How British Intelligence Framed Julian Assange As Russian Agent
Kit Klarenberg
ACTIVE MEASURES
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February 20/21st could mark WikiLeaks founder-and-chief Julian Assange’s final opportunity to avoid extradition to the US. London’s High Court has scheduled two days of arguments over whether he can ask an appeals court to block his transfer Stateside. If unsuccessful, he could be sent across the Atlantic, where he faces prosecution under Washington’s draconian Espionage Act, and penalties ranging from 175 years in a “supermax” prison, to death, for exposing the lies and crimes of US global empire.
It is the most important press freedom case of all time. Yet, at no point during Julian’s seven years of arbitrary detention in London’s Ecuadorian embassy, or five years at His Majesty’s Pleasure in Belmarsh Prison, Britain’s “Gitmo”, have the mainstream media or international human rights groups taken a serious interest in his plight. Many Western citizens - including those who had hitherto full-throatedly supported WikiLeaks, and Julian’s crusade against official secrecy - were also indifferent over, if not outright supportive of, his violent explusion from the Ecuadorian embassy.
Much of this conspiracy of silence and apathy can be attributed to a concerted campaign of calumny, incubated in London and Washington DC, designed to extinguish public sympathy for Julian. As Nils Melzer, the United Nations special rapporteur on torture, wrote in a June 2019 oped Western media refused to publish, he was “systematically slandered to divert attention from the crimes he exposed,” and once he’d been “dehumanized through isolation, ridicule and shame, just like the witches we used to burn at the stake, it was easy to deprive him of his most fundamental rights without provoking public outrage worldwide.”
A prominent libel against Julian was that he operated upon the orders, and in the interests, of the Kremlin. Built up as an omnipotent villain on the world stage following the February 2014 Western-sponsoredMaidan coup in Ukraine, and all manner of domestic political upheaval in Europe and North America small and large framed as somehow Moscow-orchestrated ever after, anyone and anything branded as even vaguely sympathetic to Russia automatically became an FSB and/or GRU chaos agent.
When British police forcibly hauled Julian handcuffed out of the Ecuadorian embassy, many mainstream outlets - and a great many Russiagaters - cheered, believing he would soon be indicted for his GRU-assisted role in subverting the outcome of the 2016 US Presidential election. No such charges have been forthcoming. And in September 2021, Yahoo News inadvertently let an incongruous cat out of the bag. The outlet revealed the CIA had explored plans to surveil, kidnap, and even kill Julian while he was ensconced in the Ecuadorian Embassy.
The explosive report was almost entirely ignored by the mainstream media - although one fundamental aspect of the article even its advocates and promoters largely overlooked was the disclosure that the CIA possessed no evidence Julian or WikiLeaks had any ties whatsoever with Russia. “Difficulty” in proving he or his organization had operated “at the direct behest of the Kremlin” was reportedly a “major factor” when, in April 2017, Mike Pompeo, then-C.I.A. director, designated WikiLeaks a “non-state hostile intelligence service.” That unfounded assertion opened the floodgates for the Agency's untrammeled surveillance, harassment, and persecution of Julian and his collaborators. It also served as justification for its assassination plots.
There is another dimension to this mephitic myth that has largely remained unexplored. Integrity Initiative, a covert British intelligence information warfare operation, was pivotal to perpetuating the narrative of Julian as Kremlin asset. This sordid tale reveals just how flimsy Western propaganda campaigns are concocted and then disseminated through compliant media. Now, with Julian facing extradition to the US, it has never been more urgent to expose.
Killing Hope
A major component of the Integrity Initiative scandal was the organisation’s construction of cloak-and-dagger “clusters”. These were - and may well remain today - clandestine networks of journalists, scholars, politicians and military and intelligence operatives, which the Initiative could mobilise to disseminate black propaganda, therefore influencing policy and perceptions, targeting domestic and overseas adversaries. One little-known example of the potency of clusters was an aggressive campaign to falsely connect Julian with the Kremlin.
