00:00:09
No worries.
00:00:10
British police got him into the embassy
00:00:13
and arrested Julian.
00:00:15
[Music]
00:00:17
This is one example of many, many
00:00:21
acts of persecution,
00:00:24
deliberate torture. Joanne
00:00:30
Then I felt there was danger.
00:00:33
[Music]
00:00:37
I'm all right. I'm here with you. With a
00:00:41
concern for us, Julian's family and
00:00:43
friends is that Julian's not here with
00:00:46
us.
00:00:52
[Music]
00:00:58
many many millions of people have
00:01:00
benefited immensely from the
00:01:03
publications of Wikileaks in June.
00:01:07
If you just want to take one example is
00:01:10
the uh Katron murder. I don't know if
00:01:13
that's
00:01:15
what the helicopter pilots and the
00:01:18
gunner murder these people.
00:01:24
This is a war crime and yet Julian has
00:01:27
to be extradited for reporting a war
00:01:30
crime.
00:02:01
It's a vindictive persecution which is
00:02:05
an attack on press freedom worldwide.
00:02:06
Right. And uh it should be fought by all
00:02:09
means.
00:02:14
[Music]
00:02:25
The story of Wikileaks begins in the
00:02:27
middle of the war in Iraq. A handful of
00:02:30
hackers and a few journalists. They
00:02:33
quickly made the US military's worst
00:02:35
nightmare a reality by revealing a
00:02:38
classified video to the world.
00:02:58
When I first saw it, actually it didn't
00:03:00
have that much impact on me.
00:03:03
cuz I didn't know where it was, when it
00:03:05
was, what was the circumstances, who
00:03:07
were these people, etc. It was only by
00:03:10
following the path through the thing and
00:03:12
seeing how relaxed and sort of innocent
00:03:15
most of the people were in the video
00:03:17
that the carnage then became uh so
00:03:20
outrageous.
00:03:23
The video is complex. To better decipher
00:03:26
it, the founder of Wikileaks and his
00:03:28
team moved to Rekuik, the capital of
00:03:31
Iceland. They rent a discrete house they
00:03:33
call the bunker.
00:03:39
[Music]
00:03:51
It's July 2007. An Apache helicopter
00:03:54
flies over a neighborhood in Baghdad.
00:03:57
The onboard camera spots a group of
00:03:59
Iraqis on the ground. Two of them are
00:04:01
carrying weapons. The pilot in radio
00:04:04
contact with his base requests
00:04:06
permission to fire.
00:04:07
Hotel
00:04:09
to six individuals with AK-47s
00:04:12
request permission to engage.
00:04:14
Once I started discovering more and more
00:04:17
detail, this is when it became more
00:04:19
emotional. So to understand that yes,
00:04:23
this person was a journalist from
00:04:25
Reuters and this was a a driver uh from
00:04:28
Reuters.
00:04:30
Among the victims, Wikileaks identifies
00:04:33
Sed Shama, a Reuters's assistant driver
00:04:36
and photographer, Namir Nor Eld.
00:04:43
The helicopter pilot obviously sees
00:04:46
Namir and Sas as insurgent and instantly
00:04:51
decides that the cameras are are
00:04:53
weapons.
00:04:55
All right, we got guy with an RPG.
00:04:57
But this is what death sent basically
00:04:59
for those guys.
00:05:04
A few minutes later, the nature of the
00:05:07
incident changes. The mission becomes a
00:05:10
war crime. A black van approaches to
00:05:12
assist the wounded. Inside, there are no
00:05:15
combatants, just two men with two
00:05:18
children. The pilot makes up an imminent
00:05:21
threat and requests permission to fire
00:05:23
again.
00:05:25
Bushmaster 7. Roger. This is Bushmaster
00:05:28
7. Roger. Engage.
00:05:29
Come on.
00:05:33
Clear.
00:05:37
Clear.
00:05:42
Coming around. Clear.
00:05:43
Roger. Trying to
00:05:47
Oh yeah. Look at that. right through the
00:05:48
windshield.
00:05:50
[Music]
00:05:54
On the ground, corpses everywhere. The
00:05:58
helicopter then captures on film the
00:06:00
arrival of a group of soldiers. Among
00:06:02
them, Ethan McCord.
00:06:06
This is me here.
