In that light, as the shameful/shameless treatment of Julian Assange continues and is on the verge of even worse developments, I was wondering about some dates and timelines in the whole sordid affair. And about how crucial it is for those wanting to 'capture' him, to tie him to Russia in any form and shape they can come up with and make halfway credible.
10 days ago in The True Meaning of 'Collusion' I mentioned how Robert Mueller in his indictment of 12 Russians - but not Assange -, released on the eve of the Trump-Putin summit, strongly insinuated that WikiLeaks had actively sought information from Russians posing as Guccifer 2.0, that would be damaging to Hillary Clinton. I also said that Assange was an easy target because, being closed off from all communication, he cannot defend himself. From the indictment:
a. On or about June 22, 2016, Organization 1 sent a private message to Guccifer 2.0 to "[s]end any new material [stolen from the DNC] here for us to review and it will have a much higher impact than what you are doing." On or about July 6, 2016, Organization 1 added, "if you have anything hillary related we want it in the next tweo [sic] days prefable [sic] because the DNC [Democratic National Convention] is approaching and she will solidify bernie supporters behind her after." The Conspirators responded, "ok . . . i see." Organization 1 explained, "we think trump has only a 25% chance of winning against hillary . . . so conflict between bernie and hillary is interesting."Now, the indictment itself has been blown to shreds by Adam Carter, while the narrative that the Russians hacked DNC servers and provided what they stole to WikiLeaks, has always categorically been denied by Assange, while the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS) and others have concluded that the speed at which the info was downloaded from the servers means it couldn't have been a hack.
Oh, and Carter left little standing of Mueller et al's portrait of Guccifer 2.0 as being of Russian origin. Plus, as several voices have pointed out, Assange had said on British TV on June 12 2016, ten days before the date the indictment indicates, that WikiLeaks was sitting on a batch of material pertaining to Hillary Clinton. An indictment full of allegations, not evidence, that in the end reads like Swiss cheese.
But it does serve to keep alive, and blow new fire into, the "The Russians Did It" narrative. And obviously, it also rekindles the allegation that Assange was working with the Russians to make Trump win and Hillary lose. Allegations, not evidence, against which neither Assange nor "the Russians" are in a position to defend themselves. Very convenient.
In his June 25 article How Comey Intervened To Kill Wikileaks' Immunity Deal, The Hill's John Solomon details how negotiations in early 2017 between legal representatives for Julian Assange and the US Justice Department were suddenly halted when James Comey, then FBI director, and Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) suddenly and entirely unexpectedly told Adam Waldman, Assange's attorney, and David Laufman, then head of Justice's counterintelligence and export controls section, who had been picked to lead the talks, to stand down.
This happened when Waldman reached out to Warner, who informed Comey, among other things, about Assange's offer to provide evidence that he did not get the DNC files from the Russians. That would have dealt a huge blow to the Russia-Did-It allegation, and it would also have destroyed the narrative of Assange working with Russia. And lest we forget: it would have made Mueller's indictment worth less than the paper it's written on.
That Comey's order for Waldman and Laufman to stand down risked the lives and safety of CIA operatives receives surprisingly(?) little attention, but apparently it was worth it for Comey to keep the narrative(s) alive. What do the operatives themselves think about it, though?
It's not fully clear from Solomon's article when exactly the stand down order was given, and/or when the talks broke down entirely. Going through the dates, we know it's sometime between March 28 2017, when we know talks were still ongoing, and April 7 2017, when Assange "released documents with the specifics of some of the CIA malware used for cyber attacks." After that, then CIA director Mike Pompeo labeled WikiLeaks a "hostile intelligence service."
Why is the date interesting? For one thing because present Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno was elected to his job on April 2 2017 (he took office on May 24). And it's Moreno who now holds Assange's fate in his hands. It was Moreno, also, who cut off Assange completely from the outside world last March.
Moreno's about-face since becoming president is something to behold. He had been vice-president, trustee and friend to his predecessor Rafael Correa from 2007 to 2013. Moreno, who's wheelchair bound after being shot in a burglary in 1998, was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts for the disabled in Ecuador.