The Initiative’s Spanish cluster was particularly instrumental in this regard. The largest and most influential of any Initiative cluster outside the UK, its ranks include a number of prominent journalists, academics, think tank representatives, lawmakers from several parties, government ministers, and military officials.
Initiative documents leaked in November 2018 by Anonymous, the “hacktivist” collective, detail how this nexus has successfully subverted the Spanish political process. There is, for instance, the case of Pedro Baños, a colonel in the Spanish army and formerly chief of counterintelligence and security for the European Army Corps. His fate is highly relevant to the Initiative’s role in framing Assange as a Russian asset.
In June 2018, the spook-staffed Initiative learned Madrid’s governing Socialist Workers’ Party was to appoint Baños director of Spain’s National Security Department, roughly the equivalent of the US Department of Homeland Security. Baños had repeatedly appeared on RT and Sputnik in the months prior, and publicly called for constructive, harmonious relations between the European Union and Moscow.
The Initiative couldn’t tolerate his appointment to such an influential post. Within hours of learning this confidential information, the Spanish cluster covertly passed dossiers on the colonel to local and international media outlets and activated its overseas clusters to publish negative comments about the proposed move on social media, to “generate international support” for its blockage.
The Initiative’s London-based team also set up a dedicated WhatsApp group “to coordinate Twitter response, get contacts to expand awareness and get people retweeting the material.”
The cluster, moreover, sent material to El País and El Mundo, leading Spanish dailies. Representatives of the People’s Party—which has cluster operatives within its ranks—and Ciudadanos, another centrist party, publicly called for Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez to block the appointment, while some Spanish diplomats also expressed their “concerns.” As the day drew to a close, it was confirmed Baños was no longer in the running for the post.
Conducting destabilizing information operations in Spain hadn’t always been so easy for the Initiative. An internal file - “Why is it so difficult to address the Russia issue in Spain, and what should be done?” - spells out in some detail the issues the organisation hitherto encountered in this regard. Foremost among these, Moscow “[wasn’t] perceived as a problem affecting Spain’s national security,” not least because the two countries had no history of conflict that could be exploited to terrify and rile the Spanish public.
“Pro–Russian narratives” were said to “often [pervade] at all levels” of Spanish society. Citizens and officials alike widely believed Moscow was “humiliated” in the 1990s, when Western powers broke clear agreements on NATO expansion, and that Russia has “a natural right” to a sphere of regional influence.
Overwhelmingly, Russia was seen in Spain “as a potential source of investment, tourism and business opportunities” rather than a hostile adversary, and politicians, journalists, diplomats, and citizens were moreover keen to pursue dialogue with Moscow, to “explore ways to restore [Europe’s] relationship with the Kremlin,” with “a tougher line from the EU or NATO” on Russia “mostly seen as counterproductive or even dangerous.”
Quite an insurmountable state of affairs - until Julian’s public commentary on the Catalonian independence vote in 2017. This handed the organisation all the ammunition it needed to bogusly present Moscow as a grave threat to Spanish democracy and territorial integrity, while simultaneously reinforcing the spook-concocted charge that the WikiLeaks founder was a Russian operative.
‘Close Eye on the Crisis’
The autonomous Spanish region of Catalonia held a referendum on independence on October 1st 2017. Madrid declared the vote illegal and, in the weeks leading up to polling day, police cracked down on numerous large-scale protests. Photos and videos of these tumultuous scenes spread widely on social media. Many civic organizations and high-profile figures disseminated news of these protests and police actions. Among this throng was Julian. His Twitter posts attracted thousands of retweets worldwide and were referenced in a number of RT and Sputnik reports on the events unfolding in Barcelona.