00:06:10
I was one of about six who were
00:06:12
dismounted at the time um running up
00:06:15
onto the scene. I had never seen
00:06:17
anything like that before. I saw on the
00:06:20
corner um what appeared to have been uh
00:06:22
three men. Um and they were completely
00:06:26
destroyed by the 30 mm rounds. It almost
00:06:29
to me didn't seem real. It it kind of
00:06:31
seemed like something that you would see
00:06:34
out of a bad horror movie.
00:06:38
The soldier realizes the severity of the
00:06:40
incident as he approaches the van. He
00:06:43
locates two wounded people. a
00:06:45
four-year-old girl and a 10-year-old
00:06:47
boy.
00:06:51
[Music]
00:06:54
I originally thought that the boy was
00:06:56
was deceased
00:06:58
um cuz of the he had a wound to the
00:07:00
right side of his head and he wasn't
00:07:01
moving. Um and when I went back out to
00:07:04
the van, um he made like a labored
00:07:07
breath movement and um that's when I
00:07:10
started screaming that the boy's alive,
00:07:12
the boy's alive. And uh I grabbed him,
00:07:16
started running up to the Bradley, which
00:07:17
is now
00:07:22
radio.
00:07:28
At this point, he looks up at me and I
00:07:29
looked down at him. Um and I told him,
00:07:32
"It's going to be okay. I have you.
00:07:34
Don't worry. It's going to be okay." Um
00:07:35
and his eyes rolled back into his head.
00:07:37
And at that point, I thought that he
00:07:40
possibly had just died in my arms.
00:07:44
[Music]
00:07:46
After this day, I couldn't justify what
00:07:48
I was doing in Iraq anymore.
00:07:52
I became um very angry with the war, the
00:07:56
death and destruction of of innocent
00:07:58
people. That's not what I joined the
00:08:00
military for.
00:08:02
On April the 5th, 2010, Wikileaks
00:08:05
publishes the video online. The public
00:08:08
discovers the true horror of this war in
00:08:11
Baghdad. The families of the victims
00:08:13
learn of what happened.
00:08:20
[Music]
00:08:27
The man driving the van died, but the
00:08:30
boy saved by Ethan McCord survived.
00:08:34
[Music]
00:08:48
Huh?
00:08:56
[Music]
00:09:02
Well, good afternoon to you. I am Dylan
00:09:04
Ratigan. Some breaking news this
00:09:05
afternoon. a shocking graphic video from
00:09:08
Iraq apparently showing US troops
00:09:10
gunning down innocent civilians. I
00:09:12
had just got done dropping my kids off
00:09:14
at school back in April 2010. Um I went
00:09:17
home, grabbed a cup of coffee, sat down
00:09:19
on the couch, and turned on the news and
00:09:21
uh there I was running across the screen
00:09:23
of my own television um carrying a
00:09:25
child. Um I knew immediately what it
00:09:28
was. Um and it actually felt like a huge
00:09:30
slap in the face. I had spent so much
00:09:33
time trying to forget that incident. Um,
00:09:36
and then here it was being pushed in my
00:09:37
face again.
00:09:40
Ethan McCord was demobilized in 2010.
00:09:44
Since then, he has been an anti-war
00:09:46
activist.
00:09:48
[Music]
00:09:58
The collateral murder release was very
00:10:00
important. Uh, the video is iconic. It's
00:10:03
symbolic. It was a stunning testimony of
00:10:06
a war crime. There was no question about
00:10:08
it. And people saw for their own eyes
00:10:13
what the the war entailed.
00:10:36
[Music]
00:10:42
Wikileaks explodes on international
00:10:44
media.
00:10:47
[Music]
00:10:51
Many people are now interested in these
00:10:53
faces.
00:10:54
Julian Assange and one of the founders
00:10:57
of the project.
00:10:59
Wikileaks is financed by contributions
00:11:02
from private people. $200,000 for
00:11:06
operational costs. It was built in a way
00:11:08
that whistleblowers remain anonymous to
00:11:11
the project itself. So whenever
00:11:14
something was received, it was not clear
00:11:17
where it came from. So the whistleblower
00:11:20
should feel secure in a way that if he
00:11:22
feels something should be out in the
00:11:24
public. Um there is not an instance that
00:11:28
is then judging about his feelings.
00:11:37
Wikileaks grants total anonymity to all
00:11:40
its sources. Just one month after the
00:11:42
video was broadcast, the US Army
00:11:45
arrested a young soldier not far from
00:11:47
Baghdad.
