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Julian Assange: Wanted by the Empire, Dead or Alive

Courtesy Darryl Yeoh via Flickr

The American airwaves quiver with the screams of parlor assassins howling for Julian Assange's head. Jonah Goldberg, contributor to the National Review, asks in his syndicated column, “Why wasn't Assange garroted in his hotel room years ago?” Sarah Palin wants him hunted down and brought to justice, saying: “He is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands.”

Assange can survive these theatrical blusters. A tougher question is how he will fare at the hands of the US government, which is hopping mad. US Attorney General Eric Holder has announced that the Justice Department and Pentagon are conducting “an active, ongoing criminal investigation” into the latest Assange-facilitated leak under Washington's Espionage Act.

Asked how the US could prosecute Assange, a non-US citizen, Holder said, “Let me be clear. This is not saber-rattling,” and vowed “to swiftly close the gaps in current US legislation…”

In other words the espionage statute is being rewrit­ten to target Assange, and in short order, if not already, President Obama — who as a candidate pledged “trans­parency” in government — will sign an order okaying the seizing of Assange and his transport into the US jurisdiction. Render first, fight the habeas corpus law­suits later.

Interpol, the investigative arm of the International Criminal Court at The Hague, has issued a fugitive notice for Assange. He's wanted in Sweden for ques­tioning in two alleged sexual assaults, one of which seems to boil down to a charge of unsafe sex and failure to phone his date the following day.

This prime accuser, Anna Ardin has, according to Israel Shamir , writing on this CounterPunch site, “ties to the US-financed anti-Castro and anti-communist groups. She published her anti-Castro diatribes in the Swedish-language publication Revista de Asignaturas Cubanas put out by Misceláneas de Cuba… Note that Ardin was deported from Cuba for subversive activities.”

It's certainly not conspiracism to suspect that the CIA has been at work in fomenting these Swedish accusa­tions. As Shamir reports, “The moment Julian sought the protection of Swedish media law, the CIA immediately threatened to discontinue intelligence sharing with SEPO, the Swedish Secret Service.”

The CIA has no doubt also pondered the possibility of pushing Assange off a bridge or through a high win­dow (a mode of assassination favored by the Agency from the earliest days) and has sadly concluded that it's too late for this sort of executive solution.

The irony is that the thousands of diplomatic commu­nications released by WikiLeaks contain no earth-shak­ing disclosures that undermine the security of the Ameri­can empire. The bulk of them merely illustrate the well-known fact that in every capital city round the world there is a building known as the US Embassy inhabited by people whose prime function is to vanquish informed assessment of local conditions with swaddling cloths of ignorance and prejudice instilled in them by what passes for higher education in the United States, whose gov­erning elites are now more ignorant of what is really happening in the outside world than at any time in the nation’s history.

The reports in the official press invite us to be stunned at the news that the King of Saudi Arabia wishes Iran was wiped off the map, that the US uses diplomats as spies, that Afghanistan is corrupt, also that corruption is not unknown in Russia! These press reports foster the illusion that US embassies are inhabited by intelligent observers zealously remitting useful information to their superiors in Washington DC. To the contrary, diplomats — assuming they have the slightest capacity for intelli­gent observation and analysis — soon learn to advance their careers by sending reports to Foggy Bottom care­fully tuned to the prejudices of the top State Department and White House brass, powerful members of Congress and major players throughout the bureaucracies. Remember that as the Soviet Union slid towards extinc­tion, the US Embassy in Moscow was doggedly supply­ing quavering reports of a puissant Empire of Evil still meditating whether to invade Western Europe!

This is not to downplay the great importance of this latest batch of WikiLeaks. Millions in America and around the world have been given a quick introductory course in international relations and the true arts of diplomacy — not least the third-rate, gossipy prose with which the diplomats rehearse the arch romans à clef they will write when they head into retirement.

Years ago Rebecca West wrote in her novel The Thinking Reed of a British diplomat who, “even when he was peering down a woman's dress at her breasts man­aged to look as though he was thinking about India.” In the updated version, given Hillary Clinton's orders to the State Department, the US envoy, pretending to admire the figure of the charming French cultural attaché, would actually be thinking how to steal her credit card infor­mation, obtain a retinal scan, her email passwords and frequent flier number.

There are also genuine disclosures of great interest, some of them far from creditable to the establishment US press. On our CounterPunch site last week Gareth Porter identified a diplomatic cable from last February released by WikiLeaks which provides a detailed account of how Russian specialists on the Iranian ballistic missile pro­gram refuted the US suggestion that Iran has missiles that could target European capitals or that Iran intends to develop such a capability. Porter points out that:

“Readers of the two leading US newspapers never learned those key facts about the document. The New York Times and Washington Post reported only that the United States believed Iran had acquired such missiles — supposedly called the BM-25 — from North Korea. Neither newspaper reported the detailed Russian refuta­tion of the US view on the issue or the lack of hard evi­dence for the BM-25 from the US side.

“The Times, which had obtained the diplomatic cables not from WikiLeaks but from the Guardian, according to a Washington Post story Monday, did not publish the text of the cable. The Times story said the newspaper had made the decision not to publish 'at the request of the Obama administration.' That meant that its readers could not compare the highly distorted account of the document in the Times story against the original document without searching the Wikileaks website.”

Distaste among the “official” US press for WikiLeaks has been abundantly apparent from the first of the two big releases of documents pertaining to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The New York Times man­aged the ungainly feat of publishing some of the leaks while simultaneously affecting to hold its nose, and while publishing a mean-spirited hatchet job on Assange by its reporter John F Burns, a man with a well burnished record in touting the various agendas of the US govern­ment.

