On 10th Anniversary of ‘Collateral Murder’ Release: The US Soldier Who Sought to Save Iraqi Children – Consortium News

Ten years ago today WikiLeaks Collateral Murder video was published, depicting a horrific scene on a Baghdad street in 2007. Here is a talk by the one U.S. soldier who sought to save young victims of an American massacre.

Soldier Reveals What Happened onBaghdad Street; WikiLeaks WebinarOn 10th Anniversary of Videos Release

Consortium News

Ethan McCord was a U.S. soldier on patrol in Baghdad in July 2007 when he came upon a scene he says hed never encountered. Lying dead on a street were inanimate objects that turned out to be dead civilians, slain in cold blood by a U.S. Apache helicopter still filming the carnage from above.

McCord found a child still alive in a civilian van the US soldiers had gleefully struck. She had a stomach wound and glass in her eyes. The soldier carried her away to seek help, as seen in the cockpit video that U.S. Army intelligence officer Bradley Manning would soon pass to WikiLeaks.It was published on April 5, 2010, alarming the Pentagon and putting WikiLeaks on the map.

Later on Sunday, register to view a webinar with Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnnson, scholar Nozomi Hayase and Col. Ann Wright on the release of Collateral Murder. Hrafnnson traveled to Baghdad to meet the two children that McCord saved. The link to the webinar is below.

Here is a 17-minute talk given by McCord to the United National Peace Conference, in Albany, NY over the weekend of July 23-25, 2010. It was produced by the United National Peace Conference Media Project, the Sanctuary for Independent Media and the Hudson Mohawk Independent Media Center. McCord puts the events in context, explaining that U.S. military killing of Iraqi civilians was routine. He also exposes the reaction of the command to his actions to save the life of an innocent girl.

Here is how to register for Sundays webinar.

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On 10th Anniversary of 'Collateral Murder' Release: The US Soldier Who Sought to Save Iraqi Children - Consortium News

Headlong and Century Films Partner With BBC Arts On UNPRECEDENTED: REAL TIME THEATRE FROM A STATE OF ISOLATION – Broadway World

BBC Arts has joined award-winning theatre company Headlong and BAFTA winning Century Films, as broadcast partner for Unprecedented: Real Time Theatre from a State of Isolation, a series of short, digital plays written and performed in isolation, which will be broadcast across the nation during lockdown as part of Culture in Quarantine.

Written by celebrated playwrights, performed by a cast of over fifty UK actors and curated by Headlong, Century Films and BBC Arts, Unprecedented is a series of short digital plays exploring our rapidly evolving world. The plays will respond to how our understanding and experiences of community, education, work, relationships, family, culture, climate and capitalism are evolving on an unprecedented scale. The series will ask how we got here and what the enduring legacy of this historic episode might be.

Directors working on the series include; Ned Bennett (Equus; An Octoroon; Yen), Deborah Bruce (Pride and Prejudice), Tinuke Craig (Vassa; The Colour Purple), Debbie Hannan (The Panopticon; Pah-La), Jeremy Herrin (This House; People Places and Things), Brian Hill (Bella and The Boys; Falling Apart), Ola Ince (Poet in da Corner; Appropriate: The Convert), Nathaniel Martello-White (Cla'am), Caitlin McLeod (Returning To Haifa), Blanche McIntyre (Tartuffe; The Writer) and Holly Race Roughan (Hedda Tesman; Broken Dreams).

The series will include new works from a diverse group of celebrated playwrights including; April De Angelis (My Brilliant Friend; The Village), Josh Azouz (The Mikvah Project; Buggy Baby), Deborah Bruce (The Distance; The House They Grew Up In), John Donnelly (The Pass; The Knowledge), James Graham (Ink; QUIZ; Coalition; Brexit: An Uncivil War; Labour of Love), Charlene James (Cuttin' It; Tweet Tweet), Matilda Ibini (Where do we go next: Little Miss Burden), Jasmine Lee-Jones (seven methods of killing Kylie Jenner) Duncan MacMillan (People, Places and Things; City of Glass; Rosmersholm; 1984; Lungs), and Anna Maloney (Consent), Nathaniel Martello-White (Torn; BLACKTA), Chlo Moss (This Wide Night; The Gatekeeper), Prasanna Puwanarajah (Nightwatchman; Patrick Melrose; Doctor Foster) and Tim Price (Salt, Root, Row; The Radicalisation of Bradley Manning).

