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Julian Assange Hid Out in London Journalists' Club

By Lachlan Markay | December 10, 2010 | 14:54

A  A

MSNBC.com reported Thursday that Julian Assange was hiding out in the Frontline Club, a club for journalists in London, where reporters "closed ranks and kept his whereabouts to themselves." That Assange "knew…he would be well-fed and, more importantly, safe" at the Frontline club demonstrates the bizarre affinity that journalists have for the Wikileaks founder.

Assange's mission is not journalism's mission. He sees no inherent value in truth; information is simply a means to his (very political) end. He doesn't want transparency; by his own admission, Wikileaks's endgame is opacity. He is not a reformer, he is a destroyer.

And yet UK Spectator writer Alex Massie proclaimed in one headline last month: "Yes, Julian Assange Is A Journalist." Massie wrote:

I don't have to agree with Assange's motives (or even his own, long-term desires) any more than I need agree with Daniel Ellsberg's politics to think that Wikileaks, like leaking the Pentagon Papers, constitutes a public service. (The Pentagon Papers, mind you, were much more significant and, actually, much more damning.)

Assange is "of course" a bad guy from the perspective of the Pentagon who'd much rather avoid this kind of scrutiny. But in this instance it's not obvious that Assange - even if he were an American - is required to put the putative interests of American (or British or even Australian) "national security" above all else; far less that he should presume that the public interest in how our wars are fought counts for almost nothing.

Is Assange "irresponsible"? I dare say he is. But not as irresponsible as those who permitted the torture of prisoners or the grisly abuse of prisoners at Abu Ghraib and lord knows what else.

And that seems to be where journalists find common ground with Assange: he seeks transparency and accountability and to speak truth to power. Sure, he may be harming the national interest, but he's doing so simply out of a desire to keep politicians and the military (the people in charge of national security) honest - a journalist's task if there ever was one.

But then there's the problem that none of that is actually true. Assange has no interest in making the American political system more transparent or responsive. He does not want to keep the American government honest, he simply wants to destroy it - or at the very least, render it completely useless and ineffective - by forcing it to be opaque, secretive, and, eventually, unable to function.

But don't take my word for it. One need only read Assange himself to conclude that the man wants nothing short of the downfall of the American government, as Wall Street Journal columnist Gordon Crovitz noted:

In 2006, Mr. Assange wrote a pair of essays, "State and Terrorist Conspiracies" and "Conspiracy as Governance." He sees the U.S. as an authoritarian conspiracy. "To radically shift regime behavior we must think clearly and boldly for if we have learned anything, it is that regimes do not want to be changed," he writes. "Conspiracies take information about the world in which they operate," he writes, and "pass it around the conspirators and then act on the result."

His central plan is that leaks will restrict the flow of information among officials—"conspirators" in his view—making government less effective. Or, as Mr. Assange puts it, "We can marginalize a conspiracy's ability to act by decreasing total conspiratorial power until it is no longer able to understand, and hence respond effectively to its environment. . . . An authoritarian conspiracy that cannot think efficiently cannot act to preserve itself."

Berkeley blogger Aaron Bady last week posted a useful translation of these essays. He explains Mr. Assange's view this way: "While an organization structured by direct and open lines of communication will be much more vulnerable to outside penetration, the more opaque it becomes to itself (as a defense against the outside gaze), the less able it will be to 'think' as a system, to communicate with itself." Mr. Assange's idea is that with enough leaks, "the security state will then try to shrink its computational network in response, thereby making itself dumber and slower and smaller."…

Or as Mr. Assange told Time magazine last week, "It is not our goal to achieve a more transparent society; it's our goal to achieve a more just society." If leaks cause U.S. officials to "lock down internally and to balkanize," they will "cease to be as efficient as they were."

When the New York Times published the Pentagon Papers, its stated objective was to make the federal government more transparent and more responsive in the hope that it would better serve the American people. Assange, on the other hand, wants to close the federal government, to make it more opaque and insulated until it can no longer serve the American people.

It's a bit ironic to see Massie and all the reporters at the Frontline Club, all of whom hail from a nation still living under the Official Secrets Act, rushing to the defense of a man who openly seeks the destruction of a government that guarantees press freedom, and all in the name of "journalism."

But then, reporters have always been suckers for the "underdog" narrative, even when it has meant supporting undesirables. Media love affairs with a Fidel Castro or a Hugo Chavez seem to have had more to do with their oppositional attitude towards the United States and other world powers. Of course if one examines the statements and writings from these figures, it usually becomes clear that they are despotic, narcissistic thugs.

The "one of us" attitude many reporters seem to have taken towards Assange is perhaps due more to the romanticism of his David v. Goliath conflict with the United States than to anything he has said or done. After all, when one examines his own stated objectives, it's fairly clear that he is not a journalist, and in fact that he seeks to use information as a destructive political tool (also known as propaganda), which runs directly counter to the core mission of journalism.

About the Author

Lachlan Markay is an associate with Dialog New Media. Click here to follow Lachlan Markay on Twitter.
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Comments

Might I suggest

Submitted by jdlybrand on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 3:13pm.

If the government wishes to keep their documents secret , store them along with Obama's birth certificate and college transcripts.

 

"What a revoltin' development this is!"

Chester Riley

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The sooner this guy...

Submitted by daddysyk on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 3:20pm.

hangs himself in his cell, or has an accident in the showers, or is released and dies in a car accident the better.  Then we send black ops guys to round up the rest of them and they can join him in hell where he belongs.  That will send a message to the sub-human filth that they are.  Or, we could have Eric Holder arrest him and put him on trial in New York. 

"The world needs ditch diggers too."  ---Judge Smails
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Isn't this a bit of shooting the messenger?

Submitted by BlueHeron on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 4:19pm.

If these communications are/were so vital, where were the appropriate safeguards to prevent unauthorized access and theft? 

If I leave my Mercedes on the street running with keys in the ignition, most people will walk by.  But when someone steals my car is the thief solely at fault?

I see little to nothing in the press about the real source of the problem.......sloppy protection of confidential information. Fingers are pointing in every other direction. 

 

BlueHeron
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Yes BlueHeron

Submitted by sentry_99 on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 4:28pm.

The thief is solely at fault for stealing your car.  Just like a woman is never at fault for being raped no matter what she was wearing. 

Assange is not a messenger.  He would be like the owner of the chop shop your Mercedes ended up at.  He may not have stolen it but he is taking advantage of the crime.  We don't really know if these leaks would have occurred if there were not Wikileaks.

I think the government should just copyright all their materials and if they get leaked, they sue for copyright infringement.  If the movie and music industries can go after mothers for their kids downloading media from the internet, the government should be able to bankrupt a Euro-trash rapist.

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Well, that was ---

Submitted by matthewdean on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 10:28pm.

very well put, sentry_99.

MD

"The credibility of the story is undermined by the selection of sources." - (h/t Jer)
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This is one time the messenger should be shot

Submitted by Dave. on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 4:35pm.

...right along with everybody else that helped that bastard.

-Dave

Vote for the American in November

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This Government is Responsible for the Leaks.

Submitted by gruyere cheese on Fri, 12/10/2010 - 4:37pm.

Why is it that the so called media is not questioning this administration's inability to secure this information if it was that confidential?

Julian Assange saw an opportunity and he took it! This government left the WH door wide open for this to happen. I don't hear anyone admitting to this breakdown in security in the cyberspace world.

Assange exposed the crack in the wall and it is embarrassing this administration, and for that this administration will make sure that he pays.

 

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