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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

  • "Mad Dog" Mc Clusky says:

    Someone should go in and drag the varmint out of the embassy.

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      The funny thing “Mad Dog” is that dragging the varmint out of the embassy is likely, in spite of the posturing, the last thing the US government wants.
      If you recall, there was a dire warning from WikiLeaks a few years ago that if Julian Assange were ever to be arraigned in the US they would dump information that will make yours “Mad Dog” and the world’s eyes water.
      And I don’t think they are kidding. Call their bluff and you could find yerself looking at Royal Flush, a Full House, and right down the twin barrels of a Derringer.
      Just be happy with acting the tough guy (no risk there) and demonising the bloke and be very very careful what you wish for.

      • Kathy says:

        So you do admit he’s a varmint sugarplum. You get all het up when the US is mentioned don’t you sweetie car to tell your Aunty Kathy all about it.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Kathy, you’re not real bright are you. I was merely repeating back to the not real bright misnamed “Mad Dog” who should really be called “Slow Dog.”
          Do I get all het up? Not at all, the planet is occupied by largely by lock step half wits like yourself. Something I accept with good grace and humour.
          I admire many Americans greatly, especially those with guts and brains. Heres a sample, let them tell Kathy all about it. You are cute by the way.

          http://www.patriotsquestion911.com/

      • Milton says:

        Jean Baptiste an Assange disciple, how conventional; a true adherent!
        So rather than publish information that could “make our eyes water” they prefer to keep it as a bargaining “Trump” card, Jean. What high minded people. Too cute by half. No doubt another bluff you’ve fallen for. Surely that “dump” would make the world a better place? Nuh, didn’t think so. So much for the revolution, we’ll put it off for another day – chai anyone?

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          How you manage to interpret me as an “Assange disciple” is beyond rational contemplation but that’s how your strange mind works so we will leave it at that.
          No, it would not be good for the world. Corner those military industrial lunatics and there is potential for a disaster of an apocalyptic order.
          Try thinking Milton, I’m not completely convinced yet that it is beyond you.
          (Bugger! I think I just broke a NY resolution, “I will tell no porkies this year”. I’m too nice, I really am.)

          • Carl on the Coast says:

            “Corner those military industrial lunatics and there is potential for a disaster of an apocalyptic order. ”

            Oi! …. JB, methane and melting ice caps no longer a threat me old mate?

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Deliciously convoluted thinking there Carl. Just how do you do it!
            No, old boy, a potential disaster of one sort does not exclude an inevitable disaster of another. Trying to imagine how you think so is so fraught with risk I will not even try.
            I must report your desperate quest for a plausible glimmer of justification for your denial remains desperate.

            http://arctic-news.blogspot.com.au/2016/12/over-20-of-the-most-terrifying-images-of-2016.html

            Will humans be extinct by 2026? Seems more likely with every passing year old mate.

          • Milton says:

            Danger, or even a nuisance apocalypse, lurks behind every corner CotC. Be afraid, be very afraid and hope to high heaven that Assange remains in the embassy. That’s what the US guvmint wants.

        • Jean Baptiste says:

          Milton. Theres the thing, you have such a limited world view. Why on Earth would the US want the controversy of trying Assange? Assange, in spite of what you like to believe has considerable approval and admiration world wide.
          As the situation stands it is far better for the US image to have Assange in the situation he is in.
          Here’s a bit of fun.

          https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Passcode/2017/0110/Is-Julian-Assange-becoming-a-folk-hero-for-Trump-supporters

          • Razor says:

            The Christian Science Monitor old bean. Not nearing the end are we and deciding to have 50cents each way?

          • Jean Baptiste says:

            Just demonstrating my impartiality Razor. That’s the thing with conservative brains. You all suffer from it. If a bloke eats a salad for variety he must be a vegetarian eh?

  • Milton says:

    Dismayed, old correspondent, as the previous blog is winding up I thought i’d put these articles up again as i’m interested in your response. You’ve made clear that you’re a big fan of Keating and pretty dismissive of Reagan, so i’m guessing Thatcher isn’t one of your heroes either. Hence your feedback on these comments:
    https://theconversation.com/both-left-and-right-thatchers-undeniable-influence-on-australian-politics-13335
    http://www.solidarity.net.au/unions/labors-love-affair-with-the-market-the-keating-years/

    • Jean Baptiste says:

      A Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher fan? People don’t come any cuter than that.

    • Dismayed says:

      Milton. Sigh. Why would I want to give your delusions any more oxygen. I have refuted with facts your bile for years now. It is sad that in Australia we still have people like you who wish this nation was nothing more than a colony. Tied by the apron strings to your mother of England.. There is not point in giving an oxygen thief like you anymore you do jot have the ability to comprehend anything that does not reconfirm your false fixed ideals. The fact you are continuing to cheer the neo-liberal ways further highlights just how far off the pace you are, hypoxia related no doubt. Keating modernised this Nations approach. Thatcher ran on ideology, Reagan was and remains a joke almost as bad as yourself. I have no time for ignorant fools like you. How about you take some responsibility for continuing to support blindly and without question the worst government this nation has seen? I know I expect too much as I know you don’t have the intelligence to do any such thing. Move along your idiocy is boring.

