an interview with WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Hrafnsson: Updated
‘Everything Was Done To Make Julian Assange’s Life Miserable’; In his first interview since Julian Assange’s arrest, WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson discusses the “disgraceful” detention of the platform’s founder, criticism of its links to Russia and what he describes as the “appalling” treatment of Chelsea Manning., spiegel.de, May 3, 2019
I have no idea what Germany’s Fair Use laws for interviews are, but I’ll choose some parts, and you can read the rest if you’d care to.
If JtC reckons that I've borrowed too much, I'll slim it down.
DER SPIEGEL: Mr. Hrafnsson, on Wednesday you saw WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in a court room in London, where he was sentenced to 50 weeks in jail for violating the conditions of his bail. British police arrested him on April 11 in the Ecuadorian Embassy after the government of Ecuador withdrew his political asylum. How is he doing?
Hrafnsson: He is in the Belmarsh high-security prison in South London. There, he is waiting for his trial for the extradition request from the United States government. On Wednesday, a court found him guilty of a bail act offense when he was using his human right to seek asylum.
DER SPIEGEL: As the new editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks, do you sometimes worry you could end up in a high-security prison like Assange?
Hrafnsson: As WikiLeaks has been under attack for 10 years, I am aware of the dangers that come with the job. I have been working full-time for WikiLeaks since midsummer 2010. It is obvious that I am in the cross hairs of the U.S. government, its military and its secret services. We have known since 2014 that not only Julian Assange, but also other people who are connected with the organization are under investigation.
DER SPIEGEL: How did the diplomatic asylum end which Assange was granted by the Ecuadorian government in August 2012?
Hrafnsson: The ambassador asked him into the meeting room of the embassy and presented a letter, which he read out loud, saying the diplomatic asylum had been revoked and that he had to leave the embassy immediately. When Julian left the meeting room and wanted to go back to his room, the lobby of the embassy was full of British Policemen who grabbed him.
DER SPIEGEL: That doesn’t really fit with diplomatic rules.
Hrafnsson: Well, it was a long prepared, politically motivated move. Already last year, the embassy started a war of attrition, psychological warfare: cutting off the Internet, installing cell phone jammers, restricting visitors, turning off the heating. Everything was done to make Julian Assange’s life miserable.
DER SPIEGEL: He certainly didn’t look particularly well when he was dragged out of the embassy.
You may want to click in to see Kristinn’s response to these Qs as well; I’d forgotten that it’s so lengthy.
DER SPIEGEL: Is it true that you were offered the surveillance material from the embassy?
DER SPIEGEL: There were reports of Assange not behaving in a way that one would expect from a guest of the embassy. He supposedly didn’t flush the toilet, and he has been described as arrogant and narcissistic.
DER SPIEGEL: WikiLeaks has a rather simple but radical approach. If documents are in the public interest and authentic, they will be published. Is this still the idea?
Hrafnsson: WikiLeaks’ approach would not have been radical a few decades ago, but that changed with the enormous escalation of secrecy of those in power after 9/11. State secrecy and corporate secrecy have been increasing without being convincingly justified. In this environment, the fight of an organization like WikiLeaks is becoming more radical in an environment changing for the worse. At the same time, regular people are unprotected against the invasion of their privacy, as former CIA employee and whistleblower Edward Snowden revealed to us. And private entities like Google, Facebook and others are harvesting our private information as well. So, yes, this is still the idea.
DER SPIEGEL: In the beginning, WikiLeaks said: “We don’t discriminate, we publish what we get.” Does that still apply today?
Hrafnsson: When we started to publish U.S. military documents in 2010 on a massive scale, we were criticized for just “dumping documents” unredacted. We were accused of having “blood on our hands.” In 2013, during Chelsea Manning’s trial, a Pentagon official was called to testify about the harm the publications had caused and the people who had been killed because of these. He had to admit that nobody had been harmed.
DER SPIEGEL: But of course, you still have a responsibility for the people mentioned in the documents.
Hrafnsson: Once again: There have been millions of documents published by WikiLeaks. Where is the harm? And where is the harm in truthful information? And that compared to the harm that has been exposed and the bloodshed that was caused by the parties that were exposed.