Using digital conferencing technology, and combining live and pre-recorded material, these intimate new plays will give an immediate insight into this extraordinary communal experience. Unprecedented: Real Time Theatre from a State of Isolation will be braodcast on the BBC as part of BBC Arts' Culture in Quarantine initiative and made avaliable to stream online from May.

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Headlong and Century Films Partner With BBC Arts On UNPRECEDENTED: REAL TIME THEATRE FROM A STATE OF ISOLATION - Broadway World

Remember That Time John Terry Won an Oscar? The Inevitable Ellen Selfie Meme Onslaught Begins – Infosurhoy

When Ellen Degeneres posted the most retweeted tweet (let alone selfie) of all timelast night, you could be sure that John Terry would want in on the action. Or at least, someone with rudimentary Photoshopping skills would make sure the glory-hunting Chelsea defender got in there with the Oscar elite somehow, anyhow.

And so, with Ellen Degeneress 2,524,600 (and counting!) selfie tearing up Twitter records, heres the pick of the inevitable Photoshop reworks that have followed in its wake.

Best selfie of all time Ellen Degeneres? I think not. Once again Nic Cage has upped his game pic.twitter.com/tIL16OSZiQ

Jake Young (@jakesmadnesss) March 3, 2014

This is the closest Nicolas Cage has come to an Oscar for some time. Maybe just put this forward in the Short Film category next year?

It was inevitable http://t.co/dHSDkbKuGm pic.twitter.com/0kYtcG2lOS Metro (@MetroUK) March 3, 2014

Another classic entry into the John Terry: Glory Hunter meme pantheon.

Attack of the clones: A dozen Kevin Spaceys hijack Ellens famous selfie (PICTURE) http://t.co/g7FrsWJMNu pic.twitter.com/CEsPt4wx2U HuffPost UK (@HuffPostUK) March 3, 2014

Whats more terrifying: A clone army of Kevin Spaceys, or

[emailprotected] record-breaking selfie inspires countless memeslike more Ellen! #Oscars http://t.co/R5h8tBxo3h pic.twitter.com/Ppe2Aw9Mn2

Yahoo Movies (@YahooMovies) March 3, 2014

enough Ellen Degeneres replicas to start a five-a-side football team?

Very selfie much oscar wow such Ellen DeGeneres pic.twitter.com/oWszLyJrIl

Doge (@WowSuchDoge) March 3, 2014

Much opportune Photoshopping from the Doge team.

We reckon @guardian wins correction of the day for this Oscar-themed cock-up http://t.co/LtNVsghSNY pic.twitter.com/rp1KlMhvSo

Us Vs Them (@UsVsTh3m) March 3, 2014

And to think we have Hangover trilogy star Bradley Manning to thank for it all. Or at least thats what the Guardian would have you believe, mistaking Hollywoods Bradley Cooper for whistleblowing Bradley Manning, now Chelsea Manning.

And there are plenty more where these came from. Enjoy them while you can youll be sick of seeing these everyday for the foreseeable future soon enough. Feel free to throw links to the best youve seen into the comments section below.

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Remember That Time John Terry Won an Oscar? The Inevitable Ellen Selfie Meme Onslaught Begins - Infosurhoy

During time of crisis, Rafi’s reaches out to the community – Olean Times Herald

OLEAN When Amber Rafi-Sultan learned she would have to close down her restaurant Monday, she began making plans to help others in the community who might be strained from the coronavirus pandemic that has put many people out of work.

Rafi-Sultan, who owns Rafis Platter on Wayne Street with her husband, Aamir Sultan, decided to offer curbside meals to the community from 11:30 a.m. to noon in the upcoming days to help others. The meals will be handed out each day while supplies last.

I am cooking food to help the community, Rafi Sultan explained on Tuesday. Im going to keep doing it until Ive depleted everything from the restaurants supplies.

Rafi-Sultan noted she could freeze her food supplies at the restaurant, but decided she wanted to help everyone in need at this time.