00:11:49
[Music]
00:11:56
His name Bradley Manning. He spends his
00:11:59
days filing military documents and is
00:12:02
suspected of having leaked the video.
00:12:05
Bradley Manning is a young 22-year-old
00:12:07
army intelligence specialist only a
00:12:09
couple of years in the army. He felt
00:12:11
that there were operations going on. He
00:12:13
felt that there had been civilian deaths
00:12:15
and other things about war that the
00:12:18
American people and that the world
00:12:19
should know about.
00:12:23
[Music]
00:12:25
The question is how was he able to
00:12:27
download all this information without
00:12:28
drawing suspicion to himself? So, in
00:12:31
fact, he told people apparently that
00:12:33
when he was actually downloading some of
00:12:35
this sensitive information onto a CD, he
00:12:38
was actually listening to Lady Gaga. It
00:12:40
wasn't true at all, but that's what he
00:12:42
told people. And they said, "Oh, okay.
00:12:43
That's fine. That now we understand what
00:12:45
he's why he's spending so so much time,
00:12:47
why it's taking so long for him to do
00:12:50
whatever he's doing." With high levels
00:12:52
of clearance, Bradley Manning downloads
00:12:55
millions of confidential documents,
00:12:58
military reports,
00:13:00
diplomatic cables, strategy memos about
00:13:04
Iraq and also Afghanistan.
00:13:11
Bradley Manning first offers his
00:13:13
documents to the Washington Post and the
00:13:15
New York Times, who don't respond.
00:13:27
Then he contacted Wikileaks.
00:13:31
Alone, the soldier is in a vulnerable
00:13:33
position. He chats with Adrien Lammo, a
00:13:36
young hacker, telling him everything.
00:14:02
Unfazed by the circumstances, Adrien
00:14:05
Lammo reports Bradley Manning to the
00:14:07
FBI, a move he explains during a meeting
00:14:11
with other hackers.
00:14:14
what I was doing at that time is what I
00:14:20
do believe um Private First Class
00:14:23
Manning was doing which is acting one's
00:14:26
conscience.
00:14:27
In that case, I felt
00:14:31
compelled.
00:14:33
Compelled, I don't believe, is too
00:14:34
strong a word.
00:14:37
[Music]
00:14:42
Bradley Manning is supported by some
00:14:44
activists. However, it's little compared
00:14:47
to the firepower of conservative
00:14:49
commentators.
00:14:52
[Applause]
00:14:52
[Music]
00:14:54
Hi, I'm Bill O'Reilly. Thanks for
00:14:56
watching us tonight. There are traitors
00:14:58
in America. That is the subject of this
00:15:00
evening's talking points memo. Whoever
00:15:02
leaked all those State Department
00:15:03
documents to the Wikileaks website is a
00:15:06
traitor and should be executed or put in
00:15:08
prison for life.
00:15:10
Whoever in uh our government leaked that
00:15:13
information, is guilty of treason. And I
00:15:15
think anything less than execution is
00:15:17
too kind a penalty.
00:15:20
Bradley Manning is incarcerated in a
00:15:23
highsecurity military prison. During his
00:15:26
trial, the soldier admits to leaking
00:15:28
documents to alert the public. He is
00:15:30
convicted of espionage and theft.
00:15:34
[Music]
00:15:40
35 years behind bars, that is the
00:15:43
sentence for this man, Bradley Manning,
00:15:45
the US soldier convicted of the biggest
00:15:47
breach of classified data and media.
00:15:52
The fate of Bradley Manning does not
00:15:54
prevent Wikileaks from continuing its
00:15:56
affairs. The site is now associated with
00:15:59
international press, including the
00:16:01
Guardian. In the property of the news
00:16:03
giant, a headquarters is set up to
00:16:05
analyze over 90,000 documents. This time
00:16:09
about Afghanistan.
00:16:11
[Music]
00:16:13
We set up a secret office on the fourth
00:16:15
floor of this building that nobody else
00:16:17
was allowed in. uh and we had this kind
00:16:19
of little international bunker uh or war
00:16:22
room
00:16:23
and essentially what we found were there
00:16:25
were some 92,000
00:16:27
documents uh these are incident logs uh
00:16:30
war reports in Afghanistan and to some
00:16:33
parts along the Afghan Pakistan border
00:16:36
and we did a lot of work on going
00:16:38
through these logs trying to decode them
00:16:40
a lot of them were written in an almost
00:16:42
impenetrable military jargon full of
00:16:44
abbreviations and acronyms
00:16:48
One of the main uh findings that we came
00:16:51
up with these documents was that the
00:16:54
Pakistani military and intelligence
00:16:56
service, the ISI
00:16:58
very closely supports the some of the
00:17:02
Taliban and other insurgent activities
00:17:04
in Afghanistan as a way of keeping the
00:17:07
coalition forces off balance.
