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Assange’s greatest fear is anonymity

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EARLIER this week, I joked on social media that Assange has become so used to confined spaces, it would be wrong not to lock him up again.

The truth is the Ecuadorians have grown tired of hosting Assange in their tiny Knightsbridge embassy. The man sometimes mocked as Cupboard Boy actually resides in a converted women’s toilet where he has a kitchenette, a treadmill, a bed and a desk.

It is not entirely dissimilar to a standard prison cell, albeit with internet access and while Assange and his rapidly dwindling coterie of supporters bleat about his incarceration there is no doubt it is entirely self-imposed.

In 2012, Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa facilitated and supported Assange’s application for asylum.

Correa, a Hugo Chavez ally and member of the Latin America ‘pink’ leftist movement, had engaged in a form of international attention seeking, a sort of geopolitical ‘look at me’ exercise.

Correa was incapable of understanding Assange’s detention within the embassy would lead necessarily to a sharper international focus of political conditions within his own country (his government had a dismal record in terms of media control and routinely locked up journalists that failed to push the government line), limit trade opportunities with foreign countries, especially with the US and lead to a diplomatic impasse with the UK.

In May last year Lenín Moreno became President of Ecuador. While Moreno is cut from the same ideological cloth as his predecessor, he does not share Correa’s enthusiasm for Assange.

This is where we are now. The Ecuadorians want Assange out. They won’t get to the point of actually pushing him out the front door. They are seeking a negotiated settlement that will spare them further embarrassment. So, the first step was to seek diplomatic immunity for Assange which would allow him to leave the UK and not face charges there (an outstanding warrant exists for his arrest in the UK for jumping bail) or anywhere else.

This was a farcical attempt and the British Foreign Office quite rightly rejected it. Yesterday, Assange tweeted a photo of himself in a Ecuadorean soccer jumper and shortly afterwards, the Ecuadorean foreign minister, María Espinosa, announced he had become a citizen of Ecuador. This creates a mild complication for the British authorities but does not prevent his arrest should he make his way out of the embassy.

In 2015, the London Met withdrew its patrols of the immediate area, citing manpower and resource issues. In all probability Assange would get a couple of blocks down the road before the inevitable crash tackle. More likely, should the stalemate continue, he will be surreptitiously taken into custody with the tacit approval of the Ecuadorians.

Assange is said to fear arrest by US authorities and often tweets darkly about the existence of secret warrants. Whether they exist or not is unclear but late last year the US Attorney-General, Jeff Sessions, said the arrest of Assange had become “a priority.”

Assange is a wanted man for publishing the Iraq War and Afghan War documents leaks and perhaps the most damaging, the US Diplomatic cable leak in 2010 of which the US says threatened its national security. Obviously the US won’t say what assets were put at risk but the blythe manner in which Wikileaks published that material without due analysis, editorial or curatorial oversight, was an extraordinarily dangerous and callous exercise.

Since that time, many of Wikileaks personnel have departed, concerned at Assange’s ‘my way or the highway’ style, which is said to verge on the megalomaniacal. You might say that he is now relatively harmless but he retains significant support from dark forces around the globe.

The Steele dossier on Trump and Russia basically described Wikileaks as a Kremlin asset. Bear in mind that document is not designed to be a dot point version of gospel truth. Intelligence dossiers rely on second hand information, gossip and speculative theories posed by others.

In the context of the DNC email dump, it might be just as likely that Assange could argue he acted out of malice towards Hillary Clinton and given his reported hatred of the Clintons, that would be entirely credible.

But in 2012 Assange appeared on Russia today (RT), a propaganda channel that essentially regurgitates Putin and the Kremlin’s world view. A year later Wikileaks tweeted it had received hacked material that would embarrass the Russian government. It quickly walked the tweet back claiming it would only be embarrassing to some Russian companies. In any event it came to nothing. No document dump, no leak, nothing.

In April 2017, CIA Director Mike Pompeo (a Trump appointee) said of Assange and his organisation “It is time to call it out for what it really is — a non-state hostile intelligence service often abetted by state actors like Russia.”

While Assange has rejected the Russian doormat tag, it’s safe to say that if Assange isn’t a Kremlin asset, he’s doing a very good impersonation of one. His supporters from seven years ago have dropped off because what Assange and Wikileaks claimed to be back then — freedom fighters earnestly engaged in the business of throwing light on the world’s dark secrets — has been revealed to be a partisan exercise based on the whims of the organisation’s leader.

He is right to fear arrest by the US but given his circumstances over the last five years it can’t be imprisonment he fears. He has become accustomed to confined spaces. A prison cell would not cause a sudden surge of claustrophobia.

The real reason Assange refuses to leave the Ecuadorean embassy and face justice is not incarceration but the ignominy and ultimately the anonymity a prison sentence will bring. Assange, the narcissistic scofflaw who once was a human headline, can’t abide the thought of becoming a nobody.

And that is really all you need to know about Julian Assange.

This article was published in The Australian on 12 January 2018.

167 Comments

  • BASSMAN says:

    No matter what is said about Assange he was correct to expose the sickening footage showing US soldiers shooting dead 18 civilians from a helicopter in Iraq. There is no way this can be condoned. If a bloke can be imprisoned for exposing such wanton killing then the wrong people are in prison. These people would have had families. National Security my arse. The Looters here use that term every time they want to squirm out of something that upsets them…usually the truth!Regarding this singular fact…imagine what we DON’T know regarding the Americans and their history of ‘collateral damage’.

