Assange Makes First Public Comments Since Release

Above: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange (C), next to his wife Stella Assange (L) and Kristinn Hrafnsson, editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks, speaks during a parliamentary hearing at the Council of Europe in Strasbourg, eastern France, on October 1, 2024. Image copyright: Frederick Florin/AFP/Contributor via Getty Images

The Facts

  • WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Tuesday made his first public comments since being released from a British prison earlier in the year.

  • The 53-year-old journalist had been incarcerated for five years as he and his legal team fought extradition to the US, where he was wanted on 17 Espionage Act charges for government documents he and his organization published in 2010.


The Spin

Establishment-critical narrative

Assange's publications revealed war crimes, torture, and human rights abuses. Rather than pursue the perpetrators of these crimes, the US went after the whistleblower and journalist, having a chilling effect on journalism and creating a perception that the US is more interested in covering up wrongdoing than seeking justice.

Pro-establishment narrative

By indiscriminately publishing classified US documents that included unredacted names of government sources, Assange put hundreds of people's lives at risk. His action went way beyond traditional journalism, and it was right that he faced the charges that he did.


Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO

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