What made him turn? Or should we perhaps ask: when did the Americans get to him? And what do they have on him? Is it bribe or blackmail? There's talk of new and generous IMF loans as we speak. What's clear is that Moreno is in London this week, and it's unlikely that Assange's situation doesn't come up in talks at all, even if that's what Moreno's people want to make us believe. It's way more likely that discussions are happening about how to put Assange out on to the street and then in a British or even US jail.
But Assange's case may not be as hopeless as we think. First, all the British have on him is a charge of jumping bail. That carries three months and a fine. It's not labeled a serious charge, that goes for offences that carry three years and more. New UK Foreign Minister Jeremy Hunt misspoke seriously when he said Assange faced serious charges. He doesn't. And Britain still has a court system, and Assange still has lawyers.
More important, perhaps, is that Moreno will come under a lot of pressure, and probably already is, to not hand over Assange. The UN has been very clear about what it thinks about Assange's treatment. It violates more international laws than we can count. But who cares about the UN anymore these days, right?
Even more outspoken has been the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. I know, I had never heard of them either. But they're a serious body, most South American nations are members, and many Caribbean ones. Here's what the court said on July 13:
This court is not some hobby club. Wiki:The Inter-American Court of Human Rights ruled on Friday the right to seek asylum in embassies and other diplomatic compounds. The ruling includes a mandatory safe process, and the obligation of states to provide safe passage to those granted asylum. Without naming Julian Assange, the ruling was deemed a huge victory for the WikiLeaks founder who has been held up in the Ecuadorean embassy in London since 2012.
The court released a public statement, which said that it had "interpreted the reach of the protection given under Article 22 (7) of the American Convention on Human Rights and Article XXVII of the American Declaration on the Rights and Duties of Man, which recognize the right to seek and receive asylum in a foreign territory."
"In particular, the Court declared upon the relative issue of whether this human right protects both territorial asylum and diplomatic asylum. Similarly, the Court determined the human rights obligations of the Member States of the Organization of American States regarding the host country and, in this case, for third States, in virtue of the risk that persons seeking international protection could suffer, which was the reason for the principle of non-refoulement.
"The Organization of American States established the Court in 1979 to enforce and interpret the provisions of the American Convention on Human Rights. Its two main functions are thus adjudicatory and advisory. Under the former, it hears and rules on the specific cases of human rights violations referred to it. Under the latter, it issues opinions on matters of legal interpretation brought to its attention by other OAS bodies or member states."The court is also very clear in its ruling. Note: "the obligation of states to provide safe passage to those granted asylum". Moreno may want to think twice before he surrenders Assange and goes against the ruling. The consequences could be far-reaching. Nobody wants to start a fight with ALL of their neighbors all at the same time. Violating the ruling would make the court obsolete.
The ideal solution would be if Australia would offer Julian Assange safe passage back home. Another country could do the same. Assange has never been charged with anything, other than the UK's bail-skipping charge, a minor offence.
Julian Assange is a journalist, and a damn good one at that. The silence in the Anglo - and international - media about his case is shameful and deafening. So is the smear campaign that's been going on for over a decade. How many women have been turned against the man by the false Swedish rape charges? Condemning someone to isolation without access to daylight or medical care goes way beyond shameful.
It's time to end this horror show, not prolong or deepen it. But the power of international intelligence services is at stake, and they're going to go to great lengths to impose that power. The US has already even claimed that freedom of speech, i.e. its entire Constitution, does not apply to non-Americans.
That's quite the claim when you think about it. That also tells us how much is at stake for ourselves. The mainstream media are already captives to the system, lock, stock and barrel. But if Assange can be silenced this way, what are Jim Kunstler, the Automatic Earth and Zero Hedge going to do? Are we all going to shut up?
We need to rage against the dying of the light more than ever. Because the light, indeed, is dying. We should not go gentle into that night without ever being heard from again. We owe that to ourselves, our children, and to Julian. It's all the same thing. Not standing up for Assange means not standing up for your children. Are you sure you're okay with that?
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