Right now, kindness is the most important thing, she continued. Because everyone is in a state of panic we cannot panic, weve got to help each other in any which way we can.

Rafi-Sultan said she began cooking early Tuesday to have dozens of meals ready to hand out to the public at the side of the restaurant. Additional meals were also delivered to St. Elizabeth Motherhouse in Allegany, the Warming House soup kitchen and the Genesis House homeless shelter.

Rafi-Sultan said her whole team of employees have volunteered to help hand out the meals to the community. One of her employees, Bradley Manning, said he was very busy handing out meals of pasta primavera and salad in the restaurant parking lot.

A lot of people who came through today did not have their families with them, Manning said. Theres been times when weve all needed help, but didnt ask when we needed it.

A mother who stopped by the restaurant to pick up meals for her six children said she appreciated the gesture of kindness from the restaurant.

Its a very nice thing that theyre doing, the mother said while sitting in her vehicle. Not everybody does this.

Rafi-Sultan noted the Wayne Street restaurant recently reopened after it was closed for a short while to allow time for the family to open its new restaurant in Ellicottville. Both facilities are now closed.

But its OK, God has a plan, she said with resolve.

(Contact reporter Kate Day Sager at kates_th@yahoo.com. Follow her on Twitter, @OTHKate)

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During time of crisis, Rafi's reaches out to the community - Olean Times Herald

Assange tried to call White House, Hillary Clinton over data dump, his lawyer says – WTVB News

Tuesday, February 25, 2020 9:54 a.m. EST by Thomson Reuters

By Michael Holden

LONDON (Reuters) - Julian Assange tried to contact Hillary Clinton and the White House when he realised that unredacted U.S. diplomatic cables given to WikiLeaks were about to be dumped on the internet, his lawyer told his London extradition hearing on Tuesday.

Assange is being sought by the United States on 18 counts of hacking U.S. government computers and an espionage offence, having allegedly conspired with Chelsea Manning, then a U.S. soldier known as Bradley Manning, to leak hundreds of thousands of secret documents by WikiLeaks almost a decade ago.

On Monday, the lawyer representing the United States told the hearing that Assange, 48, was wanted for crimes that had endangered people in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan who had helped the West, some of whom later disappeared. [nL5N2AO0W5]

U.S. authorities say his actions in recklessly publishing unredacted classified diplomatic cables put informants, dissidents, journalists and human rights activists at risk of torture, abuse or death.

Outlining part of his defence, Assange's lawyer Mark Summers said allegations that he had helped Manning to break a government password, had encouraged the theft of secret data and knowingly put lives in danger were "lies, lies and more lies".

He told London's Woolwich Crown Court that WikiLeaks had received documents from Manning in April 2010. He then made a deal with a number of newspapers, including the New York Times, Britain's Guardian and Germany's Der Spiegel, to begin releasing redacted parts of the 250,000 cables in November that year.

A witness from Der Spiegel said the U.S. State Department had been involved in suggesting redactions in conference calls, Summers said.

However, a password that allowed access to the full unredacted material was published in a book by Guardian reporters about WikiLeaks in February 2011. In August, another German newspaper reported it had discovered the password and it had access to the archive.

A spokesman for The Guardian said the authors were told the password was temporary and the book contained no details about the whereabouts of the files.

PEOPLE'S LIVES "AT RISK"

Summers said Assange attempted to warn the U.S. government, calling the White House and attempting to speak to then- Secretary of State Clinton, saying "unless we do something, people's lives are put at risk".

Summers said the State Department had responded by suggesting that Assange call back "in a couple of hours".

The United States asked Britain to extradite Assange last year after he was pulled from the Ecuador embassy in London, where he had spent seven years holed up avoiding extradition to Sweden over sex crime allegations which have since been dropped.

Assange has served a prison sentence in Britain for skipping bail and remains jailed pending the U.S. extradition request

Supporters hail Assange as an anti-establishment hero who revealed governments' abuses of power, and argue the action against him is a dangerous infringement of journalists' rights. Critics cast him as a dangerous enemy of the state who has undermined Western security.

(Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Gareth Jones and Giles Elgood)

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Assange tried to call White House, Hillary Clinton over data dump, his lawyer says - WTVB News

Factbox: News and Quotes From Julian Assange’s Extradition Hearing – The New York Times

LONDON Julian Assange appeared before a British court for a third day on Wednesday to fight an extradition request from the United States which wants to put the 48-year-old on trial for hacking government computers and violating an espionage law.

The Wikileaks founder is being sought by the United States on 18 counts of hacking U.S. government computers and an espionage offense, having allegedly conspired with Chelsea Manning, then a U.S. soldier known as Bradley Manning, to leak hundreds of thousands of secret documents by WikiLeaks almost a decade ago.

Assange's lawyer Edward Fitzgerald said his client should not be extradited because the case was political and he was not violent.

Below are the other main developments and quotes from the hearing.

* At one point, Judge Vanessa Baraitser asked whether Assange's lawyers needed to check on him because his eyes were closed.

Assange said he could not hear in the dock and was unable to instruct his legal team. Asking to sit closer to them, he complained: "I am as much a participant in these proceedings as I am at Wimbledon," referring to the crowd at the British tennis tournament.

Assange said his legal team has been spied on and therefore he could not give comments to them in confidence.

In response, the judge said: "I can't make an exception in your case".

However, after his lawyers said it was unfair Assange could not sit with his legal team, and the lawyer for the U.S. government also said he would be largely supportive of the move, the judge said she would hear an application for Assange to sit with his lawyers on Thursday morning.

"There are two microphones in here. There are a number of unnamed embassy officials here," Assange said.

* Judge Baraitser said earlier they had become aware that someone has taken a photograph in the courtroom this week. She said that if anyone is found taking or trying to take a photo they will be considered in contempt of court and will be dealt with accordingly.

"I want to make it absolutely clear that it is a criminal offence to attempt to take a photograph ... in any court," she added.

* Fitzgerald said the case against his client was political and that extradition for political offences was unlawful under the 2003 Anglo-U.S. extradition treaty.

"It is an essential protection, which the U.S. puts in every single one of its extradition treaties," Fitzgerald told the court. He said it was also illegal under the European Court of Human Rights and UK domestic law.

He added it was a "virtually universal" legal principle that non-violent people should not be extradited for political offences. "If it is not a terrorist case, a violent offence, you should not be extradited for a political offence," he said

Fitzgerald added that the Wikileaks founder was on some medication, so may need regular breaks.

* Fitzgerald said Assange should not be extradited because his work is similar to that of many non-governmental organizations. He said for example a non-governmental organization may reveal how many people China execute each year. Extradition may be sought by China or Russia based on disclosures that are uncomfortable or threatening, he said.

(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; editing by Stephen Addison)

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Factbox: News and Quotes From Julian Assange's Extradition Hearing - The New York Times

Julian Assange, The Glass Cage And Heaven In A Rage: Day Four Of Extradition Hearings OpEd – Eurasia Review

Thursday, February 27, Woolwich Crown Court. The first round of extradition hearings regarding Julian Assanges case concluded a day early, to recommence on May 18th. It ended on an insensible note very much in keeping with the woolly-headed reasoning of Judge Vanessa Baraitser, who is of the view that a WikiLeaks publisher in a cage does not put all heaven in a rage. On Wednesday, Assanges defence had requested whether he would be able to leave the confines of his glass cage and join his legal team. As Assange had explained in response to his nodding off during proceedings, I cannot meaningfully communicate with my lawyers. There was little point in asking if he could follow proceedings without enabling his participation.

This was not a point that fell on reasonable ears. The judge felt it came too close to a bail application, and was initially refused as posing a potential risk to the public. Gibberish was duly thrown at counsel for both sides, with health and safety, risk assessment and up to Group 4 featuring as meaningless terms on the obvious: that Assange could pose no threat whatsoever, as he would be in the continuous company of security guards. As former UK diplomat Craig Murray observed, She started to resemble something worse than a Dalek, a particularly stupid local government officer of a very low grade.

According to the judge, to permit such a measure of access between Assange and his team effectively constituted a departure from court custody, a striking nonsense of Dickensian dimensions. Not even the prosecution felt it unreasonable, suggesting that one need not be so technical in granting such applications.