00:17:11
Whistleblowing website Wikileaks does it
00:17:14
again. Last time it was Iraq. This time
00:17:16
it's Afghanistan.
00:17:20
The discoveries make the front page of
00:17:22
the New York Times, the Spiegel, and of
00:17:25
course the Guardian. By doing so,
00:17:28
validating the work of Wikileaks.
00:17:32
[Music]
00:17:36
So this is the Guardian from this
00:17:38
morning. Uh 14 pages uh about this
00:17:41
topic. Uh, also concurrently in the
00:17:46
Spiegel 17 pages, the real story of this
00:17:50
material is that it's war. It's one damn
00:17:53
thing after another.
00:17:56
Washington is inevitably furious
00:18:00
groups.
00:18:00
The United States strongly condemns the
00:18:03
illegal disclosure of classified
00:18:06
information.
00:18:08
In the documents published by Wikileaks,
00:18:10
there are some names of American army
00:18:12
collaborators that appear. In
00:18:14
Afghanistan or Iraq, the military uses
00:18:16
translators. In the eyes of the
00:18:18
insurgents, these men are traitors.
00:18:21
Disclosing their identity puts their
00:18:23
lives at risk.
00:18:32
Good afternoon
00:18:35
at the Pentagon. Wikileaks is denounced
00:18:38
as a criminal organization.
00:18:41
The battlefield consequences of the
00:18:43
release of these documents are
00:18:45
potentially severe and dangerous.
00:18:48
Mr. Assange can say whatever he likes
00:18:50
about the greater good he thinks he and
00:18:52
his source are doing. But the truth is
00:18:55
they might already have on their hands
00:18:58
the blood of some young soldier or that
00:19:00
of an Afghan family.
00:19:06
It was of course unfortunate that uh uh
00:19:08
some names were actually published
00:19:10
there. But uh it has been overplayed
00:19:13
quite a bit uh with very dramatic and
00:19:16
and ridiculous words from Pentagon that
00:19:19
uh Wikile might have blood on his hand
00:19:22
and that coming from you know
00:19:24
organization
00:19:26
which have you know quite a bit of blood
00:19:28
on his hands is almost hypocritical
00:19:31
and as of now I mean there have been no
00:19:34
reported incidents of of of anyone that
00:19:37
has been been hurt by this information.
00:19:40
[Music]
00:19:46
What do you expect at the end of the day
00:19:48
with all this material?
00:19:49
Well, I hope it creates
00:19:52
disincentives for engaging in immoral
00:19:56
conduct in war. So, disincentives for
00:19:59
engaging in war in war crimes uh in
00:20:03
Iraq, in other places. It gives the
00:20:06
victims of war in Iraq a sense of
00:20:09
justice,
00:20:11
a better understanding of how war goes
00:20:14
and how war goes wrong.
00:20:16
Possibly the most valuable thing to come
00:20:18
out of it.
00:20:28
Wikileaks is releasing one story after
00:20:31
another. Afghanistan, Iraq. The media
00:20:34
world is asking the same question. Who
00:20:37
is this enigmatic Julian Assange?
00:20:40
The founder of Wikileaks covers the
00:20:42
front pages of magazines.
00:20:45
[Music]
00:20:55
Julian Assange taking the world by storm
00:20:59
which has proven to irritate his
00:21:00
colleagues.
00:21:02
Julian's approach was to just rush
00:21:04
things and to blast out those few big
00:21:07
leaks
00:21:09
and concentrate only on those leaks.
00:21:11
Yes. Because they they're what gives you
00:21:14
most popularity, you know, and that's
00:21:16
not the approach. I'm not into being
00:21:18
popular. It was a right approach. if you
00:21:20
want to build a personality, if you want
00:21:22
to become, I don't know, Time magazine
00:21:24
man of the year or something like this,
00:21:26
but it's not the right approach in
00:21:29
respect to the ideals of this
00:21:30
organization.
00:21:32
Sweden.
00:21:34
Okay.
