A Retrospective Look At The Work WikiLeaks Made Possible As Assange Remains Silenced

in #wikileaks7 years ago

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This article was originally published via Disobedient Media and is my own intellectual property.


An argument is only as good as the evidence it cites. For this reason, WikiLeaks embodies one the most significant information armories in existence. John Pilger spoke to this importance when he compared WikiLeaks with a mainstream press that he called nothing more than "state-stenography." In the wake of news of Assange being cut off from the outside world by order of the Ecuadorian government, Pilger also wrote that the "silencing of Assange is the silencing of us all."

After this author and other independent journalists, whistleblowers and friends of Assange took part in a ten-hour vigil to call for the journalist's freedom of speech to be upheld under the banner #ReconnectJulian, many have continued to publicize the injustice of his inability to speak and have contact with the outside world on top of his ongoing arbitrary confinement.

As this writer previously noted, a topic of discussion during the online vigil centered on the irreplaceable impact WikiLeaks has had through the documentation of evidence of corruption and war-crimes. The consequences of WikiLeaks' most well-known accomplishments cannot be overstated.

In a 2016 conversation with Democracy Now, Julian Assange described WikiLeaks:

"....WikiLeaks has become the rebel library of Alexandria. It is the single most significant collection of information that doesn’t exist elsewhere, in a searchable, accessible, citable form, about how modern institutions actually behave. And it’s gone on to set people free from prison, where documents have been used in their court cases; hold the CIA accountable for renditions programs; feed into election cycles, which have resulted in the termination of, in some case—or contributed to the termination of governments, in some cases, taken the heads of intelligence agencies, ministers of defense and so on. So, you know, our civilization can only be as good as our knowledge of what our civilization is. We can’t possibly hope to reform that which we do not understand."
The resonance stemming from the information published by WikiLeaks extends infinitely beyond the scope of a few well-known issues like the Iraq War Logs, Collateral Murder, Cablegate or Vault 7. Taking stock of the work impacted directly by WikiLeaks from even one small outlet like Disobedient Media creates an immense array of topics, in a microcosm of the depth and breadth of ammunition WikiLeaks has given to anti-establishment journalism.

For example, William Craddick's ground-breaking coverage of the Laura Silsby child trafficking scandal would not have been possible without the WikiLeaks publication of emails showing Clinton and State Department interference on Silsby's behalf. Craddick wrote of multiple email chains published by WikiLeaks which demonstrated that "Clinton intervened politically on behalf of Laura Silsby."

Likewise, WikiLeaks' publication of the Dutroux dossier strengthened Disobedient Media's coverage of the fact that court records showed, without doubt, that Marc Dutroux was one link in a vast chain of human traffickers with strong enough establishment ties that Dutroux was greatly enriched through the activity. Disobedient Media wrote:

"There were over eight hundred mentions of Nihoul in the WikiLeaks dossier, published in 2009. The notes record the presence of a photo of Nihoul with “various political figures... Nihoul proposed to reduce [traffic] girls from Eastern countries...WikiLeaks’ Dutroux dossier also shows large financial transactions, maps of numerous European countries, and the presence of international currencies including Morrocan and Saudi Arabian money. The dossier shows payments of hundreds of thousands of francs to Michelle Martin, Dutroux’s then-wife, and to Dutroux’s personal bank account."

Disobedient Media's coverage of Greg Bucceroni's testimony of an East Coast child abuse network was yet another article published by this outlet that was bolstered with documentation from WikiLeaks. Our report stated:

"WikiLeaks emails sent during the crisis reveal that in behind-the-scenes discussion of Rendell’s Haitian efforts, Hillary Clinton’s aides characterized Rendell as extremely motivated to remove the children from Haiti as quickly as possible. The discussion included statements by Clinton aides showing an awareness that the children Rendell sought to fly from the earthquake-ravaged island nation included 12 minors who were not involved in any adoption process."

The following screenshot illustrates the extremely relevant email chain published by WikiLeaks.