Now this part pretty much backs up what I’ve posited, and as Hrafnsson talks with Jen Robinson and Julian’s other attorneys, I’m guessing they see it this way as well:
Hrafnsson: He almost got the maximum sentence of one year in jail for skipping bail, but the real battle is the extradition case. It can take two or three years. The U.S. government has been given two months, until June 12, to produce additional information supporting the extradition request.
DER SPIEGEL: The request is based on an indictment on a charge of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion that holds a maximum sentence of five years. Will that be the only charge?
Hrafnsson: It is obviously only the first step, and it would be extremely naive to try to maintain that other charges will not be added when he is on American soil. Letters were issued to individuals connected with WikiLeaks where they were offered immunity if they provided information pertaining to the investigation into what obviously was being described as the violation of the Espionage Act of 1917.
DER SPIEGEL: Do you think the government in Washington is trying to get Assange to the U.S. in the first place on the pretext of the relatively benign charge of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, so that it can then come up with additional charges that might lead to a life sentence or even the death penalty?
Hrafnsson: That’s an absolute certainty. That is the playbook.
DER SPIEGEL: What conclusions do you draw from Manning’s treatment?
Hrafnsson: It looks like that when it comes to the criminal justice system in the U.S., in certain cases, it’s just a criminal system without justice. Look at the letters that have been sent out to several individuals who were connected with WikiLeaks and are now living in exile — some here in Germany, some in Iceland — threat letters with the offer of immunity if they work with the grand jury in Virginia in the persecution of WikiLeaks. In other words: If you don’t cooperate, we will go after you. I refer to this as the Don Corleone offer, which is from the Godfather, an offer you can’t refuse.
The rest, again, is here.
From WL on twitter yesterday:
Fidel Narvaez, former Ecuadorean Consul and WL Joseph A Farrell @SwaziJAF on the prolonged campaign against @wikileaks’ Julian #Assange. From punitive court rulings to a prison cell that he is forced to spend 23 hours a day in. @Underground_RThttps://t.co/GYYY4o176t
— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) May 5, 2019
Comments
And even if the US pinky promises that they won't...
charge him with anything else... I'm willing to put cash on them immediately discovering "New" evidence that necessitates reneging on that deal.
Because that's pretty much standard.
I do not pretend I know what I do not know.
i reckon the DoJ won't
even bother with promises; this is one of the cretins promised immunity from any (truthful, ha ha) testimony via WL on twitter:
WikiLeaks: The US is indeed investigating Assange for publishing secret information, DOJ letter suggests; The United States is officially charging Julian Assange for hacking, a crime seemingly perfect for extradition. However, the US Attorney’s Office is also investigating him for „obtaining and disseminating secret information“, punishable by death. That is what the Department of Justice wrote in a letter we now publish, netzpolitic.org
and when snoopy dawg had unwound it, i found evidence of the hideous amount of bad blood between asange and dumbshiet-borg, both on his wiki page, a book he wrote, and interviews. the timing's right, too, as in 'afghan war logs', iirc.
but he's one of the names kristinn had hinted at, cnn had had a whole 'nother rather empty short list, but to me: the borg is the Big Deal. he'd testiy against julian in a heartbeat, and no one would give a good goddam about 'the truth'..
Does anyone see any way out of this for Assange?
"Without the right to offend, freedom of speech does not exist." Taslima Nasrin
it's hard to imagine, depending
on which 'this' you mean. even if the appeals to extradition proceeding take years, he's still fucking stuck in bellmarsh UK gitmo, in solitary 23 hours a day. ack, i'd neglected to say that i'd found this on stefania maurizzi's twitt account, wondering aloud about some phrasing on giulfgal's may 5: VIPS on Julian Assange and Freedom of the Press'. something close to 'reports say he's being interrogated by cia', perhaps tortured'.
it's really hard to think that the protests, consortium news vigils, around the globe as well the SEP's in australia...will make much of a difference, but i do admire the folks who show up for him, and for chelsea...in person.
how long will chelsea stay incarcerated for refusing to testify before a secret GJ? and of course they're hoping to flip her, as well.