As the time came for citizens to go to the polls, former Spanish Prime Minister Felipe González asked Grupo PRISA - Spain’s most powerful media conglomerate and owner of El País, the country’s second-largest newspaper - to issue a “firm response” to the independence movement, “given the seriousness of the situation.”
El País duly began publishing extremely critical articles on the Catalonian situation on a daily basis. Among other things, these reports inferred the independence movement was somehow directed, financed, or influenced by Russia, and Spain more broadly was subject to a dastardly Kremlin interference campaign, via bots and trolls on social media and “fake news”, at the very head of which Julian sat.
The degree to which El País was influenced by the Initiative prior to the referendum isn’t certain. But subsequently, the organisation circulated a “major study on Russian influence in the Catalan referendum process…privately to key influencers in Spain, including the Prime Minister’s office, and throughout Europe on the Integrity Initiative network.”
A briefing note, “Framing Russian meddling in the Catalan question,” offered “insights, background information and suggestions to contextualize and interpret (likely) Russian meddling in Spain.”
The paper’s headline claims were markedly bold. The Kremlin had “activated its propaganda apparatus” - including Julian and Edward Snowden - to “contribute to destabilizing Spain.” Catalan pro-independence activists - who formed part of an “extensive network of pawns” cultivated by the Kremlin overseas—may have somehow “bought Assange’s support.”
Evidence presented for these bombastic charges was nonexistent. For example, a small number of tweets posted by Julian in Catalan, which implied a decent knowledge of the independence movement’s history, purportedly suggested persons unknown could have been feeding him the information.
Likewise, Vladimir Putin’s reference to the referendum in a speech was alleged to have insidiously “conferred some legitimacy” on the vote. This was despite the Russian president vociferously backing Madrid in that oratory, while declaring the unfolding crisis “an internal affair of the Kingdom of Spain.” The Initiative inexplicably branded this banal diplomatic boilerplate a “subtle” indication the Kremlin was “keeping a close eye on the crisis.”
Such paltry conspiratorial conjecture led the organization to conclude, “a classic control and absorption mechanism of the KGB” had been deployed to support the independence movement and disrupt Spain to further Moscow’s propaganda narratives “about a dysfunctional, weakening and almost collapsing EU”
This bunkum was cited in a number of mainstream media articles, including an El País piece written by its editor, David Alandete. The fictional narrative that online support for Catalan independence was a Russian plot fronted by Julian conclusively minted, a trickle of disinformation became a deluge, with El País leading the charge. It published stories on the topic almost every day for weeks thereafter replete with slick charts and graphics, widely recycled by other news outlets.
All that hubbub, combined with the Initiative’s dodgy dossier reaching the desks of high-ranking politicians in Madrid, was surely instrumental in Spain’s defense and foreign ministers announcing in November 2017 Russian-based Twitter accounts had used social media “to massively publicize the separatist cause and swing public opinion behind it” in the lead-up to the referendum.
‘Exceptionally Misleading’
So it was that the next month, Alandete was invited to present his findings to the British Parliament’s Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, which was conducting an inquiry into “fake news.” Julian had been invited to testify separately, but this was rescinded after an intervention from the Foreign Office.
Accompanying Alandete were Francisco de Borja Lasheras, director of the European Council on Foreign Relation’s Madrid office, and Mira Milosevich–Juaristi, senior fellow for Russia and Euroasia at Elcano Institute. Both were - are? - members of Integrity Initiative’s Spanish cluster.
The panel of lawmakers was, to say the least, a receptive audience. With the Catalan Assembly elections mere days away, the Committee thought it “a particularly interesting time to discuss this issue.” Chair Damian Collins also appears to have attended an Integrity Initiative event convened in February 2016.
The Spanish trio’s assertions met no challenge or criticism, as they rattled off virtually verbatim various bogus hypotheses and claims from the Initiative’s briefing paper. Milosevich–Juaristi declared, “the complexity of the combination of different instruments used during the referendum in Catalonia” - including Julian’s social media activities - meant it was “impossible” there wasn’t a determined Kremlin hybrid warfare strategy at work in the breakaway region. She nonethless admitted, “I do not have material to justify that.”