Excerpt from WikiLeaks-published email showing discussion of Rendell’s efforts to remove orphans from Haiti

Disobedient Media also cited WikiLeaks publications in coverage of the Zoe's Ark scandal, as well as our writing on Dyncorp. Child trafficking and abuse was far from the only topic reported by Disobedient Media that was supported by WikiLeaks documents. This author also cited Assange's text 'Google is Not What it Seems,' in Disobedient Media's coverage of the weaponization of artificial intelligence, and again in this author's report on Eric Schmidt's unusually hasty resignation from his executive role at Alphabet, Google's parent company.

WikiLeaks' publication of The Yemen Files informed Disobedient Media's coverage of the bipartisan US support for Saudi Arabia's ongoing genocide perpetrated against Yemeni civilians, revealing that the US was funding/arming both sides of the conflict, profiting very literally from the resulting deaths of thousands.

In Disobedient Media's coverage of findings stemming from this author's collaboration with Suzie Dawson in the journalistic initiative known as DecipherYou, which analyzes never-before-scrutinized Snowden documents, WikiLeaks' files were used to cross-reference issues of interest. This proved extremely useful in bolstering our understanding of the SID Today documents, in once instance expanding our understanding of the history of PRISM.

Disobedient Media's groundbreaking report on the scandal surrounding the removal of former South Korean President Park from her position also cited a WikiLeaks cable. The cable described rumors among the South Korean public that Park's close spiritual advisor, Choi Tae-Min, represented a “Rasputin” type figure with “complete control over Park’s body and soul during her formative years.”

WikiLeaks has also been instrumental in informing the public of the blatant corruption stagnating the Democratic Party establishment, which acted to undercut Senator Bernie Sander's campaign in favor of Clinton during the 2016 Democratic Primary race. Without WikiLeaks' publication of the DNC Emails, little of the critical evidence of corruption would be available for the public to bear witness to. Legacy press would easily dismiss valid accusations of corruption as the fevered conspiracy theories of "Bernie Bros." WikiLeaks' role in proving the subversion of the American democratic process at the hands of the Democratic party cannot be overestimated in its importance.

Without the publication of the DNC emails (and the Guccifer 2.0 documents which were most likely published as an effort to smear WikiLeaks), it is unlikely that the DNC fraud lawsuit would have come into existence.


Image: Getty

As Disobedient Media reported, the defense counsel of the DNC and Debbie Wasserman Schultz have not only been forced to state outright that such corruption took place, they have actually argued that this primary rigging was protected by the first amendment. It is highly likely that, without WikiLeaks, none of this would have ever taken place. Likewise, the appalling censorship, later admitted by Twitter, of the #DNCLeak hashtag during the run-up to the 2016 Presidential election would never have come to light without WikiLeaks' publication giving rise to the tag in the first place.

This author noted that the DNC emails were so damning, that it seems they spawned the entire Trump-Russia narrative in an effort to deflect from the contents of the documents: "The publication of the DNC emails served as the starting point of the constantly evolving Russian hacking narrative, which has changed in the face of evidence within the chrysalis of media salivation from accusations of a “hack” to accusations of “collusion,” and finally, to accusations of mere Russian social media “trolling.”

Clearly, simply in viewing the range of work WikiLeaks documents have supported in Disobedient Media's reporting over the course of less than two years of work, the range and depth of diversity in the type of material WikiLeaks provides evidence for is at once shocking and awe-inspiring. As Julian Assange remains out of contact with the outside world, it is a timely reminder to take stock of the value WikiLeaks provides to the public and independent media in so many different areas. With this context in mind, the ability of Assange to speak his mind and communicate with the public as the face of the organization he leads becomes more important than ever.

In light of all this, please consider donating to Julian Assange's legal defense fund.

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We owe so much to Wikileaks that it's hard to fathom. It's particularly hard to fathom why anyone who claims to care about free speech and liberty would not be appalled by the unjust containment of Julian Assange.

But I consider it a good sign how hard the establishment is fighting to silence him and the revelations made through Wikileaks... They are showing their fear of what an informed populace can do to disrupt the business as usual of the Deep State.

