Saturday, June 29, 2019

The torture of Julian Assange



Roll of dishonor

It's hard to believe that there are any real journalists in control of these "news" outlets.
UN expert's op-ed rejected by the
Guardian,
Times of London,
Financial Times, 
Sydney Morning Herald,
Australian,
Canberra Times,
Telegraph,
New York Times,
Washington Post,
Thomson Reuters Foundation,
Newsweek



By NILS MELZER
UN Special Rapporteur on Torture

On the occasion of the International Day in Support of Torture Victims, 26 June 2019

I know, you may think I am deluded. How could life in an Embassy with a cat and a skateboard ever amount to torture? That’s exactly what I thought, too, when Assange first appealed to my office for protection. Like most of the public, I had been subconsciously poisoned by the relentless smear campaign, which had been disseminated over the years. So it took a second knock on my door to get my reluctant attention. But once I looked into the facts of this case, what I found filled me with repulsion and disbelief.

Surely, I thought, Assange must be a rapist! But what I found is that he has never been charged with a sexual offence. True, soon after the US had encouraged allies to find reasons to prosecute Assange, two women made the headlines in Sweden. One of them claimed he had ripped a condom, and the other that he had failed to wear one, in both cases during consensual intercourse — not exactly scenarios that have the ring of "rape" in any language other than Swedish. Mind you, each woman even submitted a condom as evidence. The first one, supposedly worn and torn by Assange, revealed no DNA whatsoever — neither his, nor hers, nor anybody else’s. Go figure. The second one, used but intact, supposedly proved "unprotected" intercourse. Go figure, again.

The women even texted that they never intended to report a crime but were "railroaded" into doing so by zealous Swedish police. Go figure, once more. Ever since, both Sweden and Britain have done everything to prevent Assange from confronting these allegations without simultaneously having to expose himself to US extradition and, thus, to a show-trial followed by life in jail. His last refuge had been the Ecuadorian Embassy.

All right, I thought, but surely Assange must be a hacker! But what I found is that all his disclosures had been freely leaked to him, and that no one accuses him of having hacked a single computer. In fact, the only arguable hacking-charge against him relates to his alleged unsuccessful attempt to help break a password which, had it been successful, might have helped his source to cover her tracks. In short: a rather isolated, speculative, and inconsequential chain of events; a bit like trying to prosecute a driver who unsuccessfully attempted to exceed the speed-limit, but failed because their car was too weak.

Well then, I thought, at least we know for sure that Assange is a Russian spy, has interfered with U.S. elections, and negligently caused people’s deaths! But all I found is that he consistently published true information of inherent public interest without any breach of trust, duty or allegiance. Yes, he exposed war crimes, corruption and abuse, but let’s not confuse national security with governmental impunity. Yes, the facts he disclosed empowered U.S. voters to take more informed decisions, but isn’t that simply democracy? Yes, there are ethical discussions to be had regarding the legitimacy of unredacted disclosures. But if actual harm had really been caused, how come neither Assange nor Wikileaks ever faced related criminal charges or civil lawsuits for just compensation?

But surely, I found myself pleading, Assange must be a selfish narcissist, skateboarding through the Ecuadorian Embassy and smearing feces on the walls? Well, all I heard from Embassy staff is that the inevitable inconveniences of his accommodation at their offices were handled with mutual respect and consideration. This changed only after the election of President Moreno, when they were suddenly instructed to find smears against Assange and, when they didn’t, they were soon replaced. The President even took it upon himself to bless the world with his gossip, and to personally strip Assange of his asylum and citizenship without any due process of law.

In the end it finally dawned on me that I had been blinded by propaganda, and that Assange had been systematically slandered to divert attention from the crimes he exposed. Once he had been dehumanized through isolation, ridicule and shame, just like the witches we used to burn at the stake, it was easy to deprive him of his most fundamental rights without provoking public outrage worldwide. And thus, a legal precedent is being set, through the backdoor of our own complacency, which in the future can and will be applied just as well to disclosures by The Guardian, the New York Times and ABC News.

Very well, you may say, but what does slander have to do with torture? Well, this is a slippery slope. What may look like mere "mudslinging" in public debate, quickly becomes “mobbing” when used against the defenseless, and even “persecution” once the State is involved. Now just add purposefulness and severe suffering, and what you get is full-fledged psychological torture.

Yes, living in an Embassy with a cat and a skateboard may seem like a sweet deal when you believe the rest of the lies. But when no one remembers the reason for the hate you endure, when no one even wants to hear the truth, when neither the courts nor the media hold the powerful to account, then your refuge really is but a rubber boat in a shark-pool, and neither your cat nor your skateboard will save your life.

Even so, you may say, why spend so much breath on Assange, when countless others are tortured worldwide? Because this is not only about protecting Assange, but about preventing a precedent likely to seal the fate of Western democracy. For once telling the truth has become a crime, while the powerful enjoy impunity, it will be too late to correct the course. We will have surrendered our voice to censorship and our fate to unrestrained tyranny.