00:21:36
For Asange's colleague, it's a betrayal
00:21:38
of Wikileaks ideals. The two men clash
00:21:42
through online conversation, of course.
00:21:45
[Music]
00:21:46
[Applause]
00:21:59
He suspended me for being disloyal and
00:22:02
insubordinate and stuff like this. So,
00:22:04
this is some kind of weird military
00:22:07
terminology that he uses himself to deal
00:22:10
with people he is working with. Um,
00:22:13
you felt betrayed? Yes, because I did
00:22:16
not betray him and I did never ever
00:22:18
betray Wikileaks.
00:22:20
Daniel Dmshite Berg leaves Wikileaks in
00:22:23
2010. Criticized by his friends, Julian
00:22:27
Assange is hated by his enemies who
00:22:30
sometimes call for his execution
00:22:32
publicly.
00:22:33
The dead man can't leak stuff. This
00:22:34
guy's a traitor, a treasonist, and and
00:22:36
illegally shoot the son of a
00:22:38
Well, I think Assange should be
00:22:39
assassinated. Actually, I think Obama
00:22:41
should put out a contract and maybe use
00:22:43
a drone or something.
00:22:55
120 people headed up by a general who do
00:22:58
nothing else but target us. Defense
00:23:00
Intelligence Agency and FBI uh
00:23:03
internally called the Wikileaks war
00:23:05
room. United States at the moment there
00:23:07
is an attempt to get up an espionage
00:23:10
prosecution against me and other people.
00:23:13
The United States um intelligence
00:23:16
community plus military is what may
00:23:20
maybe 1.5 million people. So 120 is
00:23:24
actually not so
00:23:26
perhaps a bit overconfident of Julian
00:23:28
Assange. Since 2010, the American
00:23:31
authorities are in fact seeking to
00:23:33
arrest him, and an opportunity presents
00:23:36
itself in Sweden.
00:23:38
[Music]
00:23:42
In the summer of 2010, two young women
00:23:45
accuse Julian Assange of having
00:23:47
consensual but unprotected sex. The
00:23:50
press takes the case and speaks of a
00:23:53
suspicion of rape. The judge opens an
00:23:56
investigation.
00:23:58
Without proof, the proceedings are first
00:24:00
cancelled, but it is surprisingly
00:24:03
revived. Julian Assange accuses
00:24:06
Wikileaks of political maneuvering.
00:24:08
[Music]
00:24:14
It appears to be highly irregular
00:24:17
uh and some kind of legal circus
00:24:21
was clearly a smear campaign and that
00:24:24
who is behind this we do not know.
00:24:27
Behind
00:24:29
closed doors, however, Julian Assange
00:24:31
speaks of a destabilization operation
00:24:34
aimed at his extradition to the United
00:24:36
States.
00:25:10
British police have arrested the founder
00:25:12
of the Wikileaks website, Julian
00:25:14
Assange. Wikileaks founder has been
00:25:16
arrested by British police over sexual
00:25:18
assault claims in Sweden.
00:25:20
In December 2010, British police issue a
00:25:24
Swedish arrest warrant. In prison in
00:25:27
London for a week, Julian Assange denies
00:25:29
all accusations of rape. For a year and
00:25:32
a half, he does everything in his power
00:25:35
to not be handed over to Sweden, which
00:25:38
is, according to him, the first step of
00:25:40
his extradition to the United States.
00:25:43
[Music]
00:25:46
when all legal remedies were were
00:25:48
exhausted, uh, Julian sought refuge in
00:25:51
the Ecuadorian embassy and, uh, they
00:25:54
decided that he had a a reasonable fear
00:25:58
of extradition to United States and uh,
00:26:01
granted him
00:26:04
safe haven in the Ecuadorian embassy.
00:26:07
The Assange case mobilized the most
00:26:10
acclaimed lawyers in the world. among
00:26:12
them a historical figure of Spanish
00:26:15
justice, former magistrate Baltazar
00:26:18
Garzon.
00:26:20
He coordinates free of charge the
00:26:22
defense of the Wikileaks founder.
00:27:01
In June 2012, Julian Assange became the
00:27:05
world's most protected political
00:27:07
refugee. barricaded in this Victorian
00:27:10
house in central London.
00:27:18
I ask President Obama to do the right
00:27:22
thing.
00:27:24
The United States must renounce its
00:27:27
witch hunt against Wikileaks.