Agreed! It really is difficult to comprehend the positive impact they've had. I wanted to write this to hopefully emphasize how important it is to keep loudly defending Assange and Wikileaks. :)

And please remove the flags on my comments, that is nothing short of denying free speech. I am a Assange supporter and I have just as much right as anybody else to share my view/opinions on the matter.

He's not there because of free speech, he's there because he skipped out on bail. Those charges in Sweden were probably a bogus cover to jail him because of his free speech but we will never know because the charges have been dropped. There's no arrest warrant in the US for him, he's done nothing illegal, printing something someone gave you is not illegal unless you were the one who stole them. They would have to have pretty compelling evidence of a crime to get a warrant for his arrest, a warrant could be issued as a person of interest in a crime but unless he confesses or they have solid proof he hacked into any US systems there's nothing there that can hold him. He should just come out and do his little bit for bail jumping and take his chances that the US doesn't have what it needs to actually extradite him. Even if they do, like I said, unless he confesses or has substantial evidence they can't hold him. I think he fears for his life more than for arrest, the Clintons have a long list of people who have died after crossing their path.

"Those charges in Sweden... the charges have been dropped."

No, there were never any charges in Sweden, and the investigation was dropped years later than it should have been thanks to pressure from the UK government in 2013.

"There's no arrest warrant for him in the US."

That is absolutely untrue, there is a maximal probability that a secret indictment exists against him. In the wake of Vault 7's publication, Reuters reported: "Federal prosecutors in Alexandria, Virginia, have expanded a long-running grand jury investigation into WikiLeaks to include the leak of Central Intelligence Agency documents to the website, a source familiar with the inquiry said.U.S. officials have confirmed that Alexandria-based prosecutors have been conducting a federal grand jury investigation into WikiLeaks and its sources. Some court documents on elements of the inquiry have been made public."

During the ten-hour #ReconnectJulian vigil, CIA whistleblower John Kiriakou confirmed the extremely high likelihood that secret charges await Assange in the United States, specifying that such charges would likely be filed in the Eastern District Court of Virginia, which he said is known as “the Espionage court.” Kiriakou explained that this was because no national security defendant had ever won a case there, and that it is the home of the Central Intelligence Agency. He said: “[Assange] couldn’t possibly get a fair trial in the Eastern District of Virginia.”

Caitlin Johnstone did a fantastic job summing this issue of the military efforts to destroy Assange, and I will leave you with her words on the matter:

"Julian Assange cannot “leave whenever he wants”. A judge with severely corrupt ties ruled in February that his arrest warrant still stands for an absurd bail-jumping charge from 2012 that Assange has already served his sentence for many times over according to the law as it is written. As soon as he sets foot outside the embassy he will most certainly be arrested, and then most certainly extradited to the US where the Trump administration is aggressively pursuing his arrest.

Chelsea Manning was tortured. CIA black sites exist. The hoards of online trolls promulgating the narrative that Assange can “leave whenever he wants” would crack like eggs under the treatment that is inflicted upon individuals who have dared to stand up to the US-centralized empire.

Assange isn’t hiding from justice, he is hiding from injustice. There is no reason to believe that this draconian empire would give him a fair trial and humane treatment. He can no more “leave whenever he wants” than he could if there was a firing squad stationed outside the embassy door.

And now this same western empire has pressured Ecuador into cutting off Assange’s internet access, phone calls and visitors to its siege, with electronic jammers being placed inside the embassy to make doubly certain that he is completely cut off from the world. A whole new array of weapons have been added to the empire’s siege, and it’s getting a lot hotter in there."

Chelsea Manning wasn't tortured, not in the true sense of torture, please go view my comment on that thread to Caitlin. This isn't a third world country that throws people in a dungeon.

