Assange Celebrations Mixed With Rebukes of White House

Press-freedom advocates this week flagged the damage done by the U.S. government’s pursuit of a journalist who helped expose state secrets and evidence of war crimes.

President Joe Biden giving an address in July 2021 at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia. (White House /Adam Schultz)

By Jessica Corbett
Common Dreams

Amid celebrations that a plea deal with the United States resulted in the release of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange from a British prison, press freedom advocates this week continued to raise serious concerns about the damage done by the U.S. government’s pursuit of a journalist who helped expose state secrets and evidence of war crimes.

“Julian Assange faced a prosecution that had grave implications for journalists and press freedom worldwide,” said Jodie Ginsberg, CEO of the Committee to Protect Journalists, following news of the deal.

After spending seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy in the United Kingdom and five more in the London’s Belmarsh Prison, Assange agreed to plead guilty to one felony to avoid more time behind bars. 

The 52-year-old Australian was fighting against his extradition to the United States, where he faced 18 charges under the Espionage Act and a federal computer fraud law for publishing classified material and could have been locked up for the rest of his life.

“We are hugely relieved that Julian Assange is finally free — a long overdue victory for journalism and press freedom. He never should have spent a single day deprived of his liberty for publishing information in the public interest,” said Rebecca Vincent, Reporters Without Borders’ director of campaigns, in a statement.

“Nothing can undo the past 13 years, but it is never too late to do the right thing, and we welcome this move by the U.S. government,” she added. “We will continue to campaign in support of journalists around the world who find themselves targeted for national security reporting, and for reform of the U.S. Espionage Act, so that it can never again be used to target journalistic activity.” 

[See: How America’s Official Secrets Act Ensnared Julian Assange]

Vincent’s group is among several press freedom and human rights organizations that had long called for the U.S. Department of Justice to drop the charges against Assange — and after news of the plea deal broke, several others warned of what is to come. 

Assange supporters in October 2022 carry ribbon around the Justice Department Building (Joe Lauria)

Amnesty International secretary general Agnès Callamard celebrated what the deal will mean for the WikiLeaks founder and his family — including his wife Stella Assange, who plans to seek a pardon for her husband, and their young children — but said Tuesday that “the yearslong global spectacle of the U.S. authorities hell-bent on violating press freedom and freedom of expression by making an example of Assange for exposing alleged war crimes committed by the USA has undoubtedly done historic damage.”

“Amnesty International salutes the work of Julian Assange’s family, campaigners, lawyers, press freedom organizations, and many within the media community and beyond who have stood by him and the fundamental principles that should govern society’s right and access to information and justice,” she added. “We will keep fighting for their full recognition and respect by all.”

“…the global spectacle of the U.S. authorities hell-bent on violating press freedom and freedom of expression by making an example of Assange for exposing alleged war crimes committed by the USA has undoubtedly done historic damage.”
Agnès Callamard, Amnesty International

Not all journalists and media outlets defended Assange, despite the precedent that his conviction could have set, and multiple headlines — including at The Associated Press, The New York Times, and The Washington Post — highlighted his guilty plea. 

“A plea deal would avert the worst-case scenario for press freedom, but this deal contemplates that Assange will have served five years in prison for activities that journalists engage in every day,” said Jameel Jaffer, executive director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University. “It will cast a long shadow over the most important kinds of journalism, not just in this country but around the world.”

Ben Wizner, director of the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, emphasized that “with today’s guilty plea, Julian Assange stands convicted of practicing journalism, and all investigative journalists now face greater legal peril.”

“Exposing government secrets and revealing them in the public interest is the core function of national security journalism,” Wizner continued.

“Today, for the first time, that activity was described in a guilty plea as a criminal conspiracy. And even if the current Department of Justice stays true to its assurances that the Assange case is unique and will not provide a precedent to be wielded against other publishers, we can’t be confident that future administrations will honor that commitment.”

“The precedent set by this guilty plea would have been far more dangerous had it been ratified by federal courts,” he added. “But make no mistake, the vital work of national security journalists will be more difficult today than it was yesterday.”

The precedent set by this guilty plea would have been far more dangerous had it been ratified by federal courts…. But make no mistake, the vital work of national security journalists will be more difficult today than it was yesterday.” Ben Wizner, ACLU

Seth Stern, director of advocacy for Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF), also looked to the future, tying Assange’s deal to the November U.S. election in which Democratic President Joe Biden is set to face former Republican President Donald Trump.

The current administration “could have distinguished itself from Donald Trump, Biden’s openly anti-press electoral opponent, whose administration first indicted Assange,” Stern noted in a piece for the Daily Beast. “It could have dropped the case.”

Instead, the Biden administration opted for a plea deal that “does not add any more prison time or punishment for Assange,” Stern stressed, echoing his initial statement on the news. “Its only impact will be to legitimize the criminalization of routine journalistic conduct and encourage future administrations to follow suit—including a potential second Trump administration.”