Still, the Spaniards easily convinced the Committee that, “Russian interference was so huge and so oppressive that you could not move for it.” The parliamentarians asked whether Moscow had sought to interfere with the referendum’s outcome, or if there was any OTHER specific objective in RT and Sputnik’s coverage of the violent scenes that unfolded in Barcelona. The witnesses were at a loss. Lasheras repeatedly stated, “we have no specific evidence,” and “we do not know,” while Alandete unconvincingly contended the only evidence he could provide was that Russian state-affiliated media organizations had reported on the events in the first place.
These admissions prompted no criticism or challenge from the Committee. Still, Labour MP Paul Farrelly fleetingly raised some vital points:
“The question is how much influence has [Russian media] got? How much should it be blamed for the bad reflections it has for instance on the image of Spain, compared with the actions of the Spanish government that fed it in the first place? What emphasis should we place on that, compared with the actions that have been tweeted and shared around the world?”
Alandete repeatedly claimed to not understand the question, so Farrelly simply said “it doesn’t matter,” and moved on, a staggering capitulation on an absolutely key question that no study of alleged “fake news” or “disinformation” has ever adequately countenanced. Still, while the lawmakers clearly weren’t interested in seriously probing the trio’s assertions, hacker and activist MC McGrath was, and submitted a detailed, withering assessment to the Committee in response.
McGrath “scrutinized their testimony, along with other publications about Russian interference in Catalonia” the Spanish trio supplied. This included articles published by El País and Elcano Institute. They identified “numerous instances of misinterpretation of data sources, use of inaccurate information, lack of attention to detail, and poor research methodology,” which resulted in “exceptionally misleading” conclusions being presented to the parliamentary panel.
The sheer scale of the lies, distortions, exaggerations, misrepresentations and “exceptionally poor attention to detail” uncovered by McGrath is quite extraordinary. For example, numerous El País reports alleged there was a “suspiciously large” number of tweets about Catalonia from Russian bots and trolls, in particular retweets of RT and Sputnik, as well as Julian’s personal account.
However, McGrath’s analysis of 23,418 retweets of Julian’s posts discussing Catalonia in September and October showed just 2.1% emanated from accounts located in Russia. This was entirely in line with world population ratios, and in no way indicated “disproportionate interest in the situation in Catalonia” from Moscow. In fact, those retweeting Julian were overwhelmingly based in the US.
Even more damningly, McGrath found Julian featured in just 17 of 596 stories about Catalonia published by RT and Sputnik from September - December 2017. Meanwhile, of the 1,508 tweets shared by the pair’s English- and Spanish-language Twitter accounts on Catalonia within this timeframe, a mere 22 - 1.46% - mentioned him. Ironically, El País published considerably more stories referencing Julian than Sputnik and RT combined during this period. McGrath concluded:
“Claims about fake news, especially those published in the media and brought before legislative bodies, need to be more thoroughly scrutinized. It is important to conduct further research to understand how widespread of an issue fake news about fake news is and how these unfounded allegations come about. It is necessary to explore how claims of fake news can themselves be used as a manipulative tactic and understand the impact this has on society.”
‘Escalation of Tensions’
Despite this savage indictment of the trio’s credibility, the Committee appeared unmoved, issuing an interim report in July 2018 quoting them at some length. It asserted unequivocally:
“During the referendum campaign, Russia provoked conflict, through a mixture of misleading information and disinformation, between people within Spain, and between Spain and other member states in the EU, and in NATO.”
Even more significantly, in March that year the Initiative-manufactured controversy led to Ecuador cutting off Julian’s internet access and preventing him from receiving any visitors other than his lawyers. It was argued that his social media activities “put at risk the good relations [the country] maintains with the U.K., with the other states of the European Union, and with other nations.”
