By Chris Hedges
Nation of Change - May 9, 2013
This interview is a joint project of Truthdig and The Nation magazine.
A tiny tip of the vast subterranean network of governmental and
intelligence agencies from around the world dedicated to destroying
WikiLeaks and arresting its founder, Julian Assange, appears outside the
red-brick building on Hans Crescent Street that houses the Ecuadorean
Embassy. Assange, the world’s best-known political refugee, has been in
the embassy since he was offered sanctuary there last June. British
police in black Kevlar vests are perched night and day on the steps
leading up to the building, and others wait in the lobby directly in
front of the embassy door. An officer stands on the corner of a side
street facing the iconic department store Harrods, half a block away on
Brompton Road. Another officer peers out the window of a neighboring
building a few feet from Assange’s bedroom at the back of the embassy.
Police sit round-the-clock in a communications van topped with an array
of antennas that presumably captures all electronic forms of
communication from Assange’s ground-floor suite.
The Metropolitan Police Service (MPS), or Scotland Yard, said the
estimated cost of surrounding the Ecuadorean Embassy from June 19, 2012,
when Assange entered the building, until Jan. 31, 2013, is the
equivalent of $4.5 million.
Britain has rejected an Ecuadorean request that Assange be granted
safe passage to an airport. He is in limbo. It is, he said, like living
in a “space station.”
“The status quo, for them, is a loss,” Assange said of the U.S.-led
campaign against him as we sat in his small workroom, cluttered with
cables and computer equipment. He had a full head of gray hair and gray
stubble on his face and was wearing a traditional white embroidered
Ecuadorean shirt. “The Pentagon threatened WikiLeaks and me personally,
threatened us before the whole world, demanded that we destroy
everything we had published, demanded we cease ‘soliciting’ new
information from U.S. government whistle-blowers, demanded, in other
words, the total annihilation of a publisher. It stated that if we did
not self-destruct in this way that we would be ‘compelled’ to do so.”
“But they have failed,” he went on. “They set the rules about what a
win was. They lost in every battle they defined. Their loss is total.
We’ve won the big stuff. The loss of face is hard to overstate. The
Pentagon reissued its threats on Sept. 28 last year. This time we
laughed. Threats inflate quickly. Now the Pentagon, the White House and
the State Department intend to show the world what vindictive losers
they are through the persecution of Bradley Manning, myself and the organization more generally.”
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