Julian Assange — Political Persecution or Criminal Prosecution?

Overview
The story of Julian Assange’s prosecution is the story of a question no democracy has been able to answer clearly: where does journalism end and espionage begin?
For twelve years — from his arrest on a European warrant in 2010 to his plea deal in 2024 — Assange existed in a legal and diplomatic purgatory that had no real precedent. He was confined to an embassy for seven years, locked in a maximum-security prison for five, charged under a World War I-era espionage law, defended by the UN’s top torture expert, denounced by CIA directors, and supported by press freedom organizations worldwide.
The United States wanted to establish that publishing classified documents could be criminal. Press freedom advocates wanted to establish that it couldn’t. Assange himself wanted to be recognized as a journalist being persecuted for doing journalism. His critics wanted to distinguish between journalism and reckless endangerment.
In the end, a plea deal resolved the immediate case without resolving any of the underlying questions — which may have been the point.
The Swedish Case
The Sexual Assault Allegations
In August 2010 — months after WikiLeaks published Collateral Murder and as the organization was preparing to release the Afghan War Diary — two women in Sweden reported sexual assault allegations against Assange.
The details of the allegations varied: one woman said Assange had sex with her while she was asleep; the other said he had refused to use a condom despite agreement to do so. Under Swedish law, these actions constituted sexual offenses.
Assange denied the charges and argued they were politically motivated — either fabricated or amplified by Swedish authorities under pressure from the United States. He claimed the sexual encounters were consensual and that the timing of the allegations — immediately after WikiLeaks’ most damaging publications — was not coincidental.
The Swedish prosecution became a polarizing issue. Many of Assange’s supporters accepted his claim that the charges were a pretext for extradition to the United States. Women’s rights advocates argued that dismissing sexual assault allegations because the accused is politically inconvenient was exactly the kind of behavior that discourages reporting. Both positions had merit. The truth of the underlying allegations was never tested in court — Sweden eventually dropped the investigation in 2019 after the statute of limitations expired.
The UK Extradition Battle
After Sweden issued a European Arrest Warrant, Assange was arrested in London in December 2010. He fought extradition through the British courts, losing at every level. Facing imminent extradition, he sought asylum.
The Embassy Years (2012-2019)
Life Inside
On June 19, 2012, Assange walked into the Ecuadorian Embassy in London — a modest apartment in the Knightsbridge neighborhood — and did not walk out for six years and ten months.
Ecuador’s president, Rafael Correa, granted Assange political asylum on the grounds that he faced political persecution. The British government refused to grant him safe passage out of the country, posting police officers outside the embassy around the clock at a cost eventually estimated at over £16 million.
Assange lived in a single room, later expanded to a small suite. He had no outdoor access, no sunlight, and increasingly limited space as his relationship with embassy staff deteriorated. He received visitors — journalists, lawyers, supporters, and celebrities — but his world shrank to the dimensions of a London apartment.
During the embassy years, Assange continued to direct WikiLeaks operations, overseeing the publication of the DNC emails, the Podesta emails, and Vault 7. He conducted interviews, held press conferences on the embassy balcony, and maintained his public profile despite his confinement.
His health deteriorated. Multiple medical professionals reported depression, cognitive difficulties, and the physical consequences of years without sunlight or exercise. The UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention ruled in February 2016 that Assange was being “arbitrarily detained” and called for his release — a ruling the UK and Sweden rejected.
The Surveillance
In 2019, it was revealed that UC Global, a Spanish security firm hired to protect the embassy, had been secretly surveilling Assange on behalf of the CIA. The surveillance allegedly included:
- Recording Assange’s meetings with lawyers (a violation of attorney-client privilege)
- Monitoring his communications and internet activity
- Photographing visitors’ passports and phones
- Placing recording devices in the embassy, including in the women’s bathroom used by Assange’s partner Stella Moris
- Discussing plans to poison Assange or facilitate his kidnapping
UC Global’s director, David Morales, was charged in Spain with violation of privacy, bribery, and money laundering. The CIA surveillance revelations were cited by Assange’s defense as evidence of political persecution and were considered by British courts in the extradition proceedings.
The Eviction
Ecuador’s government changed in 2017. New president Lenín Moreno did not share his predecessor’s enthusiasm for hosting Assange. Relations between Assange and the embassy deteriorated — there were complaints about his hygiene, his treatment of embassy staff, and his cat.
On April 11, 2019, Ecuador revoked Assange’s asylum. British police were invited into the embassy and dragged Assange out — he was visibly disheveled, bearded, and carrying a copy of Gore Vidal’s History of the National Security State. He was immediately arrested on the UK warrant for bail violation and later on the U.S. extradition request.
The American Prosecution
The Charges
The U.S. initially unsealed a single charge of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion — alleging that Assange had helped Chelsea Manning crack a password hash to access classified material. This charge carried a maximum of five years.
In May 2019, the DOJ issued a superseding indictment adding 17 charges under the Espionage Act of 1917. The charges alleged that Assange had:
- Conspired with Manning to obtain classified material
- Solicited and received classified material
- Published classified material endangering named human intelligence sources
The total potential sentence: 175 years.
