vrijdag 22 mei 2020

ASSANGE EXTRADITION: THE CORRUPT POLITICS


ASSANGE EXTRADITION: UK Minister Who Approved Trump’s Request to Extradite Assange Spoke at Secretive US Conferences with People Calling for Him to be ‘Neutralized’



Britain’s former home secretary attended “starlight chats” and “after-dinner cocktails” in off-the-record conferences involving high-level U.S. military and intelligence figures, report Mark Curtis and Matt Kennard. 

Britain’s then Chancellor of Exchequer Sajid Javid (L) welcomes then U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton (R) to 11 Downing Street. (Office of U.S. National Security Advisor, Wikimedia Commons)
Sajid Javid, who was Britain’s home secretary from April 2018 to July 2019, attended “starlight chats” and “after-dinner cocktails” in a series of off-the-record conferences involving high-level U.S. military and intelligence figures at a five-star island resort off the coast of Georgia. Many of those attending have been exposed in WikiLeaks publications and have demanded the organization be shut down. 
Javid signed the Trump administration’s extradition request for Assange in June 2019. He was Britain’s chancellor until his recent resignation. One of the criteria under which a British home secretary can block extradition to the U.S. is if “the person could face the death penalty.”  
The month before being appointed home secretary in April 2018, Javid visited Georgia for the “world forum” of the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) — an influential neoconservative U.S. organization with close ties to the U.S. intelligence community. The AEI has run a campaign against WikiLeaks and Assange since 2010. 
It can now be revealed [this article was first published on Feb. 22, 2020] that Javid spoke at the 2018 meeting, as did Jonah Goldberg, a fellow at the AEI who has called for Assange to be “garroted.” In a column published on the AEI website, Goldberg wrote: “WikiLeaks is easily among the most significant and well-publicised breaches of American national security since the Rosenbergs gave the Soviets the bomb. So again, I ask: Why wasn’t Assange garroted in his hotel room years ago? It’s a serious question.”
Bill Kristol, a close associate of the AEI who also spoke in Georgia with Javid, has written a column titled “Whack WikiLeaks” in which he asked: “Why can’t we use our various assets to harass, snatch or neutralize Julian Assange and his collaborators, wherever they are? Why can’t we disrupt and destroy WikiLeaks in both cyberspace and physical space, to the extent possible?” Kristol’s article was promoted on social media by another AEI fellow who spoke in Georgia with Javid. 
Both Goldberg and Kristol spoke at all four of the AEI’s world fora that Javid attended from 2014 to 2018. 

Here at @AEI World Forum. If everything weren't strictly off the record, there would be some interesting things to report.

See Bill Kristol's other Tweets
On the panel with Javid in 2018 was Elliott Abrams, a key neo-conservative architect of the Iraq war of 2003 best-known for his conviction during the Iran-Contra scandal in the Reagan administration. Abrams has lamented WikiLeaks’ document releases. Also on Javid’s panel was Fred Kagan, a senior AEI staffer who served as an adviser to the U.S. military in Afghanistan.
Javid’s signing of the U.S. extradition request was a controversial decision opposed at the time by the Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott. “Julian Assange is not being pursued to protect US national security, he is being pursued because he has exposed wrongdoing by US administrations and their military forces,” Abbott told the British parliament in April 2019 after Assange had been grabbed from the Ecuadorian embassy in London. 
The Trump administration’s extradition request is unprecedented in that the U.K. has never extradited a journalist and publisher to a third country for prosecution. 
The deliberations within the U.K. Home Office about Assange’s extradition and incarceration in Belmarsh maximum-security prison, where he is currently held, are opaque. Declassified sent a Freedom of Information request to the Home Office asking for any telephone call or email mentioning Assange sent to or from Sajid Javid while he was running the department. The Home Office replied: “We have carried out a thorough search and we have established that the Home Office does not hold the information that you have requested.” 
It is unclear if Javid only discussed the Assange extradition request in person while home secretary or if he used a private email or phone to do so. 

Aerial view of the The Cloister hotel at the Sea Island resort where Sajid Javid attended six secretive conferences with an array of high-level military and intelligence figures who have been exposed by WikiLeaks. (lns1122, Flickr)
 Secret Intelligence-Linked Meetings
The attendees, agenda and even the dates of the AEI world forum are a tightly-guarded secret. But Declassified is now publishing the attendance lists and agendas — marked “confidential” — of the last four conferences Javid attended: in 2014, 2015, 2016, and 2018 (see end of article). Declassified could not obtain information on Javid’s first two AEI meetings in 2011 and 2013. 
Since attending his first “world forum” at the AEI in 2011, within a year of becoming an MP, Javid subsequently visited six out of eight AEI annual conferences up to 2018. From June 2012 until today, Javid’s parliamentary register of interests records that he has made no overseas trips paid by a third-party except those funded by the AEI. In total, Javid has received £31,285.19 ($40,800) in gifts from the AEI. 
Javid is the most frequent British guest of the U.S. organization, and in most years has been one of only a few British invitees. The only other British regular is Michael Gove, another senior figure in Boris Johnson’s cabinet. 