As Glenn Greewnald documented at the time, this resulted from “serious diplomatic pressure being applied” to Ecuadoran President Lenin Moreno “from the Spanish government in Madrid and its NATO allies.” Greenwald:
“The escalation of tensions with Spain, which has strong diplomatic ties to Ecuador, threatens Assange’s asylum in a way that the longstanding pressure from the U.S. and U.K. could not. Ecuador is being forced to choose between maintaining their relations with other states and upholding Assange’s asylum.”
That same month, Foreign Officer minister Alan Duncan had a one-to-one meeting with then–Prime Minister Theresa May, in which he was instructed to “butter up” Moreno, to facilitate Julian’s removal from the embassy. This precipitated a year of diplomatic schmoozing, including state-funded trips to London for high-ranking Ecuadoran officials and visits in the opposite direction by British security and intelligence figures. A month after Julian’s dramatic arrest in April 2019, Trade Minister George Hollingbery flew to Quito to sign London’s Andean Countries Trade Agreement.
Recall the words of Nils Melzer, on how Julian was “systematically slandered to divert attention from the crimes he exposed.” And how once he’d been “dehumanized through isolation, ridicule and shame…it was easy to deprive him of his most fundamental rights without provoking public outrage worldwide.”
The Initiative’s actions went an enormous way to isolating Julian, severely curtailing his already limited access to the outside world, laying the foundations for his removal from the Embassy and resultant incarceration, and consigning him to daily misery and physical and psychological torture.
This egregious saga is a particularly pitiful example of the ease with which Western intelligence agencies can flood corporate media with outright fiction on the flimsiest of bases, in the knowledge credulous, pliable “journalists” will peddle their fallacious lies as fact in the manner of religious conviction, and never face consequences.
If and when their lies are exposed, they can pick themselves up and hurry off as if nothing happened, safely clinging to their legitimizing awards, sanitised Wikipedia entries, and plaudits. Meanwhile, Julian is approaching the fifth anniversary of his arrival in “Britain’s Gitmo”. Each and every day since, his mental and physical health has deteriorated.
Now, his only path to liberation from that hellish structure may be a 175–year sentence in a supermax prison, situated not far from the headquarters of a spying agency that not long ago drew up elaborate plans to murder him in cold blood.
NOTE: The author of this exposé, Kit Klarenberg, is himself the target of imperialist services intimidation by the always obliging British police. And to think that to this day the world remains sold on the notion that James Bond was on the "good guys' side". Or that there is such a thing as a free and courageous Western press. See below related article.
The National Union of Journalists (NUJ) in Britain has withdrawn its initial defence of The Grayzone news site journalist Kit Klarenberg.
The WSWS noted, “Klarenberg was targeted for his journalism exposing the criminal activity of British imperialism and the NATO powers. The Grayzone noted in its report of these events published Wednesday how, in the past year, Klarenberg has ‘revealed how a cabal of Tory national security hardliners violated the Official Secrets Act to exploit Brexit and install Boris Johnson as prime minister,’ exposed ‘British plans to bomb the Kerch Bridge connecting Crimea to the Russian Federation’ and reported ‘on the CIA’s recruitment of two 9/11 hijackers.’” The detention of Klarenburg took place weeks after UK police picked up French publisher Ernest Moret in London’s St Pancras station on his way to the London Book Fair and questioned him in connection with his participation in protests against the Macron government—in that case under Schedule 7 of the Terrorism Act 2000. The WSWS noted that the Grayzone has been targeted by right-wing forces. Klarenberg used leaked emails to detail British warmonger Paul Mason’s scheming with influential security figures to shut down anti-NATO publications and organisations. Mason reported Klarenberg to the police. On June 2, four days after Klarenberg’s treatment by the police was made public, the NUJ published a short article headlined, “NUJ expresses concern over detention of journalist Kit Klarenberg”. It read, “The National Union of Journalists has expressed grave concern over the arrest of journalist Kit Klarenberg at Luton airport under counter-terrorism legislation. Klarenberg was detained by plain-clothes police officers and threatened with arrest if he failed to comply with requests for information.” “The apparent targeting of a journalist risks creating a chilling effect on others reporting on stories in the public interest and many will be aware that it follows the recent arrest of publisher Ernest M, also under counter-terrorism legislation by British police in April. Journalists will no doubt be astounded by actions of the police and rightly expect information on reasons behind Kit's detention.” Also on June 2, the NUJ’s twitter account retweeted a post from the Big Brother Watch Twitter account linking to the NUJ’s original article on Klarenburg. But making its more than 24,000 members and the wider population aware of this matter of “grave” and “huge” concern was rapidly ditched. The article and the tweet were both removed from the NUJ’s site within 24 hours, on June 3.