00:27:31
What appeared to be temporary will
00:27:34
continue on for seven long years. Julian
00:27:37
Assange receives many visitors, lawyers,
00:27:40
ministers, journalists, always in the
00:27:43
confines of four walls.
00:27:45
[Music]
00:27:57
Say photo.
00:28:15
Fore
00:28:29
exterior.
00:28:53
me
00:28:56
Julen
00:29:12
Lavan. Obsessed
00:29:20
with his safety, locked inside, Julian
00:29:24
Assange and his team keep on working. In
00:29:27
2015, new discoveries make the front
00:29:30
page of French papers.
00:29:34
[Music]
00:29:56
In the United States, they are
00:29:59
militarily
00:30:01
occupying what we had previously thought
00:30:03
of as a civilian space.
00:30:06
The essential ingredients of a new
00:30:08
transnational totalitarian dystopia have
00:30:11
been built. The the engine and the
00:30:15
wheels and the chassis have been built
00:30:18
and the key is in the ignition and it's
00:30:20
just imagine a matter now of turning
00:30:22
this on and actually it has been turned
00:30:24
on for some people. Wishaks is an
00:30:26
example of it spreading even to a media
00:30:28
organization.
00:30:30
Julian Assange's obsession the extreme
00:30:33
power of America. the 2016 presidential
00:30:38
campaign will give him the opportunity
00:30:39
to play a leading role. Once again,
00:30:46
ladies and gentlemen, I am officially
00:30:49
running for president of the United
00:30:51
States
00:30:53
and we are going to make our country
00:30:57
great again.
00:30:59
America
00:31:01
can't succeed unless you succeed.
00:31:07
That is why I am running for president
00:31:10
of the United States.
00:31:13
Clinton versus Trump. Their campaigns
00:31:16
promise to be brutal. Opposed to Hillary
00:31:19
Clinton since 2010, Wikileaks has chosen
00:31:23
its side. An internal message sent by
00:31:26
Julian Assange himself, leaving no doubt
00:31:29
about his opinion.
00:31:33
[Music]
00:31:46
What we are drawing attention to is the
00:31:49
uh amazing transformation uh of Hillary
00:31:52
Clinton and the Democratic Party uh into
00:31:55
being uh the National Security Party and
00:31:58
the National Security Candidate in the
00:32:00
American Liberal press uh in falling
00:32:03
over themselves uh to defend Hillary
00:32:05
Clinton are erecting a demon uh that is
00:32:09
going to put nooes around everyone's
00:32:11
necks uh as soon as she wins his
00:32:12
election, which he is almost certainly
00:32:14
going to do.
00:32:17
From spring 2016, tens of thousands of
00:32:21
emails from Hillary Clinton and her
00:32:23
collaborators were published online. But
00:32:25
the most sensitive documents don't come
00:32:27
from Wikileaks. Hillary Hillary Clinton
00:32:30
may have violated federal recordeping
00:32:32
rules.
00:32:41
They are revealed by a socalled Gassifer
00:32:44
2.0. O when Gusifer appears on the web,
00:32:47
Wikileaks partners with the mysterious
00:32:50
source to get more information. On June
00:32:52
the 22nd, 2016, Wikileaks sends him this
00:32:57
private message on Twitter.
00:33:00
[Music]
00:33:05
New message, the 6th of July.
00:33:21
US investigators claim to have traced
00:33:23
the trail of the hackers behind this
00:33:26
fictitious character, allegedly the
00:33:29
Russian secret service. Could Wikileaks
00:33:32
be complicit in an attempt to
00:33:34
destabilize the situation?
00:33:40
It is a a wrongful depiction. Julian has
00:33:43
stated that the the source of the
00:33:45
information was uh uh neither Russian
00:33:48
nor a state entity. Where the material
00:33:51
came from doesn't change the fact of the
00:33:54
material. I mean you get information and
00:33:57
you analyze the information and you
00:34:00
decide to publish if it's newsworthy.
00:34:03
That is the core of of of journalistic
00:34:06
practice. So
00:34:09
saying that you that that that Wikileaks
00:34:11
or Julian is is some friend of of of of
00:34:13
Russian interests or follows Russian
00:34:15
interest is is is absurd. It doesn't
00:34:18
hold up any scrutiny.
00:34:20
There is one, however, who revels in the
00:34:22
news about Hillary Clinton.
00:34:28
I'll tell you this Wikileaks stuff is
00:34:30
unbelievable. Wikileaks. Wikileaks that
00:34:33
came out on Wikileaks.