Thursdays proceedings reaffirmed Judge Baraitsers stubborn position. Her first gesture was to permit Assange a pair of headphones to better enable him to hear the proceedings, followed by a brief adjournment to see if his hearing had, in fact, improved. Assange was unimpressed, removing them after 30 minutes.

Her stretched reasoning found Assange sufficiently accessible to his lawyers despite his glassed surrounds; he could still communicate with them via notes passed through the barrier. It is quite apparent over the past four days that you have had no difficulty communicating with your legal team. The judge was willing to permit Assange a later start in proceedings to enable a meeting with the legal team and adjourn should the defence wish to meet their client in a holding cell.

That so complex a case as extradition can be reduced to sporadic notes passed to legal counsel and staggered adjournments suggests the continued hobbling of the defence by the authorities. Its invidiousness lies in how seemingly oblivious the judicial mind is to the scope of the case, complexity reduced to a matter of meetings, small points of procedure and law.

The defence team submitted that the process of consultation suggested by the judge unduly prolonged proceedings, rendering them cumbersome and insensible. The court might have to adjourn ever three minutes for a 20-minute break. To constantly take Assange to and from his holding cell was would unnecessarily lengthen proceedings and complicate matters. Judge Baraitser was dismissive of such argument, claiming that the defence was merely exaggerating.

The legal issues discussed on the fourth day centred on quibbling over the issue of espionage and its nexus with political activity. Espionage, suggested James Lewis QC for the US-driven prosecution, need not be political. Nor did it seem that Assange was intent on bringing down the US government. It cant possibly be said that there is a political struggle in existence between the American government and opposing factions.

Lewis, as has been his approach from the start, preferred a more restrictive interpretation about what a political offence might be, notably in connection with extradition. Extradition is based on conduct, it is not anymore based on the names of offences. In a rather crude, end-of-history line of thought, Lewis argued that political offences were dated matters, hardly applicable to modern societies which no longer see dissidents upholding the values of liberal democracy. (It seems that the tree of liberty, according to the US prosecution, no longer needs urgent refreshment.)

Besides, argued Lewis, the court did not need to resolve these issues, but they demonstrate that any bare assertion that Wikileaks was engaged in a struggle with the US government was in opposition to it or was seeking to bring about a policy change would need to be examined far more closely.

That is exactly what the defence contended. Assanges core activities in publishing had been based on altering US policy, with Iraq and Afghanistan being key theatres. Why was he seeking to publish the rules of engagement?, posed the defence. They were published to show that war crimes were being committed, to show they breached their own rules of engagement. Ditto the publication of the Guantanamo files, an act done to reveal the extent of torture being undertaken during the course of the war on terror. All these, contended Edward Fitzgerald QC for the defence, did change government policy. WikiLeaks didnt just seek to induce change, it did induce change.

The documentary record on Assanges political activity in this regard is thick, much of it from the contentions of US officials themselves. The US State Department preferred to see him, as former spokesman PJ Crowley did in 2010, a political actor with a political agenda, rather than being a journalist.

Incidentally, Crowleys link with WikiLeaks has a curious end, with his resignation in 2011 following comments made about the treatment of Chelsea (then Bradley) Manning at the Quantico marine base in Virginia. What is being done to Bradley Manning, he claimed at an MIT seminar that March, is ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid on the part of the department of defence. Not an entirely bad egg, then.

Please Donate Today Did you enjoy this article? Then please consider donating today to ensure that Eurasia Review can continue to be able to provide similar content.

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Julian Assange, The Glass Cage And Heaven In A Rage: Day Four Of Extradition Hearings OpEd - Eurasia Review

UK court told Assange tried to call White House, Hillary Clinton over data dump – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - Julian Assange tried to contact Hillary Clinton and the White House when he realised that unredacted U.S. diplomatic cables given to WikiLeaks were about to be dumped on the internet, his lawyer told his London extradition hearing on Tuesday.

Assange is being sought by the United States on 18 counts of hacking U.S. government computers and an espionage offence, having allegedly conspired with Chelsea Manning, then a U.S. soldier known as Bradley Manning, to leak hundreds of thousands of secret documents by WikiLeaks almost a decade ago.

On Monday, the lawyer representing the United States told the hearing that Assange, 48, was wanted for crimes that had endangered people in Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan who had helped the West, some of whom later disappeared. [nL5N2AO0W5]

U.S. authorities say his actions in recklessly publishing unredacted classified diplomatic cables put informants, dissidents, journalists and human rights activists at risk of torture, abuse or death.

