The Media Kept Assange Behind Bars

The establishment press acted in concert to assassinate the character of the WikiLeaks founder, making it respectable to hate him, writes Jonatahn Cook. 

The Guardian building in London, 2012. (Bryantbob, CC BY-SA 3.0, Wikimedia Commons)

By Jonathan Cook
Declassified UK

It is only right that we all take a moment to celebrate the victory of Julian Assange’s release from 14 years of detention, in varying forms, to be united, finally, with his wife and children — two boys who have been denied the chance to ever properly know their father. 

His last five years were spent in Belmarsh high-security prison as the United States sought to extradite him to face a 175-year jail sentence for publishing details of its state crimes in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

For seven years before that he was confined to a small room in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, after Quito awarded him political asylum to evade the clutches of a law-breaking U.S. empire determined to make an example of him.

His seizure by U.K. police from the embassy on Washington’s behalf in 2019, after a more U.S.-aligned government came to power in Ecuador, proved how clearly misguided, or malicious, had been those who accused him of “evading justice.”

Everything Assange had warned the U.S. wanted to do to him was proved correct over the next five years, as he languished in Belmarsh entirely cut off from the outside world. 

No one in our political or media class appeared to notice, or could afford to admit, that events were playing out exactly as the founder of WikiLeaks had for so many years predicted they would — and for which he was, at the time, so roundly ridiculed.

Nor was that same political-media class prepared to factor in other vital context showing that the U.S. was not trying to enforce some kind of legal process, but that the extradition case against Assange was entirely about wreaking vengeance — and making an example of the WikiLeaks founder to deter others from following him in shedding light on U.S. state crimes.

That included revelations that, true to form, the C.I.A., which was exposed as a rogue foreign intelligence agency in 250,000 embassy cables published by WikiLeaks in 2010, had variously plotted to assassinate him or kidnap him from the embassy in London. 

Other evidence came to light that the C.I.A. had been carrying out extensive spying operations on the embassy, recording Assange’s every move, including his meetings with his doctors and lawyers. 

That fact alone should have seen the U.S. case thrown out by the British courts. But the U.K. judiciary was looking over its shoulder, towards Washington, far more than it was abiding by its own statute books.

No Watchdog

Western governments, politicians, the judiciary and the media all failed Assange. Or rather, they did what they are actually there to do: keep the rabble — that is, you and me — from knowing what they are really up to. 

Their job is to build narratives suggesting that they know best, that we must trust them, that their crimes, such as those they are supporting right now in Gaza, are actually not what they look like, but are, in fact, efforts in very difficult circumstances to uphold the moral order, to protect civilisation. 

For this reason, there is a special need to identify the critical role played by the media in keeping Assange locked up for so long.

The truth is, with a properly adversarial media playing the role it declares for itself, as a watchdog on power, Assange could never have been disappeared for so long. He would have been freed years ago. It was the media that kept him behind bars. 

The establishment media acted as a willing tool in the demonising narrative the U.S. and British governments carefully crafted against Assange.

Even now, as he is reunited with his family, the BBC and others are peddling the same long-discredited lies. 

Those include the constantly repeated claim by journalists that he faced “rape charges” in Sweden that were supposedly dropped. Here is the BBC making this error once again in its reporting this week. 

In fact, Assange never faced more than a “preliminary investigation,” one the Swedish prosecutors repeatedly dropped for lack of evidence. The investigation, we now know, was revived and sustained for so long not because of Sweden but chiefly because the U.K.’s Crown Prosecution Service, then led by Sir Keir Starmer (now the leader of the Labour Party), insisted on it dragging on. 

Starmer made repeated trips to Washington during this period, when the U.S. was trying to find a pretext to lock Assange away for political crimes, not sexual ones. 

But as happened so often in the Assange case, all the records of those meetings were destroyed by the British authorities. 

The media’s other favourite deception — still being promoted — is the claim that WikiLeaks’ releases put U.S. informants in danger. 

That is utter nonsense, as any journalist who has spent even a cursory amount of time studying the background to the case knows. 

More than a decade ago, the Pentagon set up a review to identify any U.S. agents killed or harmed as a result of the leaks. They did so precisely to help soften up public opinion against Assange. 