00:34:34
Wikileaks. I love Wikileaks.
00:34:40
[Applause]
00:34:44
destabilized, the Democratic candidate
00:34:46
retorts as best she can in a debate with
00:34:49
Donald Trump.
00:34:54
The Kremlin, meaning Putin and the
00:34:56
Russian government are directing
00:35:00
the attacks, the hacking on American
00:35:03
accounts to influence our election and
00:35:07
Wikileaks is part of that as are other
00:35:09
sites.
00:35:11
In November 2016, Donald Trump was
00:35:14
elected president of the United States.
00:35:18
I pledge to every citizen of our land
00:35:21
that I will be president for all
00:35:23
Americans and this is so important to
00:35:27
me.
00:35:28
[Applause]
00:35:30
President Trump did not remain pro-
00:35:33
Wikileaks for too long. In 2017, the
00:35:37
site publishes new findings from the CIA
00:35:40
and consequently his administration's
00:35:43
attitude towards Wikileaks changes
00:35:45
dramatically.
00:35:48
We at SEAF find the celebration of
00:35:50
entities like Wikileaks to be both
00:35:52
perplexing and deeply troubling.
00:35:55
Because while we do our best to quietly
00:35:57
collect information on those who pose
00:35:59
very real threats to our country,
00:36:00
individuals such as Julian Assange seek
00:36:03
to use that information to make a name
00:36:05
for themselves. It's time to call out
00:36:07
Wikileaks for what it really is. A
00:36:09
non-state hostile intelligence service
00:36:11
often abded by state actors like Russia.
00:36:17
[Music]
00:36:18
In France, suspicions have raised that
00:36:21
Wikileaks might have joined forces with
00:36:23
Russia to destabilize the French
00:36:26
presidential elections.
00:36:28
[Music]
00:36:46
[Music]
00:36:53
The end of Emmanuel Macron's campaign at
00:36:55
headquarters. Hands are full, preparing
00:36:58
for the second round of the presidential
00:37:00
election. But a rumor is out. The
00:37:04
inboxes of certain arm marsh
00:37:06
collaborators have been hacked. It's May
00:37:08
the 5th, 2017,
00:37:11
7:30 p.m.
00:37:16
[Music]
00:37:30
rumors Twitter.
00:37:40
[Music]
00:37:52
document.
00:38:03
The emails are posted on a website
00:38:05
called Forchan by an unknown source. One
00:38:10
and a half hours later, Wikileaks
00:38:12
publishes this tweet referring to the
00:38:14
documents. This message makes Macron
00:38:17
leaks the front page of the
00:38:19
international press.
00:38:24
Marsh movement has been the victim of a
00:38:26
massive and coordinated email
00:38:31
now surfacing everywhere online. It
00:38:34
comes just hours before
00:38:36
thousands of emails, but most with
00:38:39
little or no information of interest and
00:38:42
sometimes even fake documents.
00:39:18
No evidence was ever found about
00:39:20
Wikileaks involvement in this operation.
00:39:22
They did not publish anything before
00:39:24
election day and the French police found
00:39:26
nothing on Wikileaks nor formally
00:39:28
identified the hacker. But Russian
00:39:31
hackers are heavily suspected.
00:39:34
As of now, Julian Assange has been
00:39:37
living locked up for 5 years.
00:39:41
[Music]
00:39:43
[Applause]
00:39:47
[Music]
00:39:51
A rare look inside the Ecuadorian
00:39:54
embassy in London.
00:39:55
A private security firm that allegedly
00:39:58
spied on Assange during his asylum in
00:40:00
the Ecuadorian embassy in London.
00:40:01
In surveillance video obtained by
00:40:03
Spanish newspaper El Pais, he's seen in
00:40:06
shorts and a tank top skateboarding.
00:40:09
[Applause]
00:40:13
[Music]
00:40:26
The video
00:40:44
Forever
00:40:54
[Music]
00:41:08
[Music]
00:41:13
Rafael.
00:41:15
President
00:41:16
[Applause]
00:41:19
Lenn Moreno.
00:41:40
presenting
00:41:43
[Music]
00:41:57
Julimo.