Outlining part of his defence, Assanges lawyer Mark Summers said allegations that he had helped Manning to break a government password, had encouraged the theft of secret data and knowingly put lives in danger were lies, lies and more lies.

He told Londons Woolwich Crown Court that WikiLeaks had received documents from Manning in April 2010. He then made a deal with a number of newspapers, including the New York Times, Britains Guardian and Germanys Der Spiegel, to begin releasing redacted parts of the 250,000 cables in November that year.

A witness from Der Spiegel said the U.S. State Department had been involved in suggesting redactions in conference calls, Summers said.

However, a password that allowed access to the full unredacted material was published in a book by Guardian reporters about WikiLeaks in February 2011. In August, another German newspaper reported it had discovered the password and it had access to the archive.

A spokesman for The Guardian said the authors were told the password was temporary and the book contained no details about the whereabouts of the files.

Summers said Assange attempted to warn the U.S. government, calling the White House and attempting to speak to then- Secretary of State Clinton, saying unless we do something, peoples lives are put at risk.

Summers said the State Department had responded by suggesting that Assange call back in a couple of hours.

The United States asked Britain to extradite Assange last year after he was pulled from the Ecuador embassy in London, where he had spent seven years holed up avoiding extradition to Sweden over sex crime allegations which have since been dropped.

Assange has served a prison sentence in Britain for skipping bail and remains jailed pending the U.S. extradition request

Supporters hail Assange as an anti-establishment hero who revealed governments abuses of power, and argue the action against him is a dangerous infringement of journalists rights. Critics cast him as a dangerous enemy of the state who has undermined Western security.

Reporting by Michael Holden; Editing by Gareth Jones and Giles Elgood

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UK court told Assange tried to call White House, Hillary Clinton over data dump - Reuters

What is happening to Assange will happen to the rest of us – Salon

David Morales,the indicted ownerof the Spanish private security firm Undercover Global, is being investigated by Spain's high court for allegedly providing the CIA with audio and video recordings of the meetings WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange had with his attorneys and other visitors when the publisher was in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. The security firm also reportedly photographed the passports of all of Assange's visitors. It is accused of taking visitors' phones, which were not permitted in the embassy, and opening them, presumably in an effort to intercept calls. It reportedly stole data from laptops, electronic tablets and USB sticks, all required to be left at the embassy reception area. It allegedly compiled detailed reports on all of Assange's meetings and conversations with visitors. The firm even is said to have planned to steal the diaper of a baby brought to visit Assange to perform a DNA test to establish whether the infant was a secret son of Assange. UC Global, apparently at the behest of the CIA, also allegedly spied on Ecuadorian diplomats who worked in the London embassy.

The probe by the court, the Audiencia Nacional, into the activities of UC Global, along with leaked videos, statements, documents and reportspublished by the Spanish newspaper El Pasas well as theItalian newspaper La Repubblica, offers a window into the new global security state. Here the rule of law is irrelevant. Here privacy and attorney-client privilege do not exist. Here people live under 24-hour-a-day surveillance. Here all who attempt to expose the crimes of tyrannical power will be hunted down, kidnapped, imprisoned and broken. This global security state is a terrifying melding of the corporate and the public. Andwhat it has done to Assangeit will soon do to the rest of us.

The publication of classified documents is not yet a crime in the United States. If Assange is extradited and convicted, it will become one. Assange is not an American citizen. WikiLeaks, which he founded, is not a U.S.-based publication. The extradition of Assange would mean the end of journalistic investigations into the inner workings of power. It would cement into place a terrifying global, corporate tyranny under which borders, nationality and law mean nothing. Once such a legal precedent is set, any publication that publishes classified material, from The New York Times to an alternative website, will be prosecuted and silenced.

The flagrant defiance of law and international protocols in thepersecution of Assangeis legion. In April 2019, Ecuadorian President Lenn Moreno capriciously terminated Assange's right of asylum at the London embassy, where he spent seven years, despite Assange's status as a political refugee. Moreno authorized British police to enter the embassy diplomatically sanctioned sovereign territory to arrest a naturalized citizen of Ecuador. (Assange retains his Australian citizenship.) The British police seized Assange, who has never committed a crime, and the British government keeps him imprisoned, ostensibly for a bail violation.

