April
16, 2023
Seven
progressive Democrats from the House of Representatives have signed a letter to
Attorney General Merrick Garland calling for the Biden administration to drop
the charges against Julian Assange and cease seeking his extradition.
It’s
a good letter as far as these things go. It lists the major press freedom
advocacy groups and human rights watchdogs who have called for Assange to be
released, correctly identifies the threats this case poses to press freedoms
around the world, and avoids sneaking in any of the classic smears against
Assange that normally work their way into high-level mainstream objections to
the persecution of the WikiLeaks founder. It’s an undeniably good thing that
this letter happened.
That
said, I’d like to bump this portion of the letter into the spotlight for a
moment and highlight a some bits for emphasis:
The prosecution of Julian
Assange for carrying out journalistic activities greatly diminishes America’s
credibility as a defender of these values, undermining the United States’ moral
standing on the world stage, and effectively granting cover to authoritarian
governments who can (and do) point to Assange’s prosecution to reject
evidence-based criticisms of their human rights records and as a precedent that
justifies the criminalization of reporting on their activities. Leaders of
democracies, major international bodies, and parliamentarians around the globe
stand opposed to the prosecution of Assange. Former United Nations Special
Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer and the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for
Human Rights Dunja Mijatović have both opposed the extradition. Australian
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has called on the U.S. government to end its
pursuit of Assange. Leaders of nearly every major Latin American nation,
including Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Brazilian President
Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and Argentinian President Alberto Fernández have
called for the charges to be dropped. Parliamentarians from around the world, including
the United Kingdom, Germany, and Australia, have all called for Assange not to
be extradited to the U.S.
This global outcry against
the U.S. government’s prosecution of Mr. Assange has highlighted conflicts
between the America’s stated values of press freedom and its pursuit of Mr.
Assange. The Guardian wrote “The US has this week proclaimed itself the beacon
of democracy in an increasingly authoritarian world. If Mr. Biden is serious
about protecting the ability of the media to hold governments accountable, he
should begin by dropping the charges brought against Mr. Assange.” Similarly,
the Sydney Morning Herald editorial board stated, “At a time when US President
Joe Biden has just held a summit for democracy, it seems contradictory to go to
such lengths to win a case that, if it succeeds, will limit freedom of speech.”
This
to my mind is the most impactful part of the letter, in the sense that it’s the
part that’s most likely to actually grab the attention of those responsible for
Assange’s ongoing persecution. Indeed, it appears to have been deliberately
crafted to do so.
Imprisoning
Assange in Belmarsh while working toward the unprecedented step of trying a
publisher under the Espionage Act does indeed undermine the United States’
moral standing on the world stage, and does indeed grant governments the US
doesn’t like the ability to dismiss Washington’s hand-wringing about human
rights as cynical performative hypocrisy. But while the authors of the letter
to Biden’s attorney general frame this as something illegitimate that is done
contrary to facts in evidence, in reality the moral authority of the United
States to criticize the human rights records of foreign nations has been
irreparably destroyed. Not just within the reality tunnels of foreign
propagandists, but in actuality.
When
people talk about “moral authority” it’s often in an abstract, philosophical
way, like it’s a matter of logical coherence: “You’ve no moral authority on
this subject because you are a hypocrite and your stated position contradicts
your own actions.” Like it’s just an argument about whether the correct
intellectual checkboxes have been ticked, and if they have not it means you get
to wag your finger at them and declare a mental checkmate. But the question of
moral authority boils down to something much more tangible than that.
Moral
authority is a measure of one’s qualifications for leadership on moral matters.
If I am known as a moral person who makes moral decisions, it makes sense for
people to look to me for leadership on questions of morality. If I am known as
an immoral person, then nobody’s coming to me for moral guidance, because they
understand that I do not have the qualifications for that role.
So
when people try to frame Assange’s persecution as a matter of public perception
and fighting foreign narratives about the US, they are incorrect. The issue is
not that Assange’s persecution makes the US look bad, the issue is that it
proves the US is bad.
And
of course we didn’t really need Assange’s persecution to figure that out for
ourselves. The US is the only government on earth who has spent the 21st
century killing people by the millions in wars for geostrategic dominance,
who’s been strangling populations with starvation sanctions and blockades
around the world, who is circling the planet with hundreds of military bases
with the goal of global domination, and who’s been continually increasing the
risk of nuclear armageddon with its rapidly escalating agendas geared toward
securing unipolar hegemony. Assange’s case just makes its complete lack of
moral standing much clearer.
This
will all still be the case even if Assange is released. The US empire will
still have spent years imprisoning a journalist for the crime of good
journalism, will still be the world’s worst warmonger, and will still be the
world’s most egregious violator of human rights. Its moral standing is dead and
buried, and the world should stop following its lead in creating a just and
ethical world. It simply does not have the qualifications to do so. In fact, no
power structure on earth is less qualified.
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