      • Mack the Knife says:

        Dismayed you are just a nasty piece of work. If you don’t have time for people like Milton why put so much energy into the personal insults your comments overflow with, and the insults are the substance, nothing else. You have delusions of something, just what I can’t put my finger on as I am not a psychiatrist. Please go see one and report back to solve the mystery will you.

      • Milton says:

        As expected, nothing. No surprises. And I think I’ve made clear i’m no fan of Turnbull’s govt. Unlike you I’ve no blind allegiance to any party and don’t lose any skin criticising either parties. You prove your ideology prevents you from admitting that Keating pursued and implemented the same neoliberal economics as Thatcher and Reagan, even when you know he did. What a pusillanimous poseur you are. Sigh.

      • Carl on the Coast says:

        Dismayed, there’s a sentence in your 8.42am opening spray that’s obviously arse about. I’ll give you four guesses which one; the first three don’t count.

  • BASSMAN says:

    You just can’t trust the Americans or our govt. Cast you minds back to the way Hicks was tortured at the behest of Howard in the presence of an Australian staffer having committed no crime. Even Ruddock attested to that-no crime! With the approaching election, Howard cooked up a release deal with Cheney. So embarrassed was Colonel Mo Davis, the American Chief Prosecutor for detainees held at Guantanamo Bay by this he resigned and told the world of the Cheney-Howard deal and that they had no evidence to convict Hicks. The main thing about all this is NOT Hicks. It is that Howard trashed our human rights. Ditto for Assange. The govt. has abandoned him. If anything Assange has said affects ‘national security’ why weren’t all of the hacks and journalists who published his findings treated in the same manner? Bush, Blair, Howard, Abbott,Trump, Stan Laurel (Shorten), these my friends are the biggest threats to our ‘national security’ and the world is a much more dangerous place because of them and their war-mongering in the Middle East.

  • Boadicea says:

    Astute comment from one of the many pissed-off at the sellout to Apple of Federation Square in Melbourne – with not much public consultation it would seem:
    “Apple owns the world, we just live in it”.
    Saw the same thing recently in the beautiful elegant city of Aix-en-Provence. Right in the centre square an ultra modern large Apple store patrolled by sinister black clad guards who controlled entry into the store. It was hideous.
    Seems the multimillion dollar 20yr lease may be irresistable.
    I think it’s a real shame.

    • Trivalve says:

      Hong Kong you’d like. The one I saw near Times Square anyhow. Outside there were a bunch of dodgy characters selling grey market (or worse) iPhones out of cardboard boxes.

  • Hank The Yank says:

    Let him do a greasy pig run out the doors of the embassy right into the arms of the CIA.

  • Wissendorf says:

    Assange may now be an Equadorian citizen, but does that mean he has forfeited or otherwise disposed of his Australian citizenship? If he hasn’t, is Australia still responsible for consular assistance? Are the Equadorians paying for his food and upkeep? Where is he getting the funds to maintain this farce?

    • Jack The Insider says:

      Hasn’t renounced as far as I know.

    • Penny says:

      I don’t know about the funds Wiss, but Julie Bishop did offer him Australian consul assistance back in 2016. Don’t think it suited his agenda somehow as it would make his claim that Australia doesn’t look after Australian citizens abroad a bit of a fallacy.

      • Razor says:

        Couldn’t agree more Penny. I know for a fact our consular staff pull out all stops to assist Aussies OS. They may not like the person they ate assistimg or agree with what they have done but they dig in none the less.

  • Uncle Quentin says:

    As Oscar Wilde said, “there is only one thing worse that being noticed, and that is not being noticed”…

  • Mack the Knife says:

    The next installment will probably be a Hollywood movie so I don’t reckon he has used up his 15 minutes of fame yet. The one on Snowdon was a bit of a yawn, and Cupboard Boy just hasn’t got a much of a ring to it, probably will be a flop. Could weird it up a bit, “Bad Boy Julian”.

    • Dwight says:

      Sadly, there’s been three already I believe.
      Underground (2012)
      The Fifth Estate (2013)
      Risk (2016)

      • Wissendorf says:

        Who’s your tip to be at the Bowl? Sadly for us, our favourites capitulated. Bills threw away their wildcard with a crumbling 10-3 loss to the Jags in the first playoff game, and GBP, after a great start to the season simply fell away. I’m tipping Vikings v Pats in the big one. Viks have gone from strength to strength since mid season and only have Philly to beat, both on 14-3. Pats have been solid all season, also 14-3 and Jags don’t have Brady.

  • Bill Grieve says:

    Maybe he fears for his life , who knows there could be someone waiting around the corner from the embassy with a poison tipped umbrella 🙂 …

  • Henry Blofeld says:

    Assange is a stinky fellow too it seems, Mr Insider, as read “Staff at the Ecuador Embassy in London grew tired of the whiffing WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who reportedly does not attend to his own personal hygiene”. Very smelly and “cheesy” chap indeed. Poo, someone should introduce this wretch to a cake of soap!
    https://tinyurl.com/y83e6p3c

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