ASSANGE: PENTAGON ATTEMPTS TO STIFLE
REPORTING WITH “ESPIONAGE” CHARGES
By Sherwood Ross
The Pentagon is attempting to quash coverage of its activities by alleging that any reporter seeking classified information is collaborating with the source and guilty of conspiracy to commit espionage, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says.
In an interview published in “Rolling Stone” magazine, Assange, now under house arrest in England, said the Pentagon demanded “we not only destroy everything we had ever published or were ever going to publish in relation to the U.S. government, but that we also stop ‘soliciting’ information from U.S. government employees.”
Assange asserts the Pentagon is trying to create a new legal precedent that forbids “a journalist simply asking a source to communicate information.”
“Individuals like (investigative reporter) Sy Hersh and Dana Priest (
“If the Pentagon is to have its way, it will be the end of national-security journalism in the
While Assange said the
Assange said that for the past 20 years he has been developing systems “to protect people’s rights to communicate privately without government surveillance.” He said surveillance “is another form of censorship” because “When people are frightened that what they are saying may be overheard by a power that has the ability to lock people up, then they adjust what they’re saying. They start to self-censor.”
“I have a lot of sympathy for journalists who are trying to protect their sources,” Assange told reporter Michael Hastings of “Rolling Stone.” “It’s very hard now. Unless you’re an electronic-surveillance expert or you have frequent contact with one, you must stay off the Net and mobile phones.”
He went on to say, “We are now in a situation where countries are recording billions of hours of conversations, and proudly proclaiming that you don’t have to select which telephone call you’re intercepting, because you intercept every telephone call.”
Assange said the
He said the
Assange embarrassed the Pentagon with the release of the infamous “Collateral Murder” video that showed a
He quickly followed up with the release of hundreds of thousands
of classified files related to the wars in
“But soon after he began releasing the diplomatic cables, which were widely credited with helping to spark the Arab Spring, he was detained and imprisoned after spending a week with two female supporters in Stockholm, entangling him in a yearlong legal battle to win his own freedom,” Hastings wrote.
Assange told
Assange founded WikiLeaks, dubbed the first “stateless news organization,” in 2006. The Assange interview appeared in the February 2nd issue of “Rolling Stone.” #
(Sherwood Ross formerly reported for major dailies and currently does radio commentary for “New American Dream” and directs the Anti-War News Service. Reach him at sherwoodross10@gmail.com)
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