Believe me nothing like a arrest warrant for Assange would be a secret here anymore with all the leaking. It's appalling to say the least. People have lost all confidence in the intelligence community here. They can investigate and assemble all they want but it doesn't mean they are going to come up with connections....maybe that's what Assange is afraid of, that they did, but if he knows there is no way they could he has nothing to fear by threats that, in my opinion, are made to coerce him into self containment. You have to admit if you don't have strong enough evidence against someone there's no better way to jail them then if they opt to kept themselves contained. Like I said in a prior comment people here have voting power and any move against Assange is going to be met with that voting power and the politicians know that. Furthermore, in my personal opinion he'd better off to come out under the Trump administration then to wait and take a chance with another democratic administration in the future, those people are so angry that Hillary lost they still can't get over it and would be more than likely to apply extreme amount of pressure to hang Assange anyway they could find.

Curated for #informationwar (by @openparadigm)
Relevance:Exploring the Impact of Wikileaks
Our Purpose

Great round up. History will look back on Julian Assange as one of the most important figures of the early 21st century.

Wonder what kind of a trade off that is for his kids.

The problem is that the average person is completely powerless to do anything about this. When the state is determined to get it's way and not budge, in the face of all criticism and protest, they usually get their way. I know that sounds pessimistic, but this battle has been going on for so long, that it's hard to see how they will suddenly have a change in their stance. If there was, I think it would have happened by now.

On a brighter note, I'm sure everyone feels a sigh of relief that we've all been downgraded from Russian bots to Russian trolls...

Thanks for a great article!

I understand, but there are things we can all do: Donation is one of them, and the other is standing up for Wikileaks on social media by retweeting and sharing their work, as well as the work of those that support them - John Pilger, Craig Murray, the list is endless. We can inform ourselves, and armed with that information, speak with our own friends and families about the importance of Wikileaks and why fighting for Assange's press freedoms and human rights is literally an act that serves the interest of ourselves and the whole public. I know this sounds long winded, apologies!

Thanks for the reply and it wasn't long winded. I have never had a facebook or twitter account and to be honest I'm not planning on changing that now. I knew what their gig was from a quite a while ago, so refused to sign up. Of course the other options you mentioned, are available to us all.

On another note, I'm not sure if you realise this or not, but you also have a few people on this platform targeting yourself and other independent/left leaning journalists. It's being done by downvoting your posts and your comments section, to try and silence certain opinions. Anything that is anti-war/anti establishment is the common thread and pattern. It doesn't really hurt you that much and is something you probably won't even notice. It does however annoy the crap out of your smaller followers. This is not random or coincidental (deliberate down voting patterns documented) and is a censorship campaign through a network of smaller accounts. Take a closer look at the votes and notice how some of them are negative.

I know your are extremely busy, but you may want to have a quick read through a recent post I wrote about this very topic, as I actually think it's an attempt (on a much smaller scale) of emulating the censorship campaign on other platforms. How's that for a long winded response? Anyway here's the link to the post. Just a note that they are starting to use other accounts, that were not in my original post.

https://steemit.com/steemit/@palikari123/targeted-flagging-of-posts-and-comments-from-accounts-heather2000-and-thinkingtime

In this instance we are not talking about the average person, Assange is considered a hero by most here in the US for saving us from a Hillary presidency, that won't be forgotten and there is power in numbers, voting power and any move against him will be met with that power.

People tend to feel powerless, but there is a lot of power in just speaking your mind.
And now there is steemit where we can vote on other people who speak their minds. So maybe that may make a difference. That would however need people to start speaking their minds a bit more.

So people, speak your minds, get some ideas out there and see what we can come up with. Not just for Julian but also for ourselves. Julian really needs to be able to connect with his family, and quick! But meanwhile we also need to protect or own rights. Do the work what Julian has been doing FOR US all those years. The least we can do is chip in and speak our minds, right?

Our combined creativity can move this mountain. A mountain is merely a stack of grains. In the dessert the wind moves mountains every single day.

@elizbethleavos moved a grain, @palikari123 moved a grain @bifilarcoil also moved a grain.
Who has a creative idea to move the next grain? Pick it up and move it.

I like to move-it move-it.
:-)

Let's wait for the next downgrade.