This Op-Ed has been offered for publication to the Guardian, The Times, the Financial Times, the Sydney Morning Herald, the Australian, the Canberra Times, the Telegraph, the New York Times, the Washington Post, Thomson Reuters Foundation, and Newsweek.

None responded positively.
From Wikipedia:

Nils Melzer is a Swiss academic, author and practitioner in the field of international law. Since 1 November 2016, Melzer has been serving as the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment. He is Professor of International Law at the University of Glasgow, and also holds the Human Rights Chair at the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights in Switzerland, where he has been teaching since 2009, including as the Swiss Chair of International Humanitarian Law (2011–2013).

Melzer has previously served for 12 years with the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) as Delegate, Deputy Head of Delegation and Legal Adviser in various zones of conflict and violence. After leaving the ICRC, Melzer held academic positions as Research Director of the Swiss Competence Centre on Human Rights (University of Zürich), as Senior Fellow and Senior Advisor on Emerging Security Challenges (Geneva Centre for Security Policy) and at the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights. He has also served as Senior Adviser for Security Policy at the Political Directorate of the Swiss Federal Department of Foreign Affairs.

Melzer has written several books, including: Targeted Killing in International Law (Oxford University Press, 2008), the ICRC's Interpretive Guidance on the Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities (ICRC, 2009) and the ICRC's Handbook International Humanitarian Law - a Comprehensive Introduction (ICRC, 2016). He is also a co-author of the NATO CCDCOE Tallinn Manual on the International Law applicable to Cyber Warfare (Cambridge, 2013), and of the NATO MCDC Policy Guidance: Autonomy in Defence Systems, (NATO ACT, 2014).

Friday, May 17, 2019

Psst...Durham is a special prosecutor


U.S. Attorney John Durham has been appointed by Attorney General William Barr to the special task of investigating the use of the national security system to investigate Donald Trump, as a candidate and as president.

Durham has the same level of power as Robert Mueller had, and, like Mueller, is empowered to lodge criminal charges.

The mere fact that Barr avoided using the term "special counsel" or some such does not alter Durham's status. Durham's previous service as a special counsel was more low key, with few people hearing of him. He had been appointed to investigate the CIA's erasure of videotapes of "enhanced" interrogations in which captives were waterboarded.

The press's lack of interest in that inquiry demonstrates the CIA's influence in editorial decision-making.

Durham refrained from filing criminal charges in that matter, it has been reported.
An ex-prosecutor analyzes Russiagate
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z19SR8tDbE4

Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Ouch!

Trump says he doesn't want war with Iran, but that's exactly what he wants, because that's exactly what Saudi Arabia, Netanyahu, al-Qaeda, Bolton, Haley, and other NeoCons/NeoLibs want. That’s what he put first--not America. Tulsi Gabbard (@TulsiGabbard) · Twitter https://twitter.com/TulsiGabbard .

The fact that Trump has a right to be president in the face of the Russiagate frame-up smear does not mean one must agree with all his policies or can't lend an ear to a critic.

Saturday, May 11, 2019

Russiagate probe:

Mueller skipped forensics, failed to quiz Assange


Craig Murray1, a former United Kingdom diplomat and university rector, looks at bizarre lapses in former FBI Director Robert S. Mueller’s investigation of Russiagate.

Murray's analysis
https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/05/the-real-muellergate-scandal/

A mirror page
https://fabiusmaximus.com/2019/05/11/craig-murray-muellergate-scandal/

Murray writes, "Mueller, as a matter of determined policy, omitted key steps which any honest investigator would undertake. He did not commission any forensic examination of the DNC servers. He did not interview Bill Binney2. He did not interview Julian Assange. His failure to do any of those obvious things renders his report worthless.

"There has never been, by any U.S. law enforcement or security service body, a forensic examination of the DNC servers, despite the fact that the claim those servers were hacked is the very heart of the entire investigation. Instead, the security services simply accepted the 'evidence' provided by the DNC’s own IT security consultants, Crowdstrike, a company which is politically aligned to the Clintons."

Murray adds, "That is precisely the equivalent of the police receiving a phone call saying:
"'Hello? My husband has just been murdered. He had a knife in his back with the initials of the Russian man who lives next door engraved on it in Cyrillic script. I have employed a private detective who will send you photos of the body and the knife. No, you don’t need to see either of them'.”

1. Murray is an author, broadcaster and human rights activist. He was British Ambassador to Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and Rector of the University of Dundee from 2007 to 2010.
2. Binney is a former National Security Agency technical security expert and whistleblower with a background as a mathematician.

Binney's website
https://www.whistleblower.org/bio-william-binney-and-j-kirk-wiebe/

Friday, May 10, 2019

WikiLeaks record of achievement

How WikiLeaks changed the world
https://consortiumnews.com/2019/05/09/the-revelations-of-wikileaks-no-2-the-leak-that-exposed-the-true-afghan-war/

With the "Revelations of WikiLeaks: No. 2 —The Leak That ‘Exposed the True Afghan War," Elizabeth Vos reminds us of the sort of information that the United States was suppressing in the very long-running Afghan war -- the one that some generals concede lacks a military solution.

