Nailing the Assange Story Since 2010

The essential issues at the core of the Julian Assange case were laid out in exact detail by CN‘s late founder Robert Parry as early as December 2010.

Julian Assange in his years of freedom.

As a premier investigative reporter of his generation (having uncovered major stories on the Iran-Contra scandal for the Associated Press), Bob Parry wrote a CN article on Dec. 16, 2010 entitled, “All Journalists Are Julian Assange,” that the WikiLeaks publisher was doing the exact work he did.

Bob said Assange employed the same methods: encouraging his sources to give him more information; protecting their identities; and even encouraging them to commit a small crime by leaking classified information to prevent a larger crime from being committed by the state.  

While the Obama DOJ eventually decided against indictment because it would cross the red line of criminalizing journalism, the Trump administration crossed that very line on the very same evidence the Obama administration rejected. This is an especially prescient and relevant article from the late founder of Consortium News, written just eight months after the release of the Collateral Murder video.

The article was the start of Consortium News‘ coverage of the Assange case, which has grown to be the most comprehensive and insightful to be found anywhere in the media. We are republishing Bob’s piece here. Help us to continue our Assange coverage with a generous donation today on the last day of our Spring Fund Drive.

By Robert Parry
Special to Consortium News
First published Dec. 16, 2010.

Whatever the unusual aspects of the case, the Obama administration’s reported plan to indict WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for conspiring with Army Pvt. Bradley [now Chelsea] Manning to obtain U.S. secrets strikes at the heart of investigative journalism on national security scandals.

That’s because the process for reporters obtaining classified information about crimes of state most often involves a journalist persuading some government official to break the law either by turning over classified documents or at least by talking about the secret information. There is almost always some level of “conspiracy” between reporter and source.

Contrary to what some outsiders might believe, it’s actually quite uncommon for sensitive material to simply arrive “over the transom” unsolicited. Indeed, during three decades of reporting on these kinds of stories, I can only recall a few secret documents arriving that way to me.

In most cases, I played some role – either large or small – in locating the classified information or convincing some government official to divulge some secrets. More often than not, I was the instigator of these “conspiracies.”

My “co-conspirators” typically were well-meaning government officials who were aware of some wrongdoing committed under the cloak of national security, but they were never eager to put their careers at risk by talking about these offenses. I usually had to persuade them, whether by appealing to their consciences or by constructing some reasonable justification for them to help.

Assange: Did what journalists do.

Other times, I was sneaky in liberating some newsworthy classified information from government control. Indeed, in 1995, Consortiumnews.com was started as a way to publish secret and top-secret information that I had discovered in the files of a closed congressional inquiry during the chaotic period between the Republicans winning the 1994 elections and their actual takeover of Congress in early 1995.

In December 1994, I asked for and was granted access to supposedly unclassified records left behind by a task force that had looked into allegations that Ronald Reagan’s campaign had sabotaged President Jimmy Carter’s hostage negotiations with Iran in 1980.

To my surprise, I discovered that the investigators, apparently in their haste to wrap up their work, had failed to purge the files of all classified material. So, while my “minder” wasn’t paying attention to me, I ran some of the classified material through a copier and left with it in a folder. I later wrote articles about these documents and posted some on the Internet.

Such behavior – whether cajoling a nervous government official to expose a secret or exploiting some unauthorized access to classified material – is part of what an investigative journalist does in covering national security abuses. The traditional rule of thumb has been that it’s the government’s job to hide the secrets and a reporter’s job to uncover them. 

“The process for reporters obtaining classified information about crimes of state most often involves a journalist persuading some government official to break the law either by turning over classified documents or at least by talking about the secret information. There is almost always some level of ‘conspiracy’ between reporter and source.”

In the aftermath of significant leaks, the government often tries to convince news executives to spike or water down the stories “for the good of the country.” But it is the news organization’s ultimate decision whether to comply or to publish.

Historically, most of these leaks have caused the government some short-term embarrassment (although usually accompanied by exaggerated howls of protests). In the long run, however, the public has been served by knowing about some government abuse. Reforms often follow as they did during the Iran-Contra scandal that I was involved in exposing in the 1980s.

A Nixon Precedent

Yet, in the WikiLeaks case – instead of simply complaining and moving on – the Obama administration appears to be heading in a direction not seen since the Nixon administration sought to block the publication of the Pentagon Papers secret history of the Vietnam War in 1971.

In doing so, the Obama administration, which came to power vowing a new era of openness, is contemplating a novel strategy for criminalizing traditional journalistic practices, while trying to assure major U.S. news outlets that they won’t be swept up in the Assange-Manning dragnet.

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The New York Times reported on Thursday that federal prosecutors were reviewing the possibility of indicting Assange on conspiracy charges for allegedly encouraging or assisting Manning in extracting “classified military and State Department files from a government computer system.”

The Times article by Charlie Savage notes that if prosecutors determine that Assange provided some help in the process, “they believe they could charge him as a conspirator in the leak, not just as a passive recipient of the documents who then published them.

“Among materials prosecutors are studying is an online chat log in which Private Manning is said to claim that he had been directly communicating with Mr. Assange using an encrypted Internet conferencing service as the soldier was downloading government files. Private Manning is also said to have claimed that Mr. Assange gave him access to a dedicated server for uploading some of them to WikiLeaks. 

“Adrian Lamo, an ex-hacker in whom Private Manning confided and who eventually turned him in, said Private Manning detailed those interactions in instant-message conversations with him. He said the special server’s purpose was to allow Private Manning’s submissions to ‘be bumped to the top of the queue for review.’ By Mr. Lamo’s account, Private Manning bragged about this ‘as evidence of his status as the high-profile source for WikiLeaks.’” 

