Assange Extradition Ruling Is a Relief, But it Isn’t Justice

Caitlin Johnstone says the judge supported virtually every U.S. prosecutorial argument, no matter how absurd and Orwellian.

By Caitlin Johnstone
CaitlinJohnstone.com

British Judge Vanessa Baraitser has ruled against U.S.  extradition for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, but not for the reasons she should have.

Baraitser’s frightening ruling supported virtually every U.S.  prosecutorial argument that was made during the extradition trial, no matter how absurd and Orwellian. This includes quoting from a long-discredited CNN report alleging without evidence that Assange made the embassy a “command post” for election interference, saying the right to free speech does not give anyone “unfettered discretion” to disclose any document they wish, dismissing arguments from the defense that U.K. law prohibits extradition for political offenses, parroting the false claim that Assange’s attempt to help protect his source Chelsea Manning while she was exfiltrating documents she already had access to was not normal journalistic behavior, saying U.S.  intelligence might have had legitimate reasons to spy on Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy, and claiming Assange’s rights would be protected by the U.S.  legal system if he were extradited.

“Judge is just repeating the U.S.  case, including its most dubious claims, in Assange case,” tweeted activist John Rees during the proceedings.

In the end, though, Baraitser ruled against extradition. Not because the U.S.  government has no business extraditing an Australian journalist from the U.K. for exposing its war crimes. Not because allowing the extradition and prosecution of journalists under the Espionage Act poses a direct threat to press freedoms worldwide. Not to prevent a global chilling effect on natsec investigative journalism into the behaviors of the largest power structures on our planet. No, Baraitser ultimately ruled against extradition because Assange would be too high a suicide risk in America’s draconian prison system.

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Assange is still not free, and he is not out of the woods. The U.S.  government has said it will appeal the decision, and Baraitser has the legal authority to keep Assange locked in Belmarsh Prison until that appeals process has been carried through all the way to its end. Discussions on bail and release will resume on Wednesday, and Assange will remain imprisoned in Belmarsh at least until that time. Due to Assange’s bail offense which resulted from taking political asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in 2012, it’s very possible that bail will be denied and he will remain imprisoned throughout the U.S.  government appeal.

The Media, Entertainment and Arts Alliance (MEAA), the Australian trade union to which Assange belongs as a journalist, has released a statement on the ruling which outlines the situation nicely.

“Today’s court ruling is a huge relief for Julian, his partner and family, his legal team and his supporters around the world,” said MEAA Media Federal President Marcus Strom. “Julian has suffered a 10-year ordeal for trying to bring information of public interest to the light of day, and it has had an immense impact on his mental and physical health.”

“But we are dismayed that the judge showed no concern for press freedom in any of her comments today, and effectively accepted the U.S.  arguments that journalists can be prosecuted for exposing war crimes and other government secrets, and for protecting their sources,” Strom added. “The stories for which he was being prosecuted were published by WikiLeaks a decade ago and revealed war crimes and other shameful actions by the United States government. They were clearly in the public interest. The case against Assange has always been politically motivated with the intent of curtailing free speech, criminalising journalism and sending a clear message to future whistleblowers and publishers that they too will be punished if they step out of line.”

Indeed, the ruling today was a huge relief for Assange, his family, and for all his supporters around the world. But it wasn’t justice.

“It’s good to hear that court has ruled against the extradition of Julian Assange but I am wary of the fact it’s on mental health grounds,” AP’s Joana Ramiro commented on the ruling. “It’s a rather feeble precedent against the extradition of whistleblowers and/or in defence of the free press. Democracy needs better than that.”

“This wasn’t a victory for press freedom,” tweeted journalist Glenn Greenwald. “Quite the contrary: the judge made clear she believed there are grounds to prosecute Assange in connection with the 2010 publication. It was, instead, an indictment of the insanely oppressive U.S.  prison system for security ‘threats’.”

It is good that Baraitser ultimately ruled against extradition, but her ruling also supported the entirety of the U.S.  government’s prosecutorial narrative that would allow for extradition of journalists under the Espionage Act in the future. The ruling is a significant step toward freedom for Julian Assange, but it changes nothing as far as global imperialist tyranny is concerned.

So, the appropriate response at this time is a sigh of relief, but not celebration. The Assange case has never been about just one man; the greater part of the battle, the one we are all fighting, continues unabated.

That said, the message of the empire here was essentially “We totally coulda extradited you if we wanted, but you’re too crazy,” which sounds a lot like the international diplomacy equivalent of “I could kick your ass but you’re not worth it.” It’s a way of backing down while still saving face and appearing to be a threat. But everyone looking on can see that backing down is still backing down.

I think it’s a safe bet that if this case hadn’t had such intense scrutiny on it from all over the world, we would have heard a different ruling today. The empire did what it could to try and intimidate journalists with the possibility of prison for exposing its malfeasance, but in the end, it backed down.