In a Tuesday opinion piece for The Guardian, FPF executive director Trevor Timm wrote

“Just imagine what an attorney general in a second Trump administration will think, knowing they’ve already got one guilty plea from a publisher under the Espionage Act. Trump, after all, has been out on the campaign trail repeatedly opining about how he would like to see journalists — who he sees as ‘enemies of the people‘ — in jail. Why the Biden administration would hand him any ammo is beyond belief.”

“So if the Biden administration is looking for plaudits for ending this case, they should get exactly none,” Timm asserted. “Now we can only hope this case is an aberration and not a harbinger of things to come.”

Jessica Corbett is a staff writer for Common Dreams

This article is from  Common Dreams.

Views expressed in this article and may or may not reflect those of Consortium News.

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8 comments for “Assange Celebrations Mixed With Rebukes of White House

  1. C. Parker
    June 29, 2024 at 17:06

    There is only a whisper of the crimes committed by U.S. Intelligence, Sheldon Adelson, UC Global (a Spanish surveillance business hired to spy on Assange, paid by Sheldon Adelson as a cover of the CIA’s deal with UC Global; and Mike Pompeo at that time he was head of the CIA.

    As Assange sought safety during his stay inside the Ecuador’s Embassy in London, plans to permanently silence Julian Assange were being discussed.

    There were plans to kidnap Julian Assange. There were plans to poison Julian Assange. There were plans to lure Assange into escaping from the embassy. Thus, giving the appearance Assange was running away, hence, shooting him would silence him.

    So, the Wikileaks publisher of US war crimes, Julian Assange, bravely shared a vital newsworthy expose of sickening US military war crimes, he was not only to be imprisoned under a phony charge of the espionage act, he, too, was to be another victim killed by the CIA while the media portrays him as a dangerous. False stories of putting American lives in danger. Let us applaud the good men of both UK and US surveillance in stopping him as he attempted an escape to, hmm, Russia!

    Personally, I want to know why these men, Mike Pompeo, particularly, remained free all while Julian Assange was locked-up and tortured. It is never too late to expose the truth to the people. Satisfied and justified, how sweet it is.

  2. torture this
    June 28, 2024 at 10:05

    precedents? we don’t need no stinking precedents!

  3. Mary Myers
    June 27, 2024 at 20:51

    Assange got rotten treatment from both Trump and Biden. In America truth is treason.

  4. Alan Ross
    June 27, 2024 at 15:50

    I am very happy that Julian Assange is free and that the videos of him show that it seems like he will mostly recover from the years of the brutal, illegal mockery of the U.S. go’vt and its servants. I think it is no exaggeration to say that what Assange has achieved through Wikileaks is a great permanent victory for mankind, and I think Assange really did win this battle too, albeit while paying a very high price. The idea of another Trump presidency is nauseating. In the meantime, Biden is reponsible for Julian Assange spending another 3-1/2 years in prison and then being forced to take a plea to save his life, that can have very bad ramifications for press freedom. Many people will likely vote Democratic in November, but it doesn’t mean they have to give up their hatred for most Democrats. One can only admire (even love) the independent journalists who have championed Assange’s cause and, more than ever, despise the petty creeps and cowards of the mainstream media who participated in the smear campaign.

  5. Steve Hill
    June 27, 2024 at 15:49

    The fact that many, if not most people cannot see that Biden is as great a threat, or even MORESO of a threat to democracy than Trump is just boggles my mind.

    • Gary L McMillan
      June 27, 2024 at 17:42

      Biden never tried to over through an election.

    • Alan Ross
      June 27, 2024 at 17:44

      Biden as bad as he is, and that is very bad, has misused the federal gov’t but has not tried to dismember it, nor has he devoted a lot of time to dividing Americans. The US govt domestically has done a lot of good and bad things, and dismembering it is not the answer. Biden has lied a great deal to Americans but he has no where as much encoiuraged Americans, as Trump has, to have so much contempt for each other weakening the nation as a whole.

      Many people are boggled by the fact that anyone could ever vote for Trump who is your typical big-business favoring Republican who pretends to be a populist. I believe so many Americans will vote for Trump because they are so furious with Biden for not really giving a damn about their lives while he spends over a hundred billion$ on Ukraine. Who wouldn’t be infuriated with Biden and his servants like Krugman for telling us we are doing well economically when so many of us are suffering from and are more worried about our finances than ever? When you look at what Trump has domne to working people he is worse! e.g Compare the actions of the US Labor Dept under each of them. And then again you have that ego-maniac encouragung Americans to even hate each other.

  6. bardamu
    June 27, 2024 at 12:23

    Assange was and is innocent. The US president, the state, the courts, and much of the MSM is guilty, variously. The plea deal amounts to confession at gunpoint, as they tend to.

    We won’t all forget.

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