Though some elements of this suspected Assange-Manning collaboration may be technically unique because of the Internet’s role – and that may be a relief to more traditional news organizations like the Times, which has published some of the WikiLeaks documents – the underlying reality is that what WikiLeaks has done is essentially “the same wine” of investigative journalism in “a new bottle” of the Internet.

“In most cases, I played some role – either large or small – in locating the classified information or convincing some government official to divulge some secrets. More often than not, I was the instigator of these ‘conspiracies.’”

By shunning WikiLeaks as some deviant journalistic hybrid, mainstream U.S. news outlets may breathe easier now but may find themselves caught up in a new legal precedent that could be applied to them later.

As for the Obama administration, its sudden aggressiveness in divining new “crimes” in the publication of truthful information is especially stunning when contrasted with its “see no evil” approach toward openly acknowledged crimes committed by President George W. Bush and his subordinates, including major offenses such as torture, kidnapping and aggressive war.

Holder’s Move

Holder: Prepared Assange indictment. (Edward Kimmel/Wikimedia Commons)

The possibility of an indictment of Assange no longer seems to me like rampant paranoia. Initially, I didn’t believe that the Obama administration was serious in stretching the law to find ways to prosecute Assange and to shut down WikiLeaks

But then there was the pressure on WikiLeaks’ vendors such as Amazon.com and PayPal along with threats from prominent U.S. political figures, spouting rhetoric about Assange as a “terrorist” comparable to Osama bin Laden and a worthy target of assassination.

Normally, when people engage in such talk of violence, they are the ones who attract the attention of police and prosecutors. In this case, however, the Obama administration appears to be bowing to those who talk loosely about murdering a truth-teller.

Attorney General Eric Holder announced last week that he has taken “significant” steps in the investigation, a possible reference to what an Assange lawyer said he had learned from Swedish authorities about a secret grand jury meeting in Northern Virginia.

The Times reported, “Justice Department officials have declined to discuss any grand jury activity. But in interviews, people familiar with the case said the department appeared to be attracted to the possibility of prosecuting Mr. Assange as a co-conspirator to the leaking because it is under intense pressure to make an example of him as a deterrent to further mass leaking of electronic documents over the Internet. 

“By shunning WikiLeaks as some deviant journalistic hybrid, mainstream U.S. news outlets may breathe easier now but may find themselves caught up in a new legal precedent that could be applied to them later.”

“By bringing a case against Mr. Assange as a conspirator to Private Manning’s leak, the government would not have to confront awkward questions about why it is not also prosecuting traditional news organizations or investigative journalists who also disclose information the government says should be kept secret — including The New York Times, which also published some documents originally obtained by WikiLeaks.”

In other words, the Obama administration appears to be singling out Assange as an outlier in the journalistic community who is already regarded as something of a pariah. In that way, mainstream media personalities can be invited to join in his persecution without thinking that they might be next.

Though American journalists may understandably want to find some protective cover by pretending that Julian Assange is not like us, the reality is – whether we like it or not – we are all Julian Assange.

The late Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. He founded Consortium News in 1995. 

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3 comments for “Nailing the Assange Story Since 2010

  1. Valerie
    July 1, 2023 at 04:30

    There’s a lovely photo of Stella Assange at this meeting:

    “Pope Francis holds meeting with Julian Assange’s wife”

    ‘He understands Julian is suffering and is concerned,’ says Stella Assange after audience with pontiff

    Associated Press in Vatican City

    Fri 30 Jun 2023 17.01 BST (Guardian)

    It’s hard to believe 13 years have passed since the beginning of this persecution.
    Thankyou CN for your continuous support and updates.

  2. CaseyG
    June 30, 2023 at 17:33

    Joe Biden—-I truly cherish that Preamble where it states , “We the people of the United states , in order to form a more perfect union…” you have read that—I hope.
    But then— I don’t trust you for anything anymore. Sadly you are as much a loon as is Trump. I’m sorry that you and your icky, lying son are so much alike. in fact, there does not to seem to be many who could be a credible President for this nation.

    Maybe you should read some actual American history—it might give you some ideas of what a true patriot actually does. I don’ t think you even care. Sadly, you are just another old man who seeks power and not what is best for the People. And those sad actions of yours also fit you, our current American Congress.

    And by the way, if you keep sending millions to Israel, even though they kill American citizens , and if you keep shoveling so much money to that icky little man in Ukraine who pretends to play the piano with his penis—And in spite of the heat inflicting the planet , and the smoke from so many fires— and Americans being laid off and so many not getting livable wages—–YOU—-decide to start a war in another nation. What is wrong with you?

    Americans are starving, and homeless , and jobless —unable to afford rent anywhere —and you are a crazy loon who wants to have a war over in Europe—–YOU are starting a war at home when the icky Zylensky keeps demanding more and more money. A BIG FU to you, Joe Biden as your own citizens need help, but YOU seem to want a war.PLEASE do not run for president again—you are killing your own nation and your own citizens!I would like you to reread the Preamble and think about the aim of that—-because you, like the republicans do not seem to give a rat’s ass about the citizens of your own nation. The lack of DOMESTIC TRANQUILITY is proving to so many that America is gone—but you are sadly forgetting that the PEOPLE are still here. : (

    • Valerie
      July 1, 2023 at 04:23

      Well i can’t find anything to disagree with there CaseyG. You hit the nails right on their heads.
      And a report on the dismal Afghan affair is to be found here:

      “Scathing report on US withdrawal from Afghanistan blames Trump and Biden”

      “State department’s findings also reflect poorly on Antony Blinken as it outlines the agency’s failure to expand crisis taskforce”

      Reuters

      Sat 1 Jul 2023 06.00 BST

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