In a lead-in to the Vos piece, Consortium News recalls that WikiLeaks' "Afghan Diaries set off a firestorm when it revealed the suppression of civilian casualty figures, the existence of an elite U.S.-led death squad, and the covert role of Pakistan in the conflict."

Consortium News tells us,
This is the second article in a series that is looking back on the major works of the publication that has altered the world since its founding in 2006. The series is an effort to counter mainstream media coverage, which is ignoring WikiLeaks’ work, and is instead focusing on Julian Assange’s personality. It is WikiLeaks’ uncovering of governments’ crimes and corruption that set the U.S. after Assange and which ultimately led to his arrest on April 11.

Assange reported grilled by U.S. agents
https://www.lewrockwell.com/2019/05/karen-kwiatkowski/pray-and-weep/

Karen Kwiatkowski, on Lew Rockwell's website, does not identify her sources, who also tell her that he is being doped with the horror drug BZ, which renders victims into basket cases. Kwiatkowski sees CIA chief Gina Haspel's hand at work, dubbing her "Chemical Gina." Kwiatkowski's background includes Air Force lieutenant colonel with a PhD. I know little about her accuracy. I certainly hope Assange is not being drugged, but, by the United States designating the publisher as a terrorist, the anti-WikiLeaks May government may believe that it is permitted to use "special" methods against a terrorist captive.

If it is true that Assange is being questioned by U.S. agents -- presumably without his lawyer present, something I suppose that can be rationalized when confronting "terrorists" -- his U.S. defense team may be able to argue that Assange's right to remain silent before and during any U.S. trial was abridged by U.S. officials under shelter of British terrorism policy.
WikiLeaks docs vanish from Google user
Several years ago I made a point of publishing a number of WikiLeaks documents verbatim on my blog. Not only was their news value of some importance, but I also wanted to make a point of resisting Big Government's attempts to intimidate Americans against publishing or even reading "stolen" official information (who owns a democracy's governmental information, anyway?).

I have been locked out of the Blogger account that published those documents for quite a while now. Yet, in a number of instances I have been able to recover old material lost in the cloud with careful Google searches. Not so the posts that included the WikiLeaks documents. All vanished.

You may wish to search with the terms "Paul Conant", "Znewz1", "Blogger" and "WikiLeaks." I get zip once I add "WikiLeaks" to the search string.

Ban FaceBook


Just say no to that privacy-thieving outfit. Drop FaceBook. Don't worry. You'll live. Find something more productive to do with your time. Why mess with Zuckerberg's spiritual pornography anyway?*
*I don't mean to imply that Zuckerberg is anymore Satanic than average.

Tuesday, May 7, 2019

Banned fly to uncensored (so far) Telegram


Twitter has a rival, Telegram. As it is evidently a non-profit organization, it isn't feeling the pressure to censor certain people or face business reprisals. Yet, that doesn't mean the oligarchs can't find a way to suppress it -- possibly by refusing to permit it to conduct business electronically (oh, but now that there is cryptocurrency everywhere, that idea might flop).

Telegram message service
https://telegram.org/

Here are the Telegram accounts of some of the media personalities un-personed by Instagram last week:

Alex Joneshttps://t.me/real_AlexJones
Milo Yiannopouloshttps://t.me/officialmilo
Laura Loomerhttps://t.me/loomeredofficial
Paul Joseph Watsonhttps://t.me/pjwnews
Faith Goldyhttps://t.me/faithgoldy

"Already leftists at The Daily Beast are freaking out conservatives are finding new mediums through which to express themselves," chortles InfoWars.

Again, I do not necessarily condone or endorse the views found at InfoWars or elsewhere. I object to their contributors being muzzled as "dangerous" persons. Speech is inherently dangerous, and yet in America it is free anyway.

The data collection practices of Big Tech are dangerous, as forms of mass surveillance. Yet, the "dangerous persons" who run these Silicon Valley firms don't expect that they should be muzzled. They doubtless think that you are able to make up your own mind about what they have to say and that, if you don't like it, you can go elsewhere. Of course, they have the conceit that their nice liberal reasoning makes them non-dangerous. Yet could not a case be made that they should be silenced so as not to defend their pro-mass surveillance business model?

What about Big Liberal's heroine, Hillary Clinton? Is she not a "dangerous person"? She's taken to the airwaves lately as the replacement of Michael "Say Anything" Avenatti. Who can forget when she laughed out loud on hearing that a man was murdered. She has promoted a crazed Russiagate conspiracy theory that has been picked up by a controlled media and rent the country in two. Why doesn't Big Tech muzzle her?

Write Assange at Belmarsh

Write Assange at the following address: Julian Assange DOB 3rd July 1971 HMP Belmarsh Prison Western Way London, SE28 0EB You must put ...