Wikileaks
founder Julian Assange has made an admirable habit of enraging western
governments over the last few years, particularly the United States.
Most notably,
his release of classified diplomatic documents in 2010 proved ruthlessly
embarrassing, shining a spotlight on the absurd, petty little world of
international relations.
Ever since, the
US government has done everything it can to stop him. Short of
assassination. They shut down his website, but mirror sites instantly
popped up. They sought legal action, but their efforts have been impeded
by the bureaucratic deftness of his attorneys. They froze his bank
accounts… but donations have poured in from all over the world.
Along the way,
Uncle Sam co-opted a number of allied nations to set aside their
principles for the sake of US interests– Switzerland rolled over immediately
and shuttered Assange’s bank accounts.
Australia (his home country) has remained conspicuously silent on the matter, raising not a single word of protest in his defense. One high ranking Aussie politician even publicly suggested that Assange should be killed.
Sweden has
happily played along, trumping up dubious allegations about Assange and
issuing an international arrest warrant.
And now there’s
the UK, where Assange has been based. The British government located and
arrested him, yet after his legal team was able to secure bail and delay
extradition, Assange sought refuge at the Ecuadoran embassy in London.
He’s been living there for two months in violation of his bail.
Assange knows
that, if extradited to Sweden, he’ll be shipped off to face the death
penalty in the US… so the stakes are clearly high. He even petitioned
Ecuador’s president Rafael Correa for political asylum, and just hours
ago, Correa agreed.
Swarms of
British police have now descended on the Ecuadoran embassy in London.
This, on the heels of the British Foreign Ministry issuing a warning
letter to Ecuador’s government threatening to “take actions in order to
arrest Mr. Assange in the current premises of the [Ecuadoran] embassy.”
Such a move would
be appalling, to say the least.
Embassies are
hallowed sovereign ground, not to be trespassed. Ever. This is the most
sacrosanct, fundamental, inviolable principle of international relations,
explicitly codified in both the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations
(1961) and the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations (1963).
Article 27 of
the latter, for example, states that:
“the receiving State [the UK in this case] shall, even in case of armed conflict, respect and protect the consular premises, together with the property of the consular post and the consular archives.”
International
law seems pretty obvious here. Yet British police stand ready to storm the
embassy, arrest Assange, and tear down decades of diplomatic precedent.
In a way this is
almost poetic. Assange is the man who exposed western diplomacy for the
fraud that it is. That he would be sent to his death by an egregious
violation of its most fundamental principle seems strangely appropriate.
Regardless, the
whole affair is perhaps the foulest example that western governments will
ignore their own laws, or selectively apply them, whenever they see fit.
Legal precedent
means nothing. Rule of law means nothing. Free speech means nothing. Their
own treaties mean nothing. It’s unbelievable. Anyone in the west who
honestly thinks he’s still living in a free society is either a fool or
completely out of touch.
If that seems
too radical an idea, consider that ECUADOR is now the only nation which
stands to defend freedom and human rights against an assault from the
United States, the United Kingdom, and their spineless allies.
The west has
just become a giant banana republic. Have you hit your breaking point yet?
If not now… when?
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