The NUJ has provided no explanation for its actions.
At 5.11pm on June 3, Klarenberg tweeted “@NUJofficial has deleted its statement of concern about my detention. Concerning, given I was explicitly asked about journalistic materials and + significant proportion of interrogation concerned journalism. This is of concern to all journalists entering and leaving the UK.” He added, “Both the online entry and an accompanying tweet of @NUJOfficial's ‘grave concern’ about my detention under counter-terror powers have been deleted. But it remains extant on their president's Twitter timeline. How could/why should any journalist trust them after this capitulation?”
The NUJ has not responded to requests from the WSWS for an explanation of why they have withdrawn support for Klarenberg. On Tuesday this writer contacted the NUJ’s head office in London and asked for comment on the affair. An NUJ representative on reception said that nobody was in at the NUJ that week (!) and requested that the WSWS send an e-mail asking for comment to campaigns@nuj.org.uk. As the NUJ’s press queries e-mail is listed on the organisation’s web site as communications@nuj.org.uk, an email requesting comment was also sent to that address. The NUJ has not responded.
The NUJ’s backtracking on its defence of Klarenberg came under fire on social media from those opposing the detention of Klarenberg. Freelance investigative journalist and former Guardian and Observer reporter Jonathan Cook tweeted June 5, “Another shameful day for the deeply compromised NUJ. It has deleted its statement of protest at counter-terrorism police interrogating and threatening investigative journalist Kit Klarenberg as he returned to the UK. Why are we paying dues to this fraudulent union?”
The NUJ’s refusal to defend Klarenberg is of a piece with its history of abject capitulation to the government and capitalist state and is made more venal under conditions in which Britain is playing a central role in NATO’s war against Russia—with supporters of the war such as Mason demanding a clampdown on any critical voice.
The NUJ has form on these issues, above all its treatment of the WikiLeaks founder and journalist Julian Assange. The NUJ refused to defend Assange for almost a decade following his initial arrest in London in December 2010.
On April 11, 2019, the NUJ finally issued a mealy-mouthed two-paragraph statement in Assange’s defence to cover for their culpability in his persecution by the US and British state apparatus. Their silence on the persecution was no longer tenable on the day that the most prominent journalist on the planet was snatched by British police from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London—where he had received asylum for seven years—and then thrown into London’s maximum-security Belmarsh Prison.
The NUJ statement was, however, pro forma. On May 3, 2019, the NUJ held a meeting at the Free Word centre in London to mark World Press Freedom Day, at which its representatives, including NUJ General Secretary Michelle Stanistreet, ignored Assange and refused to link his name and the fight to end his persecution to the struggle for press freedom.
In response to protests from Assange supporters in the audience, including a WSWS representative, Stanistreet cynically commented, “To focus on Assange would be offensive to the memory of those who have been killed all over the world.”
The NUJ’s executive only finally issued a substantive resolution opposing Assange’s detention and moves by the US and British governments to extradite him on November 13, 2019—almost nine years after Assange’s initial arrest.
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