    • Bella says:

      Exactly Bassman & I can’t see the UK giving Assange safe passage to Ecuador, more like guaranteed passage to the US to face a fixed trial then locked up forever. The UK has repeatedly refused to say that he won’t be extradited to the US. That says it all.

      Assange founded an organisation that published secret damning information on war crimes from anonymous sources & now the world knows. In light of that, does anyone really believe the embarrased USA military powers that be will EVER let him out of custody once they have him?
      I find it rotten to the core that Australia has pretended from the get go to defend his rights as a citizen of this country, when they never have.
      Not surprised though, we deal with other nations on our knees so why would this be any different.

    • Dwight says:

      If you’ve listened to the ravings of his mother, he absorbed his anti-Americanism with his milk. Acting on it as he did, and expecting the US to just let it go was his personal delusion. Stupidity has a cost that can’t be avoided.

      • Jean Baptiste says:

        And how exactly do you know he expected the US to “just let it go.?”
        The blokes got more cojones than anyone here will ever have, and he’s no coward, just not an idiot willing to hand himself over to a Grand Jury, the likes of which Geoffrey Robertson noted would convict a ham sandwich.
        Meanwhile the real treacherous and treasonous criminals attend black tie dinners and congratulate themselves on their billions made by successfully manipulating the worlds oil supply by the most despicable artifices.
        What was that said about us hating those who try to tell us the truth about ourselves?

      • Bella says:

        Do you really believe Wikileaks decided to publish such explosive information without any knowledge of the resulting punishment? Please Dwight.
        Assange is a guy who’s spent his entire adult life seeking then exposing what governments would kill to keep hidden & unlike those in power who intentionally dissemble truths, he’s had the daring to illuminate their lies.
        It takes guts to be him & there are very few intrepid men left on this planet who will risk their own freedom for a cause.

  • Trivalve says:

    So why not a clandestine bolt to Russia and get a two-bedroom dacha with Snowden?

  • Francene says:

    If Assange is such a man of conviction why doesn’t he just step outside the Consulate get arrested and take his lumps Jack the Insider or is he a coward?

  • wraith says:

    Didn’t you just add to his notoriety? Sorry JtI, he hasn’t slipped between the memory cracks yet because you can still pull a blog about him out of your, where do you pull blog ideas?
    I cant say I can blame him for not wanting to be a guest of the Americans, they do look unpleasant angry and confused these days. And I can understand his current hosts wanting him out. If it was me playing his landlord, I’d slip a micky in his milo and carry his cot out onto the road while he was sleeping. That actually could work!! No international incident required, just keep your face deadpan and tell’em he sleep walks!!
    cheers dears.

    • Milton says:

      A lovely insight into the machinations of your mind, wraith! Then again, dead men tell no tales and he could resort to “suicide”. Not sure how far diplomatic immunity extends.

    • Penny says:

      Or move the Embassy Wraith and not tell him. Let the new tenants deal with him…

      • Dwight says:

        Fiendishly clever Penny!

        • Trivalve says:

          Clever indeed. They do that occasionally in Canberra in Axis of Evil Street (I think there’s some warning given though. ) Which country would be the most interesting? We know it won’t be the US given that they have a new one. Too small for Russia. North Korea perhaps?

  • Dwight says:

    One of the global elite who considers the masses to be “the great unwashed” is actually greatly unwashed.

  • Rhys Needham says:

    Would Trump dare have him locked up since Assange may well have helped him win the election alongside Anthony Weiner flashing 15-year old girls online?

  • Carl on the Coast says:

    Those who may have been closely following Julian Assange’s leaking career, including the present confined personal privation he finds himself in, may be aware that his career began to unravel and became unstuck as a result of his apparent hormonal urges that flowed from his carnal activities during a sojourn to Sweden some years ago.

    If one were to be pressed for a moral explanation as to his present predicament, perhaps one could opine that he had too many balls in the air and he should not have attempted to bat on a sticky wicket.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      That’s reckless vandalism injurious to the English language Carl.
      I calculate that if 3% of the population wrote like that it would be a fatal blow.

  • Angry Dude says:

    If only Cupboard Boy had used this app https://legalfling.io/ whilst in Sweden.

  • Milton says:

    From what I can gather his second greatest fear may be soap.
    Anywho, on the off chance that he gets sent to US and is sentenced to jail is it likely that he may not have to go to jail because of the time he has already served?
    The chap certainly has a thick layer. They reckon guests are like fish, they go off after 3 days but Assange takes the cake. He is literally exploiting a country and its embassy for his own ends. You’d have to feel sorry for the people that work there.

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Good article Mr Insider on the imho cowardly non law abiding weasel Assange. I want to see the British wallopers crash tackle him, as you have alluded to, and the cuffs go on this pompous time waster. Must be a while since he had a “nookie” too, any light can be shed on that matter Mr Insider?

    • Trabvitch says:

      Monastic or onanistic seems to be the answer. And maybe, given his narcissism, he has married himself.

    • Bella says:

      If Assange is “non law abiding” what do you call the air crew who made false claims of a firefight then illegally murdered 18 civilians in Iraq?
      This one piece of leaked footage would be just the tip of the iceberg too so exactly how many innocents have been killed in this US conflict?
      What we’re told is a far cry from the truth.
      Wikileaks proved that.

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