I'm frankly, surprised he isn't in Gitmo yet.
Clearly free speech is a danger to the US Empire. Many won't rest until Assange is dead or in Gitmo.
If we cannot save this human, there will be chilling effect on speech.

Huge chilling effect on everything we should be fighting for.

I ask you yesterday to remove the censorship flags on my post, because that's all those flags represent is censorship in this case, that was not the intention of the flagging system. I will file a complaint with steemit for abuse by way of censorship to try and resolve this situation if the flags are not removed by tomorrow. When people resteem your articles that gives you extra exposure but if you are going to censor people for their opinion you give the person who resteemed your article a serious lack of doubt about reading anything they resteem and the character of that person they resteemed as someone who will censor what you say. You should be appreciative of open and honest engagement for this site has a serious lack of people willing to engage and your behavior only discourages people.

WikiLeaks is not classified as a terrorist organization, nor is Assange considered a terrorist, he'll never go to Gitmo if he ever does get arrested and extradited to the US. There would be mass protest out in the streets if that ever happened.

How are you justifying your blatant disregard for reality? Jesus. Mike Pompeo directly compared Wikileaks with Al Qaeda:

" CIA Director lambasted the journalistic organization as a threat on par with Al Qaeda. Pompeo said of Al Qaeda and Wikileaks: “They don’t have a flag at the UN, but they represent real threats to the United States of America.”"

Pompeo also classified Wikileaks as a "hostile non-state intelligence service," and has devoted a huge amount of energy to destroying Assange. Jeff Sessions has called Assange's arrest a priority. That arrest predicates that there must be US charges against Assange. The existence of these charges was confirmed even by state propoganda like CNN.

Screen Shot 2018-04-03 at 9.53.49 AM.png

I don't know what planet you're getting your information from, but it's clearly not the one we live on.

There's nothing there, no terrorist links, no murders, bombings, nothing but publishing, those same materials were published by news outlets in the US....do you see any of them sitting in jail? Unless there's a direct link to him or his organization hacking into systems publishing isn't a strong enough charge. Any judge is going to tell them that Pompeo may feel terrorized by having that information published but that doesn't mean Assange is a terrorist. What they want is to keep him contained, they want to know where he is at, what he is doing, what he is up to, to easily monitor him so threatening him with meaningless charges is the only way to keep him self contained by fear. For bail jumping charges have to be pretty serious, enough evidence would have had to be presented for the likelihood he was trying to escape a long sentence, that isn't happening here, at best he'd get fined maybe a small sentence of a few days in jail. BUT....using that to scare him along with threats from the US ensures that he self contains himself, where he can easily be monitored, where they can watch who is coming and going...it's all a ploy because they know they don't have enough evidence to charge him with anything less then what they'd have to charge publishers with who have done the exact same thing. They also know he is considered a hero by most people, those same people have voting power, protest power....many, many people here in the US aren't going to forget he saved us from a Hillary presidency. They aren't going to take it lightly if they mishandled Assange....and the powers that be know that, they know that all they have is threats to keep him contained because they can't keep him contained any other way for any duration of time significant enough to keep him silenced. Personally I think he fears for his life more than arrest, any good lawyer is going to get him off the bail jumping and fighting extradition to the US could take years in court but like I said the US would have to have strong evidence against him to warrant such a request. Meddling in a US election isn't going to work either because there's plenty of evidence our government does the same exact thing to other countries. So what all of you are missing in all of this is that they have managed to, by way of threats and intimidation, jail Assange inside the embassy, they've met their objective and that's the real story here, imprisoned without due process.

If the US was considering a legal process, guided by due process, as you presume is the case, then:
The US would simply extradite Assange, under legal processes based on International Law.
The method they have choosen, is to cut him off and make an example out of him, as Bush/Obama/Trump did/do in this never-ending War of Terror.

Great article.
A small point, though, is that you started it with a factual error: "An argument is only as good as the evidence it cites."
A good argument can persuade solely on the basis of sound logic, even in the absence of any citation.
Absolutes can be tricky :)

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