Excellent, Wendy
Re this:
.
What he didn't say is that the Obama admin's DoD was contacted by a wikileaks attorney requesting assistance in redactions, but DoD basically lol'd and said not only NO, but also to give them back their classified documents without publishing anything.
Strike-through in original.
.
There's an actual excerpt of the DoD reply at the following link:
https://www.salon.com/2010/08/20/wikileaks_5/
pure gold, that history is.
i thank you for it, as i barely remember it even after reading it.
I came across this essay on MoA
B and people in the comments are talking about Assange and Wikileaks just after they started releasing their work. This is quite interesting
Wikileak's Main Aim Is To Reveal Hypocrisy
I haven't seen much about Assange, Chelsea or Wikileaks recently. Has something happened that made people stop talking about them?
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
i'm not seeing where you're trying to
aim us, snoopy. enlighten me if you will? but as the afghan war logs are certainly mentioned, i'll bring this from the borg's wiki page again:
i'd sure have to check what WL had published before 2010, though.
here's the list, but to find anything before 2010 (iraq and afghan war diaries, collateral murder, etc.) takes scrolling a long way down the bar. the titles and descriptions in the list don't lend to copy paste.
Not leading you anywhere
Just thought that had some great stuff in it and it shows how people weren't sure what Assange was doing. Just an FYI.
Oh yeah.. I had lots of things to say about this interview when I first read it a few days ago,but I forgot what I was going to say. Brain has become a sieve.
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
just b's assertion
or some of the links in comments is what i'd meant to ask. also:
ack; i'd thought your Q
was in the link to MoA you'd provided. i'd referenced the SEP's supporters rally in Australia, here's the gist: ‘Assange’s father tells demonstrators Australian government must secure son’s release’, wsws, 6 May 2019
i'll look at the new matilda, see if they have the interview; i love hearing from julian's papa.
not really.
but they do have this from may 5:
"Yesterday, Dr Lissa Johnson was grateful to speak at a rally for Julian Assange on World Press Freedom Day with Julian’s father John Shipton, broadcaster Mary Kostakidis, former Greens senator Scott Ludlam, barrister Greg Barns and parish priest and human rights activist Father Dave, among other powerful speakers. An edited transcript of Lissa’s speech is below."
this their julian assange tab, some might be from caitlin johnstone, yes?
here it is: duh...
try youtube, ya great idjit:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbhBomnV2iU]
oscar grenfell starts at about 2:45
Chelsea Manning @SaveManning 16h16 hours ago
Day 60 of @xychelsea's incarceration. (May 6, 2019) "...the government continues to abuse the grand jury process. I don’t have anything to contribute to this, or any other grand jury."-C.E.M. (4/22/19) Please donate to Chelsea's Legal Defense Fund: http://tinyurl.com/chelsealegal
closing time for me.
i'll check in the morning to see if there's any news from anderson and hrafsson's visit to belmarsh prison. just imagining it gives me the shivers
i'm goin' back in time to offer this message of love, justice and freedom to julian and chelsea:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGMOB2K78iM]
goddam, this is a hard read.
'After nearly two months in jail, Chelsea Manning submits powerful appeal for release; Betraying my principles is “a much worse prison than the government can construct”, Niles Niemuth, 7 May 2019, wsws.org
(the 8-page appeal, pdf)
Mama assange is sick again, but she'd liked this video as does kristinn. it's spot on and all, so i'll bring it.
from pamela anderson today:
with a heart-wrenching seven minute vimeo: "it's a matter of life...and death".
[video:https://vimeo.com/334640055]
i can't find the tweet w/ julian's address i'd had on one post or another; i'll try to find it later.
i found it, but the Rules were:
"send only a letter on paper, no cards, no photos or: rejected." the subtweets by now are mot sincerely depressing. (click for stand alone to see them.) jeezum crow.
even though it's not quite right
as a metaphor, it was hard not to ping 'the midnight special'; lead belly's too hard to hear the lyrics;
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T00eJSQimIk]
jezum crow; how fucked up is this? g'night julian; g'night chelsea. we're hurtin' for ya both.