And yet a team of 120 counter-intelligence officers could not find a single such case, as the head of the team, Brigadier-General Robert Carr, conceded in court in 2013.

Despite having a newsroom stuffed with hundreds of correspondents, including those claiming to specialise in defence, security and disinformation, the BBC still cannot get this basic fact about the case right. 

That’s not an accident. It’s what happens when journalists allow themselves to be spoon-fed information from those they are supposedly watching over. That is what happens when journalists and intelligence officials live in a permanent, incestuous relationship. 

Character Assassination

But it is not just these glaring reporting failures that kept Assange confined to his small cell in Belmarsh. It was that the entire media acted in concert in his character assassination, making it not only acceptable but respectable to hate him.

It was impossible to post on social media about the Assange case without dozens of interlocutors popping up to tell you how deeply unpleasant he was, how much of a narcissist, how he had abused his cat or smeared his walls in the embassy with faeces. None of these individuals, of course, had ever met him.

It also never occurred to such people that, even were all of this true, it would still not have excused stripping Assange of his basic legal rights, as all too clearly happened. And even more so, it could not possibly justify eroding the public-interest duty of journalists to expose state crimes.

What was ultimately at stake in the protracted extradition hearings was the U.S. government’s determination to equate investigative national-security journalism with “espionage”. Whether Assange was a narcissist had precisely no bearing on that matter.

Why were so many people persuaded Assange’s supposed character flaws were crucially important to the case? Because the establishment media — our supposed arbiters of truth — were agreed on the matter.

The smears might not have stuck so well had they been thrown only by the rightwing tabloids. But life was breathed into these claims from their endless repetition by journalists supposedly on the other side of the aisle, particularly at The Guardian

Liberals and left-wingers were exposed to a steady flow of articles and tweets belittling Assange and his desperate, lonely struggle against the world’s sole superpower for the right not to be locked away for the rest of his life for doing journalism. 

The Guardian — which had benefited by initially allying with WikiLeaks in publishing its revelations — showed him precisely zero solidarity when the U.S. establishment came knocking, determined to destroy the WikiLeaks platform, and its founder, for making those revelations possible.

For the record, so we do not forget how Assange was kept confined for so long, these are a few examples of how The Guardian made him — and not the law-breaking U.S. security state — the villain.

Marina Hyde in The Guardian in February 2016 — four years into his captivity in the embassy — casually dismissed as “gullible” the concerns of a United Nations panel of world-renowned legal experts that Assange was being “arbitrarily detained” because Washington had refused to issue guarantees that it would not seek his extradition for political crimes.

Long-time BBC legal affairs correspondent Joshua Rozenberg was given space in The Guardian on the same day to get it so wrong in claiming Assange was simply “hiding away” in the embassy, under no threat of extradition (Note: Though his analytic grasp of the case has proven feeble, the BBC allowed him to opine further this week on the Assange case).

Two years later, The Guardian was still peddling the same line that, despite the U.K. spending many millions ringing the embassy with police officers to prevent Assange from “fleeing justice”, it was only “pride” that kept him detained in the embassy.

Or how about this one from Hadley Freeman, published by The Guardian in 2019, just as Assange was being disappeared for the next five years into the nearest Britain has to a gulag, on the “intense happiness” she presumed the embassy’s cleaning staff must be feeling. 

Anyone who didn’t understand quite how personally hostile so many Guardian writers were to Assange needs to examine their tweets, where they felt freer to take the gloves off. Hyde described him as “possibly even the biggest arsehole in Knightsbridge” while Suzanne Moore said he was “the most massive turd.”

 

The constant demeaning of Assange and the sneering at his plight was not confined to The Guardian’s opinion pages. The paper even colluded in a false report — presumably supplied by the intelligence services, but easily disproved — designed to antagonise the paper’s readers by smearing him as a stooge of Donald Trump and the Russians. 

This notorious news hoax — falsely claiming that in 2018 Assange repeatedly met with a Trump aide and “unnamed Russians”, unrecorded by any of the dozens of CCTV cameras surveilling ever approach to the embassy — is still on The Guardian’s website. 

This campaign of demonisation smoothed the path to Assange being dragged by British police out of the embassy in early 2019.

It also, helpfully, kept The Guardian out of the spotlight. For it was errors made by the newspaper, not Assange, that led to the supposed “crime” at the heart of the U.S. extradition case — that WikiLeaks had hurriedly released a cache of files unredacted — as I have explained in detail before. 

