chroniclesmagazine.org
<https://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/laffaire-assange/>  


L’Affaire Assange


7-9 minutes

  _____  

By:Srdja Trifkovic | April 12, 2019 



Julian Assange’s arrest inside the embassy of Ecuador in London would not
have been possible had that country’s government not authorized the British
police to enter its theoretically sovereign territory. The lesson is clear:
if you plan to seek asylum in a foreign embassy, you should be careful to
choose the diplomatic premises of a country (a) not likely to be pressurized
into betraying you; and (b) comfortable enough to make a long sojourn
tolerable.

The 1961 Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations reaffirmed the
long-established principle of inviolability of diplomatic premises. The
host-country’s police and security forces are not allowed access without a
specific authorization of the chief of mission, which was granted in this
case. Assange had spent almost seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy, after
being welcomed there by the country’s former president Rafael Correa. The
hosts’ political calculus has changed to his detriment over the past two
years, however.

The British police arrested Assange supposedly for skipping UK bail seven
years ago, but also—and far more importantly—under a previously secret U.S.
indictment. The exact charge is for conspiracy
<https://www.justice.gov/usao-edva/pr/wikileaks-founder-charged-computer-hac
king-conspiracy> , with Chelsea Manning, to hack into a “classified U.S.
government computer.” Assange lawyer Barry Pollock said the allegations
“boil down to encouraging a source to provide him information and taking
efforts to protect the identity of that source.” Assange had predicted that
this would happen years ago, and stated it as his reason for seeking asylum
in the first place.

Sen. Joe Manchin (D, W.V.) gloated “He is
<https://thehill.com/homenews/senate/438395-manchin-celebrates-assange-arres
t-hes-our-property>  our property!” when told of Assange’s arrest, and he
accurately reflected the sentiment shared by
<https://www.usatoday.com/story/opinion/2019/04/11/wikileaks-julian-assange-
nsa-extradition-hacking-chelsea-manning-nobel-column/3434034002/>  the
entire Beltway swamp, Democrats in particular:

Assange committed the unpardonable sins of embarrassing the
establishment—from members of Congress to intelligence officials to the
media. And he will now be punished for our sins. Despite having significant
constitutional arguments to be made, it is likely that he will be stripped
of those defenses and even barred from raising the overall context of his
actions in federal court. What could be the most important free speech and
free press case in our history could well be reduced to the scope and
substance of an unauthorized computer access case.

Before becoming a fugitive Assange had unveiled a massive, likely
unconstitutional NSA surveillance program
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_surveillance_disclosures_(2013%E2%80%9
3present)>  potentially affecting all Americans. He later published emails
that showed that the DNC and the Clinton campaign lied in various statements
to the public, including the rigging of the primary for her nomination. As
USA Today columnist Jonathan Turley says, “No one has argued that any of
these emails were false. They were embarrassing. Of course, there is not
crime of embarrassing the establishment but that is merely a technicality.”
The American media machine nevertheless views the WikiLeaks founder
primarily through the lens of the 2016 election, after which he was
denounced as a Russian cutout who threw that election for Trump. That is not
true, but it is certain to slant much of the U.S. mainstream media coverage
to Assange’s disadvantage.

The problem Assange ultimately faced was related to Ecuadorian domestic
politics and the country’s external vulnerabilities. Its current president
Lenin [sic!] Moreno, elected in 2017, is a Leftist who has made peace with
the Empire <https://nacla.org/news/2019/03/15/elected-left-governing-right>
, a la Greece’s disgusting bo-bo PM Alexis Tsipras. One of the fruits of
Moreno’s volte-face has been a massive World Bank loan
<https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ecuador-economy/world-bank-approves-400-
million-in-new-financing-for-ecuador-idUSKBN1JF339> , which would not have
been granted without Washington’s political blessing. Moreno’s decision was
not legal under Ecuadorian and international law: Assange is a political
refugee
<https://sputniknews.com/europe/201904111074027690-assange-embassy-arrest/>
and the country’s government cannot rescind asylum
<https://sputniknews.com/analysis/201904111074038205-assange-arrest-uk-ecuad
or/>  once it is granted. In addition he was given Ecuadorian citizenship
<https://www.theguardian.com/media/2018/jan/11/julian-assange-is-made-ecuado
rian-citizen-in-effort-to-resolve-impasse>  in December 2017, which
theoretically should have given him an additional layer of protection.
Evidently Assange should not have sought refuge in the embassy of country
susceptible to American pressure.

In this context it is useful to recall the destinies of two Hungarian
notables after the collapse of the 1956 anti-Soviet uprising. Cardinal
József Mindszenty <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%B3zsef_Mindszenty> ,
the Roman Catholic primate of Hungary, spent 15 years in the U.S. embassy in
Budapest (1956-1971). He was eventually allowed to leave, after Pope Paul VI
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Paul_VI>  offered a compromise declaring
Mindszenty a “victim of history”—instead of communism—and annulling the
excommunication <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Excommunication>  imposed on
his political opponents. For the rest of his life he resided in Vienna,
because he took grave offense at the Vatican’s suggestion that he should
give up the primacy <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primate_(bishop)>  of the
Catholic Church in Hungary in exchange for uncensored publication of his
memoirs . . . but all that is a minor footnote now.

As hundreds of Soviet tanks rolled from the east in the first week of
November 1956 and the uprising collapsed, Hungary’s reformist Prime Minister
Imre Nagy and some of his associates made the fatal mistake of seeking
sanctuary in the Yugoslav embassy in Budapest. The ensuing impasse in
Soviet–Yugoslav relations was ended when Nagy was forced to leave the
premises, after the new government of Janos Kadar and its Soviet masters
gave Tito the guarantees of safe conduct for the fugitives. They were duly
arrested (as Tito knew they would be), removed to jail in Romania, and
finally deported to Hungary for trial in 1957. Nagy was shot on June 17,
1958, and buried, face down, in an unmarked grave. It was only after the
fall of Communism that Nagy’s grave was located and he was given a proper
burial
<https://budapestbeacon.com/imre-nagy-reburied-viktor-orbans-political-caree
r-launched-25-years-ago-today/>  attended by 100,000 people.

Assange will not be executed, but his fate will be unpleasant. A hint of
what awaits him came when he was taken to Westminster Magistrates’ Court and
found guilty of breaching bail only hours after his arrest. He denied the
offense, with his lawyers arguing that he had a reasonable excuse and he
could not expect a fair trial in Britain as its purpose was to “secure his
delivery” to the United States. District Judge Michael Snow described
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/julian-assange-arrest-us-extrad
ition-ecuador-embassy-uk-police-met-wikileaks-a8865021.html>  the defense as
laughable, adding: “Mr Assange’s behaviour is that of a narcissist who
cannot get beyond his own selfish interests. He hasn’t come close to
establishing reasonable excuse.” He remanded Assange in custody ahead of a
future sentencing hearing at Southwark Crown Court. 

Assange will not be executed but his fate will be unpleasant in the extreme.
It is an even bet that Britain will extradite him to the U.S. In an
unpleasant federal facility he will have many years, decades even (he is
47), to ponder the mistake of not seeking protection of a real country. He
will be treated brutally, pour encourager les autres.

Julian Assange is not a particularly likeable man. Some of his actions may
have been legally shady and morally ambivalent. In the end he deserves our
sympathy because he will be pilloried by the sworn enemies of decency and
civilized life.


[Image via Snapperjack from London, UK. [CC BY-SA 2.0]
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Julian_Assange_in_Ecuadorian_Embass
y_cropped.jpg> ]


 

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