Julian Assange: Legitimate Asylee or Propaganda Pawn?

Ecuador has granted asylum to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.  Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino said Ecuador believed Mr. Assange faced a real threat of political persecution–including the prospect of extradition to the United States, where he would not get a fair trial.  “It is not impossible that he would be treated in a cruel manner, condemned to life in prison, or even the death penalty,” the Foreign Minister told journalists in Quito, the Ecuadoran capital.  “Ecuador is convinced that his procedural rights have been violated.”  Currently, Mr. Assange remains holed up in the Ecuadoran Embassy in London.  Given the UK’s lack of cooperation (including a thinly veiled–and quite shocking–threat to raid the Embassy), it remains unclear how he will get out of England to Ecuador.

Could this be Julian Assange escaping from the Embassy?

I have written about this issue a few times before, and I must admit that I have mixed feelings about Mr. Assange and his “accomplishments.”  While it seems that some of the information he helped exposed is important and was being withheld for illegitimate reasons, other information should have remained secret.  For example, Wikileaks exposed information about individuals from Afghanistan who were cooperating with the U.S. against the Taliban.  Such people now face increased danger in their home country.  Also, confidential diplomatic cables that were sometimes unflattering to foreign leaders should have been kept secret.  Exposure damaged our international relationships and did nothing to further the cause of freedom.  Our diplomats and our military officials need to communicate frankly with each other.  This is how policy is made and implemented, and it is how we reach our foreign policy goals (most of which are legitimate).  I suppose overall, I believe that Mr. Assange did more harm than good.  But I also suppose that my opinion in this regard is not all that important.  What I really want to talk about is whether Mr. Assange qualifies for asylum under international law.

It is pretty clear to me that Mr. Assange does not meet the requirements for asylum under international law.  First of all, Mr. Assange is a citizen of Australia.  He is currently in England and is wanted in Sweden based on a (possibly bogus) criminal charge.  If he is extradited to Sweden (as the Brits have agreed to do), he fears that he will then be extradited to the United States.  Normally, a person receives asylum from his home country; not from a third country.  As a citizen of Australia, he should receive protection from his own government.  There is some indication that Mr. Assange is not receiving protection from Australia, but this remains in dispute (Australia claims to be providing him with consular assistance as needed).  Of course, if Mr. Assange felt his government would help him, I imagine he would have gone to the Australian Embassy instead of the Ecuadoran Embassy.  Regardless of all this, international law provides protection to people who fear persecution in their home country, not in a third country, and so Mr. Assange would have a hard time qualifying under this standard.  

Second, Mr. Assange is wanted for two crimes–sexual assaults–in Sweden.  He claims that the charges have been contrived to punish him for exposing state secrets.  That may well be true, but there is no indication that Sweden would deny him a fair and public trial.  Also, there is no indication that he would be punished in Sweden for his Wikileaks activities.  All in all, there seems to be no basis for Mr. Assange to receive asylum from Sweden.

Third, Mr. Assange claims that Sweden would deport him to the United States, but this is pretty speculative.  So far, the U.S. has not asked Great Britain to extradite him (although there was a rumor about a secret indictment).  That being the case, what credible evidence can he present to demonstrate that the U.S. will ask Sweden to extradite him?   

Finally, despite the comments of the Ecuadoran Foreign Minister, there is no evidence that Mr. Assange faces persecution–as opposed to prosecution–in the United States.  As far as I know, exposing government secrets is illegal in every country.  People who violate this law may be punished according to the law.  Unless the punishment rises to a certain level of severity (for example, the death penalty), it would not equate to “persecution.”  In Mr. Assange’s case, there is no reason to believe that he would face the death penalty.  Even Bradley Manning, the U.S. Army private who leaked information to Wikileaks, is not facing the death penalty.  Also, most European countries will not extradite a suspect to the United States without assurances that he would not face the death penalty.  It is very unlikely that Sweden (or Great Britain) would extradite Mr. Assange to the U.S. without such assurances.  As he does not face “persecution” in the U.S., he would not qualify for asylum from the United States.

For all these reasons, Mr. Assange would not qualify for asylum under international law.  Ecuador has its own reasons for granting Mr. Assange asylum.  Maybe they truly believe he will be persecuted (as opposed to prosecuted) in Sweden or the United States.  Maybe they just want to annoy the the U.S. and the West.  Maybe they see it as a way to score propaganda points.  Who knows?  What seems certain, though, is that Ecuador is not granting Mr. Assange asylum because he satisfies the requirements for asylum under international law.

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5 comments

  1. […] I don’t want to discuss the virtues of Mr. Snowden’s actions (though I will note that I have been critical of another whistleblower/asylum seeker, Julian Assange, whose revelations put many people at risk). […]

    Reply
  2. I don’t know much about international law but was curious as to whether torture equates to persecution? If so he should fulfill one of your requirements?

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    • Of course if he faced torture on account of a protected ground, he would have a claim for asylum. The problem remains, there is no good evidence that he would be tortured in Sweden, the US or elsewhere. He may very well be punished for exposing state secrets (which violates the law), but this is not the same as persecution. For a different perspective from mine on whether Mr. Assange faces persecution, take a look at the Op Ed by Michael Moore and Oliver Stone in the NY Times. It raises some important points. For me, I am still not convinced that the US is trying to extradite him. If they were, why not just file the request with Great Britain? Why go to the trouble of first getting him to Sweden and then bringing him to the US? Here is a link to the Op Ed: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/08/21/opinion/wikileaks-and-the-global-future-of-free-speech.html

      Reply
  3. I think it is rendition that Assange fears more.
    On this both the US and Sweden have form.

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    • I assume you refer to extraordinary rendition where a suspect is taken to a third country and interrogated (or much worse). I think that makes more sense, especially given all the strange happenings surrounding his case – like the Brits threatening to invade the sovereign space of the Ecuadoran Embassy, the rumor about the secret indictment in the U.S., and the (at best) mixed messages from Australia in terms of whether it will protect him. The purpose of my posting is only to examine whether he satisfies the legal requirements for asylum.

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