I’m not going to take that as a sign that we’ve won the war, or even the battle. But it is a sign that our punches are landing. And that we’ve got a fighting chance here.

Caitlin Johnstone is a rogue journalist, poet, and utopia prepper who publishes regularly at Medium.   Her work is entirely reader-supported, so if you enjoyed this piece please consider sharing it around, liking her on Facebook, following her antics on Twitter, checking out her podcast on either YoutubesoundcloudApple podcasts or Spotify, following her on Steemit, throwing some money into her tip jar on Patreon or Paypal, purchasing some of her sweet merchandise, buying her books Rogue Nation: Psychonautical Adventures With Caitlin Johnstone and Woke: A Field Guide for Utopia Preppers.

This article was re-published with permission.

The views expressed are solely those of the author and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

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7 comments for “Assange Extradition Ruling Is a Relief, But it Isn’t Justice

  1. Mark Clarke
    January 5, 2021 at 15:22

    I don’t see the difference between being tortured in an English prison rather than an American prison.

  2. Anne
    January 5, 2021 at 13:14

    Thank you Caitlin – and yes, this is a very dubious refusal of extradition…and one that might find, as has been suggested, a back door opening into extradition…I would hope that the appeal will be denied, but hold no hope of that.

    Of course Mr Assange is a potential suicide – who the eff wouldn’t be given untrue “sexual assault” charges from Sweden (clearly a cooperative effort with the US to get him over here and dead); the years long hold up in the Ecuadoran embassy and then the imprisonment for about 2 years the UK’s equivalent of Gitmo for skipping bail, for g’s sake….a fine would have sufficed. And then he was maintained in solitary (known psychological torture) and had very little access to his family/lawyers – all deliberate, of course. All intended to drive him to suicide…so the utter pretense that his being on the edge of suicide attempts is at the very least utter speciousness on the part of this Baraitser arsehole…(is she paid by the US?)…

    The intention is that Mr Assange die – by his own hand or that of some other….

  3. January 5, 2021 at 02:20

    Looking at the Guardian news site this morning, it was heartening to see full coverage of this story in prominent position, with an editorial expressing a mea culpa and an apology for the central role the news organisation played in getting Assange locked up.

    Oh, right. That was just a dream.

  4. rosemerry
    January 4, 2021 at 16:47

    If it is true that Julian could be detained in prison while the USA takes its time to appeal against this decision, after nearly two years inside for NO CRIME but seeking asylum for known dangers, then UK justice appears almost as bad as that of the USA.
    Nobody has ever been shown to die or be arrested because of Wikileaks revelations, nor have any been false. This is of course the reason the USA is upset, but surely there should not be complicity with the UK any more.

  5. Southern
    January 4, 2021 at 16:02

    Most of us were under the impression that the extradition ruling would have gone the other way – that it would be Julian Assange’s defense team launching the appeal for any number of valid reasons in particular the non extradition of political prisoners.

    ….The most important case – A publisher and a journalist – is brought to a court – he is convicted of nothing – charged in this country [The UK] with nothing – He is – The charges against him are not only concocted but as his QC pointed out [yesterday] The treaty… The extradition treaty between Britain and the United States has a, specific – section in it – that says -A person cannot be extradited if the offences are said to be political – 16 of 17 of these charges of these charges against Assange in the United States are unlawful they are political, that’s not an opinion, that’s not a piece of agitprop, they are under law.. political – they’re based on a 1917 law called the espionage act which was used to chase down conscientious objectors….[John Pilger]

    Baraitser [or who ever writes her laptop memo’s] cunningly managed to avoid that particular counter argument – Consequently the 1917 espionage act doesn’t need be addressed in the appeal.

    All the prosecution will have to do is argue they’re able to prevent suicides – a completely different argument as opposed to addressing and adhering to the 1917 espionage act.

    Course it’s good thing that the extradition request has been rejected but like Caitlin writes it’s all for the wrong reasons which IMO is playing into the prosecutions hand by manipulating the topic in the appeal.

  6. Nathan Mulcahy
    January 4, 2021 at 14:21

    “I am extremely happy for Julian Assange as a person. But he should not have been brought to a point where he is suicidal. Now the system is spitting him out … In a sense, the system has succeeded in intimidating the world and passing the message.” -UN rapporteur Nils Melzer.

    Shame on the collective west.

    • Lee C Ng
      January 4, 2021 at 18:15

      “Shame on the collective west.”

      And also on the collective east, including a socialist power that takes pride on its “lifting up hundreds of millions of people from poverty.” No country is an island, and ignoring the role of heroic westerners in their fight against imperialism disqualifies it from any sympathy for its own attempts to preserve itself.

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