direct ties she and her husband Lord Arbuthnot maintain with British intelligence and military, first revealed by – who else – WikiLeaks.

It was Arbuthnot who picked up obscure Baraitser – who dutifully follows her road map. In court, as Murray has detailed in a series of searing reports, Baraitser essentially covers her incompetence with glaring vindictiveness.

Baraitser discharged Julian Assange, according to her own reasoning, because she was not convinced the appalling American gulag would prevent him from committing suicide.

But the key issue is that before reaching this conclusion, she agreed and reinforced virtually every point of the US indictment.

So at this point, on Monday, the “Gothic woman” was performing a contortion to save the US from the profound global embarrassment of prosecuting a de facto journalist and publisher for revealing imperial war crimes, not United States government secrets.

Two days later, the full picture became crystal clear. There was nothing “humanitarian” about that judgment. Political dissent was equaled with mental illness. Julian Assange was branded as criminally insane. Once again, practicing journalism was criminalized.

ORDER IT NOW

There are reasons to believe though, that a United States government appeal may fail. A British High Court would be reluctant to overturn a judgment where Baraitser actually established findings of fact: a direct correlation between the state of the American gulag, and the extreme danger to Assange’s health if he’s thrown inside this system.

As it stands, it didn’t even matter that Assange’s defense offered a full package to obtain bail, from home arrest to the use of an ankle bracelet. Baraitser’s notion that the British security state would not be able to prevent his “escape” wearing an ankle bracelet in the middle of a total, police state-style lockdown does not even qualify as a joke.

So Julian Assange is back to suffering a perverse, interminable rewrite of Poe’s The Pit and the Pendulum.

The US government’s legal strategy before the High Court convenes in April is basically to try to prove its American gulag is competent enough to prevent a suicide – even though the ultimate aim of this post-truth Inquisition seems to be the termination of Julian Assange inside the penal system. That goal doesn’t even require a supermax prison in Colorado. Belmarsh will do.

(Republished from Asia Times by permission of author or representative)
•�Category: Foreign Policy •�Tags: American Media, Britain, Julian Assange, Wikileaks
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  1. Notsofast says:

    perfect example of catch-22.

  2. Bite Moi says:

    President Trump should issue Assange a pardon just to piss the Deep State off.

  3. Avianthro says:

    The great anti-deep-state hero of the “wonderful people” doesn’t pardon Assange??

    Anyone still supporting Trump because they believe his con doesn’t deserve the right to vote anymore than those who think they are not being played by the elites and Zionists who control the media and info flows in order to maintain their power positions.

  4. What would have happened to Assange if he were a Russian or Chinese citizen and had revealed Russian or Chinese government secrets?

  5. Sean says:

    I would be interested to know when ‘Assange’ first referred to himself as a “journalist”. Also, when did others began calling him that?

  6. @Brás Cubas:

    The empire would have celebrated him as the world hero he is, and after helping him escape, would have given him permanent residency in whichever imperial province he might desire.

    Mr Trump – free Assange!

    •�Agree: showmethereal
  7. British justits hangs in the ballance whilst on its way to sillyCoNN valley

    Assange has made complete boobs out of the hanging offence

  8. The alternative media and Assange’s kawyers have probably done more harm to him than the main stream media and U.S. government. A protest staged outside the embassy resulted in Ray McGovern, Susie Dawson, Caitlin Johnstone and others hacking into Assange’s twitter account and tweeting their own article’s with links to their websites that also had contribution solicitations.

    Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison on May 1, 2019, so his release date was in April of 2020, which was delayed over U.S. extradition hearing requests.

    Extradition has been denied. Assange should be 100% free without an ankle bracelet, without house arrest, and without bail.

    The alternative media is silent!

    You are the worst friends, advocates, humanitarians, and first amendment advocates that anyone could ever ask for!

    Andrea Iravani

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