Too Little Too Late

The establishment media that collaborated with Assange 14 years ago in publishing the revelations of U.S. and U.K. state crimes only began to tentatively change its tune in late 2022 — more than a decade too late.

That was when five of his former media partners issued a joint letter to the Biden administration saying that it should “end its prosecution of Julian Assange for publishing secrets”.

But even as he was released this week, the BBC was still continuing the drip-drip of character assassination. A proper BBC headline, were it not simply a stenographer for the British government, might read: “Tony Blair: Multi-millionaire or war criminal?” 

For while the establishment media has busily fixed our gaze on the supposed character flaws of Assange, it has kept our attention away from the true villains, those who committed the crimes he exposed: former U.K. Prime Minister Tony Blair, former U.S. President George W Bush and his vice president Dick Cheney and many more. 

We need to recognise a pattern here. When the facts cannot be disputed, the establishment has to shoot the messenger. 

In this case, it was Assange. But the same media machine was rolled out against former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, another thorn in the establishment’s side. And as with Assange, The Guardian and the BBC were the two outlets that were most useful in making the smears stick.

Sadly, to secure his freedom, Assange was compelled to make a deal pleading guilty to one of the charges levelled against him under the Espionage Act. 

“Don’t Shoot the Messenger” poster of Julian Assange outside the Ecuadorian embassy in London, August 2012. (Chris Beckett, Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

Highlighting the enduring bad faith of The Guardian, the same paper that so readily ridiculed Assange’s years of detention to avoid being locked away in a U.S. super-max jail, ran an article this week, as Assange was released, stressing the “dangerous precedent” for journalism set by his plea deal.

Washington’s treatment of Assange was always designed to send a chilling message to investigative journalists that, while it is fine to expose the crimes of Official Enemies, the same standards must never be applied to the U.S. empire itself.

How is it possible that The Guardian is learning that only now, after failing to grasp that lesson earlier, when it mattered, during Assange’s long years of political persecution? 

The even sadder truth is that the media’s villainous role in keeping Assange locked up will soon be erased from the record. That is because the media are the ones writing the script we tell ourselves about what is going on in the world.

They will quickly paint themselves as saints, not sinners, in this episode. And, without more Assanges to open our eyes, we will most likely believe them.

Jonathan Cook is an award-winning British journalist. He was based in Nazareth, Israel, for 20 years. He returned to the U.K. in 2021.He is the author of three books on the Israel-Palestine conflict: Blood and Religion: The Unmasking of the Jewish State (2006), Israel and the Clash of Civilisations: Iraq, Iran and the Plan to Remake the Middle East (2008) and Disappearing Palestine: Israel’s Experiments in Human Despair (2008). If you appreciate his articles, please consider offering your financial support

This article is from Declassified UK.  

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

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11 comments for “The Media Kept Assange Behind Bars

  1. Graeme
    June 29, 2024 at 21:20

    There are some in the media who would like to keep Julian behind bars.
    Some who continue to peddle the Swedish rape allegations.

    The The Melbourne Age’s Jacqueline Maley being one such scribe. (The Age is one of the outlets with a history of turning-on and going-after Julian). Andrew O’Hagen’s unauthorised biography is her major reference.

    Maley writes: “Assange was holed up in Ellingham Manor … following charges of sexual assault following from allegations made by two Swedish women in 2010.”
    Maley goes on: “It was impossible to investigate without Assange’s cooperation.”

    Towards the end of her piece, Maley cites Clara Berglund, head of Swedish Women’s Lobby, that Assange’s accusers were never given the chance for legal redress. Yet fails to note that it’s the Swedish justice system and newspapers who hung the two women out to dry, considering they never sought anything but a confidential chat with police.

    This writer (of fiction?) attempts to belittle Julian by dubbing him the “freedom messiah.”

    From an older Jonathan Cook article:
    “Swedish authorities hadn’t charged him with a crime, making their use of a European arrest warrant highly suspect.”

    Anyone who has read Nils Melzer’s book will know that Maley has not, and that what she has written is basically bullshit and borders on libel.
    But, then that’s corporate media all over.