The Press Freedom Crisis
The Espionage Act charges sent shockwaves through the journalism community. The Act, passed during World War I, makes no distinction between a spy selling secrets to a foreign government and a journalist publishing classified information in the public interest. It has no public interest defense. If Assange could be prosecuted for publishing classified documents, press freedom advocates argued, any journalist who published leaked classified material — which is to say, every investigative journalist covering national security — could face the same charges.
Major press freedom organizations condemned the prosecution:
- Reporters Without Borders: Called it “the most significant threat to press freedom in the 21st century”
- Amnesty International: Called the Espionage Act charges “a politically motivated form of retaliation”
- The Committee to Protect Journalists: Called the prosecution “a direct attack on the First Amendment”
- The ACLU: Filed an amicus brief opposing the prosecution
Even news organizations that had been critical of Assange — including The New York Times, which had a complicated relationship with WikiLeaks dating back to Cablegate — expressed concern about the Espionage Act precedent.
The Extradition Battle
The extradition proceedings in British courts lasted from 2019 to 2024. Key developments:
January 2021: District Judge Vanessa Baraitser blocked extradition on mental health grounds, finding Assange was at risk of suicide in the U.S. prison system. She accepted the prosecution’s case on its merits but ruled the conditions of likely detention made extradition oppressive.
December 2021: The UK High Court reversed Baraitser’s ruling after the U.S. government provided assurances about detention conditions.
June 2023: The UK Home Secretary signed the extradition order.
March 2024: The UK High Court granted Assange permission to appeal the extradition, citing concerns about First Amendment protections and potential death penalty application.
The Plea Deal
On June 24, 2024, before the appeal could be heard, Assange reached a plea agreement with the U.S. government. He pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defense information in a federal court in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands (chosen for geographic proximity to Australia, where Assange was heading).
He was sentenced to time served — 62 months in Belmarsh Prison — and immediately released. He flew to Australia a free man.
The Torture Question
Nils Melzer’s Investigation
Nils Melzer, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, conducted an investigation into Assange’s treatment and published his findings in his 2022 book The Trial of Julian Assange. Melzer concluded that Assange had been subjected to “psychological torture” through:
- Prolonged arbitrary detention in the embassy and prison
- The threat of prosecution carrying 175 years imprisonment
- Deliberate degradation of his physical and mental health through denial of medical care and outdoor access
- The CIA’s surveillance of his attorney-client communications
- The combined pressure of multiple governments working to ensure his prosecution
Melzer’s findings were contested by the UK and U.S. governments but were consistent with assessments by independent medical professionals who examined Assange during his Belmarsh detention.
Legacy
The Assange case ended without answering the question it posed. The plea deal avoided a trial that would have tested whether the First Amendment protects the publication of classified documents by a non-traditional media organization. The Espionage Act’s applicability to publishers remains legally ambiguous — neither confirmed nor rejected by a court.
What the case did establish, unambiguously, is the cost of publishing America’s secrets. Twelve years of confinement. Physical and psychological deterioration. Prosecution under laws designed for spies. Whether this cost constitutes justice or persecution depends, ultimately, on whether you believe that what WikiLeaks published was journalism or something else.
Timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| April 2010 | WikiLeaks publishes Collateral Murder; Assange becomes global figure |
| Aug 2010 | Swedish sexual assault allegations made |
| Dec 2010 | Assange arrested in London on Swedish warrant |
| June 2012 | Assange enters Ecuadorian Embassy; granted asylum |
| Feb 2016 | UN Working Group rules Assange “arbitrarily detained” |
| 2016 | WikiLeaks publishes DNC/Podesta emails during U.S. election |
| April 2017 | CIA Director Pompeo calls WikiLeaks “hostile intelligence service” |
| Nov 2018 | U.S. unseals initial charge (computer intrusion conspiracy) |
| April 2019 | Ecuador revokes asylum; Assange arrested |
| May 2019 | Superseding indictment: 17 Espionage Act charges added |
| Jan 2021 | UK judge blocks extradition on mental health grounds |
| Dec 2021 | UK High Court reverses; extradition allowed |
| 2022 | Nils Melzer publishes findings on “psychological torture” |
| March 2024 | UK court grants appeal permission |
| June 2024 | Assange pleads guilty to one count; sentenced to time served; released |
Sources & Further Reading
- Melzer, Nils. The Trial of Julian Assange. Verso Books, 2022.
- Hrafnsson, Kristinn. “WikiLeaks Under Siege.” Testimony and public statements, 2019-2024.
- Goetz, John, and Bastian Obermayer. Enemy of the State: Julian Assange. 2021.
- United States v. Assange, E.D. Va., Criminal Case No. 1:18-cr-111 (2019-2024).
- UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention. Opinion No. 54/2015 concerning Julian Assange, February 2016.
- Reporters Without Borders. Statements on Assange prosecution, 2019-2024.
Related Theories
- WikiLeaks — The organization Assange founded
- Collateral Murder — The publication that triggered U.S. hostility
- Cablegate — The diplomatic cables that made Assange America’s top target
- Chelsea Manning — Assange’s most important source
- Vault 7 CIA Hacking — The CIA leak that prompted Pompeo’s “hostile intelligence” designation
Frequently Asked Questions
Was Julian Assange a political prisoner?
Why was Assange in the Ecuadorian Embassy?
What was Assange charged with in the United States?
Did Assange do anything beyond what journalists do?
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