There have been cheers for Assange and WikiLeaks from such famed leakers as Daniel Ellsberg, but to turn on one's television is to eavesdrop on the sort of fury that Lord Haw-Haw — aka the Irishman William Joyce, doing propaganda broadcasts from Berlin — used to provoke in Britain in World War II. As Glenn Greenwald wrote in his column on the Salon site:

“On CNN, Wolf Blitzer was beside himself with rage over the fact that the US government had failed to keep all these things secret from him… Then — like the Good Journalist he is — Blitzer demanded assurances that the Government has taken the necessary steps to prevent him, the media generally and the citizenry from finding out any more secrets: 'Do we know yet if they've [done] that fix? In other words, somebody right now who has top secret or secret security clearance can no longer download information onto a CD or a thumb drive? Has that been fixed already?' The central concern of Blitzer — one of our nation's most honored 'journalists' — is making sure that nobody learns what the US Government is up to.”

These latest WikiLeaks files contain some 261,000,000 words — about 3,000 books. They display the entrails of the American Empire. As Israel Shamir wrote on CounterPunch.org last week, “The files show US political infiltration of nearly every country, even supposedly neutral states such as Sweden and Switzer­land. US embassies keep a close watch on their hosts. They have penetrated the media, the arms business, oil, intelligence, and they lobby to put US companies at the head of the line.”

Will this vivid record of imperial outreach in the early 21st century soon be forgotten? Not if some com­petent writer offers a readable and politically vivacious redaction. But a warning: in November 1979 Iranian stu­dents seized an entire archive of the State Department, the CIA and the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) at the American embassy in Tehran. Many papers that were shredded were laboriously reassembled.

These secrets concerned far more than Iran. The Tehran embassy, which served as a regional base for the CIA, held records involving secret operations in many countries, notably Israel, the Soviet Union, Turkey, Paki­stan, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan.

Beginning in 1982, the Iranians published some 60 volumes of these CIA reports and other US government documents from the Tehran archive, collectively entitled Documents From the US Espionage Den. As Edward Jay Epstein, a historian of US intelligence agencies, wrote years ago, “Without a doubt, these captured records rep­resent the most extensive loss of secret data that any superpower has suffered since the end of the Second World War.”

In fact, the Tehran archive truly was a devastating blow to US national security. It contained vivid portraits of intelligence operations and techniques, the complicity of US journalists with US government agencies, the intricacies of oil diplomacy. The volumes are in some university libraries here. Are they read? By a handful of specialists. The inconvenient truths were swiftly buried — and perhaps the WikiLeaks files will soon be fade from memory too, joining the inspiring historical archive of intelligence coups of the left.

I should honor here “Spies for Peace” — the group of direct-action British anarchists and kindred radicals associated with the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and Bertrand Russell’s Committee of 100 who, in 1963, broke into a secret government bunker, Regional Seat of Government Number 6 (RSG-6) at Warren Row, near Reading, where they photographed and copied docu­ments, showing secret government preparations for rule after a nuclear war. They distributed a pamphlet along with copies of relevant documents to the press, stigma­tizing the “small group of people who have accepted thermonuclear war as a probability, and are consciously and carefully planning for it. … They are quietly waiting for the day the bomb drops, for that will be the day they take over.” There was a big uproar, and then the Conser­vative government of the day issued a D-notice forbid­ding any further coverage in the press. The cops and intelligence services hunted long and hard for the spies for peace, and caught nary a one.

And Assange? Hopefully he will have a long reprieve from premature burial. Ecuador offered him sanctuary until the US Embassy in Quito gave the president a swift command and the invitation was rescinded. Switzerland? Istanbul? Hmmm. As noted above, he should, at the least, view with caution women eagerly inviting his embraces and certainly stay away from overpasses, bridges, and open windows.

In 1953 the CIA distributed to its agents and opera­tives a killer's training manual (made public in 1997) full of hands-on advice:

“The most efficient accident, in simple assassination, is a fall of 75 feet or more onto a hard surface. Elevator shafts, stairwells, unscreened windows and bridges will serve… The act may be executed by sudden, vigorous [excised] of the ankles, tipping the subject over the edge. If the assassin immediately sets up an outcry, playing the 'horrified witness,' no alibi or surreptitious withdrawal is necessary.”

Hope Flowers in the Graveyard

Our latest CounterPunch newsletter is now going out to subscribers and is available to new subscribers.

From Jerusalem Jeff Halper files an exciting report on what he sees as positive opportunities in 2011 for escape from the dead-end of a dead peace process. “ And yet,” writes Halper, who the Director of The Israeli Committee Against House Demolitions, “ I’m optimistic that 2011 will witness a game-changing ‘break’ that will create a new set of circumstances in which a just peace is possible. That jolt which smashes the present dead-end paradigm must come from outside the present ‘process.’

Don’t miss Halper’s important and exciting analysis of ways forward to a just, workable and lasting peace.

Also in this latest newsletter: What’s really happen­ing in North and South Korea? How real is the danger of war? Peter Lee unearths the real game plans of the lead­ers of both Koreas, of China and of the United States.

For those newsletter readers who may have missed it on our website we feature Pam Martens’ stunning “Citi­zen’s Counter Strategy — Ten Ideas to Starve the Wall Street Beast.”

And Larry Portis sends us from Montpellier an amaz­ing report and interview with director Serge Avedikian about his film Barking Island, about the way thousands of dogs in Constantinople were slaughtered as an experimental overture to the Armenian genocide.

(Alexander Cockburn can be reached at alexandercockburn@asis.com.)

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