Adm. Michael S. Rogers, then director of NSA, speaks during Fort Meade’s 100th anniversary gala, June 17, 2017, at Club Meade. (Steve Ruark/Flickr)
The AEI has access to the highest levels of the U.S. intelligence community. Guests at the events Javid attended included two former directors of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and two sitting directors of the National Security Agency (NSA). In 2018, President Donald Trump’s then National Security Advisor H.R. McMaster spoke alongside Javid. Any discussions between the British minister and the intelligence chiefs have remained secret.
The CIA made clear that it is “working to take down” WikiLeaksafter the latter published the largest-ever leak of classified CIA material in 2017. It was recently revealed that the CIA was provided with audio and video of Julian Assange’s private meetings, including privileged conversations with lawyers, in the Ecuadorian embassy by a Spanish security company. The NSA has also been extensively exposed byWikiLeaks
The AEI’s 2016 event saw Javid speaking on a panel titled, “The Challenge Abroad and Implications for the United States,” alongside U.S. Senator Lindsay Graham who called for Assange to be indicted in 2010 solely for receiving leaks. 
Another panel, “Wargaming the Next Attack on the United States,” featured former CIA Director Michael Hayden alongside Marc Thiessen and Gary Schmitt, two AEI staffers who have written extensively on shutting down Assange and WikiLeaks. Also speaking in 2016 was Senator Mitch McConnell, who has called Assange a “high-tech terrorist,” and Congressman Mike Rogers, who called for WikiLeaks source Chelsea Manning to be executed
Javid spoke at the 2015 event with Paul Wolfowitz — an AEI scholar who has been extensively exposed in WikiLeaks releases — about the threat posed by the Islamic State terrorist group. Karl Rove, a former senior adviser to President George W. Bush, also spoke at the 2015 event. It was reported in 2010 that Rove was advising Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt on how Sweden could help the Obama administration prosecute WikiLeaks
Another panel at the 2015 forum was titled, “Fighting a Cyberwar: Is Defense the Only Option?” and featured the former director of the NSA, Keith Alexander; the then director of the NSA, Michael S. Rogers; as well as former CIA director Michael Hayden. 

Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz listens to a reporter’s question in the Pentagon on March 1, 2001. (DoD photo by R. D. Ward. )
“Much talk about the insecurity of the cybersphere has focused on well-publicised breaches,” the panel briefing outlined, “but the reality of the cyberthreat is much broader and more devastating than most assume.” The question posed was: “Is our only choice to bar the doors, or has the time come to take it to the enemy? And what will that mean?” 
David Petraeus, another former CIA director, spoke at the AEI’s 2014 event alongside former U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney, a member of the AEI’s board, and John Bolton, often seen as the most belligerent pro-war figure in Washington, who was a senior fellow at the AEI before becoming Trump’s national security adviser. While at the AEI, Bolton wrote ambiguously: “As for WikiLeaks itself, and anyone cooperating with its malicious enterprise, now is the time to test our cyber-warfare capabilities. Fire away.” 

American Enterprise Institute headquarters in the Daniel A. D’Aniello Building, also called the Andrew Mellon Building, in Washington, D.C. (Jonathunder, Wikimedia Commons)
Assange and the AEI
The AEI has been running a campaign against WikiLeaks—and Assange specifically — throughout the U.S. media since 2010. The organization’s website lists 20 articles or events tagged with “Julian Assange” and 43 articles tagged with “WikiLeaks,” all of which are negative.
AEI resident fellow Marc A. Thiessen has written numerous articles demonizing Assange and the work of WikiLeaks. One article titled,  “WikiLeaks must be stopped,” which is published on the AEI website, concludes, “If left unmolested, Assange will become even bolder and inspire others to imitate his example.” Another article in May 2019, also on the AEI website, is titled, “Assange is a spy, not a journalist. He deserves prison.” Thiessen attended all the same annual AEI fora as Javid from 2014-18. 
In 2012, the AEI sponsored an event in Washington, D.C., called “Assange’s asylum in Correa’s Ecuador: Last refuge for scoundrels?” hosted by the AEI’s visiting fellow Roger F. Noriega, another figure critical of Assange. The question to be answered was listed as, “Can Ecuador’s president successfully whitewash his image by advancing Assange’s anti-American crusade?”
Sajid Javid and the American Enterprise Institute did not respond to requests for comment. 

Matt Kennard is head of investigations and Mark Curtis editor, of Declassified UK, a media organization investigating U.K. foreign, military and intelligence policies. They tweet at @DCKennard and @markcurtis30. Follow Declassified on twitter at @DeclassifiedUK
This article is from Declassified UK.


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