Assange is being held in the notorious high-security HM Prison Belmarsh. He has spent much of his time in isolation, is often heavily sedated and has been denied medical treatment for a variety of physical ailments. His lawyers say they are routinely denied access to their client.Nils Melzer, the United Nations' special rapporteur on torture who examined Assange with two physicians, said Assange has undergone prolonged psychological torture. Melzer has criticized what he calls the "judicial persecution" of Assange by Britain, the United States, Ecuador and Sweden, which prolonged an investigation into a sexual assault case in an effort to extradite Assange to Sweden. Assange said the case was a pretext to extradite him to the United States. Once Assange was arrested by British police the sexual assault case was dropped.

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Melzer says Assange would face a politicized show trial in the United States if he were extradited to face17 chargesunder the Espionage Act for his role in publishing classified military and diplomatic cables, documents and videos that exposed U.S. war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan. Each of the counts carries a potential sentence of 10 years, and an additional charge that Assange conspired to hack into a government computer has a maximum sentence of five years. A hearing to determine whether he will be extradited to the United States starts Feb. 24 at London's Woolwich Crown Court. It is scheduled to last about a week and then resume May 18, for three weeks more.

WikiLeaks releasedU.S. military war logsfrom Afghanistan and Iraq, a cache of 250,000 diplomatic cables and 800 Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs along with the 2007 "Collateral Murder" video, in which U.S. helicopter pilots banter as they gun down civilians, including children and two Reuters journalists, in a Baghdad street. The material was given to WikiLeaks in 2010 by Chelsea Manning, then Bradley Manning, a low-ranking intelligence specialist in the U.S. Army. Assange has been accused by an enraged U.S. intelligence community of causing "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States." Manning was convicted of espionage charges in August 2013 and sentenced to 35 years in a military prison. She was granted clemency in January 2017 by President Barack Obama. Manning wasordered back to prisonlast year after refusing to testify before a grand jury in the WikiLeaks case, and she remains behind bars. No one was ever charged for the war crimes WikiLeaks documented.

Assange earned the enmity of the Democratic Party establishment by publishing 70,000 hacked emails belonging to the Democratic National Committee and senior Democratic officials. The emails were copied from the accounts of John Podesta, Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman. The Podesta emails exposed the donation of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two of the major funders of Islamic State. It exposed the $657,000 that Goldman Sachs paid to Hillary Clinton to give talks, a sum so large it can only be considered a bribe. It exposed Clinton's repeated mendacity. She was caught in the emails, for example, telling the financial elites that she wanted "open trade and open borders" and believed Wall Street executives were best positioned to manage the economy, a statement that contradicted her campaign statements. It exposed the Clinton campaign's efforts to influence the Republican primaries to ensure that Donald Trump was the Republican nominee. It exposed Clinton's advance knowledge of questions in a primary debate. It exposed Clinton as the principal architect of the war in Libya, a war she believed would burnish her credentials as a presidential candidate.

Journalists can argue that this information, like the war logs, should have remained hidden, but they can't then call themselves journalists.

The Democratic and Republican leaders are united in their crusade to extradite and sentence Assange. The Democratic Party, which has attempted to blame Russia for its election loss to Trump, charges that the Podesta emails were obtained by Russian government hackers. However, James Comey, the former FBI director, has conceded that the emails were probably delivered to WikiLeaks by an intermediary, and Assange has said the emails were not provided by "state actors."

WikiLeaks has done more than any other news organization to expose the abuses of power and crimes of the American empire. In addition to the war logs and the Podesta emails, it made public the hacking tools used by the CIA and the National Security Agency and their interference in foreign elections, including French elections. It disclosed theinternal conspiracyagainst British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn by Labour members of Parliament. It intervened to save Edward Snowden, who made public the wholesale surveillance of the American public by our intelligence agencies, from extradition to the United States by helping him flee from Hong Kong to Moscow. (The Snowden leaks also revealed that Assange was on a U.S. "manhunt target list.")

