In
October 2010 Julian Assange won the Sam Adams Award for Integrity. He
has also been awarded the 2009 Amnesty International Media Award and the
Economist Index on Censorship Award in 2008. It is important to
remember that accolades such as these do not come without tremendous
hard work.
The
expose of the Afghan War Diaries was a moment of media history,
orchestrated by Julian Assange. He brought together The New York Times,
The Guardian and Der Spiegel, three of the world's most reputable
newspapers to collaborate with WikiLeaks on exposing more than 90 000
secret significant action reports by the United States relating to the
war in Afghanistan. This involved a huge amount of administration in
order to co-ordinate all four media partners' publishing schedules and a
lot of time to carefully construct the levels of trust needed to bring
together three major newspapers who were also competitors.
Since
2007 Julian, WikiLeaks and the Sunshine Press have been behind
international front page stories that have changed the world. However,
every story exposing abuses by powerful organizations, whether they be
from New York or Nairobi results in a counter attack. Such the
importance and veracity of revelations must be defended.
Why Our Editor-in-Chief Is Busy and Needs to Be Defended
Immediately
after the Afghan War Diaries he conducted seventy-six interviews in
three days maximizing the impact of the disclosures. It is very
important for WikiLeaks to create a global platform with which to reach
all corners of the earth. This demonstrates to those who wish to expose
wrongdoing and misconduct that there is a way to do so without putting
themselves at risk. He remains a messenger who big governments and their
agencies can, and constantly do, attack while all the time keeping the
source of the information published safe.
Because
of the nature of the work performed by WikiLeaks both the organization
and Julian Assange are constantly under attack. Their servers are under
attack. Their security is under attack and their work resources and
finances are under attack. This results is a lot of time-consuming
administration and means working through a lot of bureaucratic steps to
re-establish the efficient running of an organisation. When finances are
frozen, as was the case with Money Brokers Limited in August this year
(the WikiLeaks account was closed because of "watchlisting" by the US
after publication of the Afghanistan documents) it resulted in many
letters back and forth, instructing a legal team to administer the
situation and still to date there has been no resolution. In just the
last 14 days he has met with more than 9 lawyers (excluding Swedish
lawyers) in in defense of WikiLeaks' publishing activities, agreements
and sources. Similarly, Julian Assange is subject to these sorts of
attacks on a personal level.
He
and WikiLeaks both have been attacked in the media by Leon Panetta,
Director of the CIA, Admiral Mike Mullen, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff and highest ranking officer in the US and Defense Secretary
Robert M. Gates not to mention the well recognized media personalities
such as Marc A. Thiessen, a former bush administration chief speech
writer and currently a Washington Post columnist who wrote "Assange is a
non-U.S. citizen operating outside the territory of the United States.
This means the government has a wide range of options for dealing with
him." Christian Whiton, a Fox News contributor, said "WikiLeaks should
be declared 'enemy combatants'," indicating they should be dealt with
outside the law and Jonah Goldberg, a conservative syndicated columnist
asked "why wasn't Julian Assange garroted in his hotel room years ago?"
Attacks
such as these create an extreme need for security and he must always be
conscious and personally vigilant - a task that is both time consuming
and mentally exhausting. The major government players such as the CIA
and the Pentagon do not stop at just Julian but also target many
WikiLeaks volunteers or associates. Two volunteers and an American
WikiLeaks spokesperson have been detained and questioned in the United
States along with other individuals alleged to be participant to his
publishing activities such as Bradley Manning, an alleged source who is
being held as a political prisoner in the United States. Mr Manning's
mother's house in Wales was raided by the FBI together with local police
earlier this year.
The
result is a constant need for legal and political support and managing
this from afar and throughout many continents is no small task.
Furthermore Julian Assange does not take these matters lightly having
been privy to bad experiences in the past - while working on the extra
judicial assassinations taking place in Kenya, two WikiLeaks' affiliates
being assassinated.
Since
the false allegations made about him in Sweden this August Julian has
also needed to work extremely hard at ensuring the smear campaign
launched against him has not affected the WikiLeaks brand. Making many
public appearances and conducting interviews is absolutely necessary not
to mention maintaining relationships with media partners who are so
easily affected by such events.
In
spite of the attacks against him, Wikileaks successfully released the
Iraq War Logs in late October - a cache of over 400 000 US military
intelligence reports relating to the war in Iraq. Due to the false
allegations mentioned above the management of this leak was extremely
difficult. However, he successfully made new lasting relationships and
expanded the media partners to include Al Jazeera, Le Monde, the Bureau
of Investigative Journalism, SVT and also brought in Public Interest
Lawyers and NGOs such as Iraq Body Count. The documents' release was
increased to television as well as print media with two full-length
documentaries being commissioned.
Julian
Assange also readily offers to speak at many public events; especially
those he feels will have a resonating effect on people's rights and
liberties, ideals he holds close to his heart. Recently he presented at
the United Nations Universal Periodic Review against the United States
in Geneva where he offered up evidence from the Iraq War logs of the
human right abuses such as the 109 000 deaths, 185 000 casualties, 66
000 civilian deaths and countless cases of torture conducted by America.
The speech he gave lasted over two hours alone and the preparation for
such an event is mammoth. During his stay in Geneva the Swiss government
was so fearful for his personal security that they offered two
International Police and two Swiss Police as his bodyguards for the
duration, yet another indication of the severity of the danger he
encounters on a daily basis. In late September he spoke in London for
Index on Censorship regarding Security and censorship in the age of
WikiLeaks.
In
the coming months Julian Assange aims to carry on the invaluable work
and service that WikiLeaks offers the public. In due course he intends
on providing information, as yet publically unknown. He has stifled many
illegal attacks and remains victorious on all legal attacks against
WikiLeaks.