    Jacqueline Maley, ‘The Freedom Messiah Is Free. A Few Women Won’t Join The Cheersquad.’ The Age, June 30, 2024, page 17. (Sadly, behind a paywall).

    hxxps://www.counterpunch.org/2020/09/24/the-us-is-using-the-guardian-to-justify-jailing-assange-for-life-why-is-the-paper-so-silent/

  2. Rafi Simonton
    June 29, 2024 at 21:15

    I guess we know what they were Guarding. Way more than “spoon fed”–how much sugar does it take to swallow gallons of crap?
    Not that I’m guilt free, either. It was years before I finally paid attention to this absolutely vital case. So many other issues. This guy seems arrogant. What about that thing in Sweden? Can’t trust Caitlin Johnstone; might be one of those left elitist vanguard wanna-bes. Certainly the Guardian, known for investigative reporting and a progressive attitude would know.
    But the glaring ad hominems and smug denunciations pointed to something very, very wrong. The more I read Johnstone and others at CN, the more their views made sense.
    Julian Assange simply did what is right. That the supposed free world persecuted him so heavy handedly and so outrageously made him a world class hero. And ripped apart the thin disguise of the undemocratic oligarchy’s empire building war machine.

  3. Susan Siens
    June 29, 2024 at 16:46

    I don’t want to pick on Marina Hyde, but her name is easy to remember and she looks like a high school girl in her photo. What an absolute cesspit of ugliness must lurk inside her. Filth, stupidity, willingness to prostitute herself (for what), it’s truly an embarrassment to see these headlines and tweets.

  4. Charlie
    June 29, 2024 at 16:39

    It’s wonderful that Julian is home and united with his family.
    His future in journalism is his to decide.

    However, we know that the CIA considered ways to assassinate him, so will he now have to retire, or keep a very low work profile, to avoid a CIA hit-squad gunning him down, a la Mossad, on the streets of Sydney ?

    I don’t trust the world’s biggest hegemonic thug not to bear a violent grudge, and seek ways of giving him a horizontal life sentence.

  5. Lois Gagnon
    June 29, 2024 at 16:06

    It’s careerism that prevents these stenographers to power from telling the truth about events. The profit motive poisons everything. It incentivizes all the more negative human traits and punishes the more altruistic ones. When will we face this ultimate truth?

  6. bardamu
    June 29, 2024 at 12:10

    I guess libel does not get prosecuted unless it is against a person or institution of power.

    It would be easier to dismiss all government accounts were they not released under so many covers in so many places. I suppose you just have to reckon that any theory about a government action that does not involve conspiracy is suspect.

  7. June 29, 2024 at 11:14

    Politicians prefer to keep secret their corrupt and immoral actions, such as America’s war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, which we not only have a right to know about, but we MUST know about to hold them accountable for them actions. Whistle-blowers, and the
    journalists who publish their revelations, such as Julian, provide an invaluable service. I consider Julian to be a noble soul, who
    sacrificed his health and much of his life, to help humanity by bringing truth to the world.

  8. Em
    June 29, 2024 at 07:34

    It would be interesting to read some of the subjects Joe Lauria focused on, and what his approach was to them while writing for the liberal’ Johannesburg STAR newspaper back when he was a young journalist just starting out.

  9. Paul Citro
    June 29, 2024 at 06:29

    The establishment press, the corporate media has betrayed us. Time for us to abandon it in mass and seek more truthful information sources.

  10. Francis (Frank) Lee
    June 29, 2024 at 05:49

    Whatever ever happened to the Manchester Guardian – as it then was – in the vanguard of the South African War in 1900-02? Well the issue of the gentleman in question was a certain Mr. J.A.Hobson, editor of the Manchester Guardian, who led the campaign against the jingoistic mobs both in the the property of Hobson as well as the Guardian newspaper building itself. Can you imagine today the type of ‘journalists’ of that calibre today! The local police were called in to protect Hobson.

    • Mari Q
      June 29, 2024 at 23:40

      Very timely summary thankyou
      Minority of MPs,so MSM in Australi too up & running the tired old debunked tho still believed slurs, accusations against Julian as well …Joe reported statement by Australian Foreign Minister an example
      Now.
      Let’s organise to monitor & call out
      each instance.
      NO MORE DEFAMATION
      JULIAN is not the story
      STATE LIES & CRIMES are

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