The inquiry by the Spanish court is the result of a criminal complaint filed by Assange, who accuses Morales and UC Global of violating his privacy and client-attorney confidentiality rights. The WikiLeaks founder also says the firm is guilty of misappropriation, bribery and money laundering.

Morales, according to El Pas, "stated both verbally and in writing to a number of his employees that, despite having been hired by the government of then-Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa, he also worked 'for the Americans,' to whom he allegedly sent documents, videos and audios of the meetings that the Australian activist held in the embassy."

"Despite the fact that the Spanish firm which is headquartered in the southern city of Jerez de la Frontera was hired by Senain, the Ecuadorian intelligence services, Morales called on his employees several times to keep his relationship with the US intelligence services a secret," the paper reported.

"The owner of UC Global S. L. ordered a meeting between the head of the Ecuadorian secret service, Rommy Vallejo, and Assange to be spied on, at a time when they were planning the exit of Assange from the Ecuadorian embassy using a diplomatic passport in order to take him to another country," according to El Pas. "This initiative was eventually rejected by Assange on the basis that he considered it to be 'a defeat,' that would fuel conspiracy theories, according to sources close to the company consulted by this newspaper. Morales called on his employees to keep his relationship with the US intelligence services a secret."

The Vallejo-Assange meeting, which included Assange's lawyers, took place Dec. 21, 2017. The security firm made audio and video recordings through microphones and cameras installed in the embassy. The CIA was immediately made aware of the plan, perhaps through an "external streaming access point" installed in the embassy, according to El Pas. The next day the United States issued an international arrest warrant for Assange.

Microphones were implanted in fire extinguishers and a women's restroom where Assange's lawyers would cloister themselves with their client in an effort to avoid being recorded. The windows in the embassy were given a treatment that provided better audio quality for the laser microphones that the CIA was using from exterior locations, the paper reported.

When Moreno was elected to the presidency in Ecuador, replacing Rafael Correa, who had granted Assange asylum in the embassy, an intense campaign was launched to force the publisher from the embassy. It included daily harassment, cutoff of internet access and the termination of nearly all visits.

UC Global, which provides personal security for casino magnate Sheldon Adelson and protection for his company Las Vegas Sands, apparently used Adelson, a friend of President Trump and one of the largest donors to the Republican Party, to lobby the Trump administration and then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo to make Assange a priority target.

La Repubblica, like El Pas, obtained important files, recordings and other information stemming from the UC Global surveillance at the embassy. They include photos of Assange in the embassy and recordings of conversations he had with doctors, journalists, politicians, celebrities and members of his legal team.

"The videos and audio recordings accessed by the Repubblica reveal the extreme violations of privacy that Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks journalists, lawyers, doctors and reporters were subjected to inside the embassy, and represent a shocking case study of the impossibility of protecting journalistic sources and materials in such a hostile environment," the Italian newspaper wrote. "This espionage operation is particularly shocking if we consider that Assange was protected by asylum, and if we consider that the information gathered will be used by the United States to support his extradition and put him in prison for the crimes for which he is currently charged and for which he risks 175 years in prison: the publication of secret US government documents revealing war crimes and torture, from Afghanistan to Iraq to Guantanamo."

More:
What is happening to Assange will happen to the rest of us - Salon

West: Bergdahl, Manning, Vindmanthe Progressive Left’s Heroes – MRCTV

How interesting that the left is all up in arms over LTC Vindman, yet they could not celebrate a 100-year-old Tuskegee Airman who flew combat missions in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam.

The left celebrates a deserter like Bowe Bergdahl yet criticizes the release of Army 1LT Clint Lorance who was imprisoned for six years because he killed the enemy in Afghanistan.

The left embraces Bradley Manning yet becomes unglued over the pardon of a US Army Special Forces Major who kills a Taliban bomb maker.

The left disparages, demeans, and denigrates an Army LTC who took an action to save the lives of his men in combatbut they adore a President who abandoned Americans to die during an Islamic terrorist attack, and lied about it.

The progressive socialist left labels anyone a hero who advances their ideological agenda, causewhile dismissing those who actually are.

For more from Allen West, check out CNSNews.com.

Read the rest here:
West: Bergdahl, Manning, Vindmanthe Progressive Left's Heroes - MRCTV