00:42:18
Julian Assange is monitored 24 hours a
00:42:21
day. On the job, a small Spanish
00:42:24
security company UC Global
00:42:29
His
00:42:31
[Music]
00:42:38
movements, his conversations, everything
00:42:41
is recorded. Everything is noted and
00:42:44
reported minute by minute. Here the
00:42:47
meeting between the client, Julian
00:42:49
Assange, and his lawyers, including
00:42:52
Baltazar Gazison.
00:42:55
11:20 a.m. The client, his wife Stella,
00:42:58
and his attorney head to the lady's
00:43:00
bathroom for a meeting.
00:43:10
He is the man who manages UC Global,
00:43:13
David Morales, a former marine commander
00:43:16
of the Spanish Army.
00:43:18
[Music]
00:43:22
Absolutely.
00:43:50
North American.
00:44:34
thanks to the information provided by
00:44:36
intelligence services.
00:44:38
The United States now knows details on
00:44:40
Julian Assange's defense strategy to
00:44:42
avoid his extradition.
00:44:50
In 2018, the founder of Wikileaks is
00:44:54
officially accused of espionage.
00:44:56
American pressure on Ecuador is
00:44:58
increasing.
00:44:59
[Music]
00:45:02
Julian Assange becomes a priority
00:45:05
target.
00:45:06
[Music]
00:45:08
On April the 11th, 2019, Ecuadorian
00:45:12
President Lenin Moreno appeared on
00:45:14
national television.
00:45:19
[Music]
00:45:42
The same day, the police arrest Julian
00:45:45
Assange within the compound of the
00:45:47
Ecuadorian embassy. The United States
00:45:50
immediately calls for his extradition.
00:45:54
I'm too good.
00:45:57
[Music]
00:46:09
Absolute
00:46:14
equilibrium.
00:46:49
In February 2020, the British judicial
00:46:53
system got involved for the first time
00:46:55
in Julian Assange's extradition request.
00:46:58
his supporters gathered and his father
00:47:01
was of course present.
00:47:06
Good morning to speak to Julian last
00:47:08
night.
00:47:09
Uh no, we didn't have a chance but I'll
00:47:11
come out and say something. We just
00:47:12
registered to get in first and then I'll
00:47:14
come out. Is that cool with you?
00:47:16
That's fine.
00:47:17
Thank you.
00:47:18
Good morning everybody.
00:47:19
Morning.
00:47:24
Good morning.
00:47:27
Good morning. Hey, thank you very much,
00:47:29
sir. Thank you.
00:47:33
Exceptionally, the hearings take place
00:47:35
inside the prison.
00:47:42
[Music]
00:47:48
Fore
00:47:56
[Music]
00:48:02
[Music]
00:48:07
mechanic.
00:48:13
[Music]
00:48:15
Absolutely.
00:48:55
among Julian Assange's unwavering
00:48:57
supporters is Bradley Manning, now
00:49:00
Chelsea Manning.
00:49:02
All right, cool.
00:49:03
Good afternoon, everyone. Uh, so two
00:49:06
months ago, the federal government,
00:49:07
the former soldier, spent a total of
00:49:09
seven years behind bars, released,
00:49:12
incarcerated, then released again. The
00:49:15
justice system hopes to force her to
00:49:17
testify.
00:49:18
Facing jail again, potentially today
00:49:21
doesn't change my stance.
00:49:24
The prosecutors are deliberately placing
00:49:26
me in an impossible position. Go to jail
00:49:29
or
00:49:31
in the alternative for, you know,
00:49:33
forgoing my principles, the the the
00:49:35
strong positions that I have that I hold
00:49:37
dear. So, it doesn't matter what the
00:49:40
what it is or what the the case is. I'm
00:49:42
just not going to comply or cooperate. I
00:49:45
think that's it. All right. Thank you,
00:49:47
everybody.
00:49:49
These statements will get Chelsea
00:49:50
Manning once again several months in
00:49:52
jail. Her determination does not pacify
00:49:56
the Assange case.
00:49:58
If extradited to the United States, the
00:50:00
founder of Wikileaks risks 175 years in
00:50:04
prison.
00:50:06
175 years for publishing information of
00:50:08
public interest.
00:50:16
There is only one journalist that is
00:50:18
detained and held in prison for doing
00:50:20
his job as a journalist in Western
00:50:22
Europe and that is Julian Assange.
00:50:42
[Music]
00:50:46
Breaking news out of London this
00:50:48
morning. Wikileaks founder Julian
00:50:50
Assange cannot be extradited to the
00:50:53
United States. On January the 4th, 2021,
00:50:57
the British courts ruled that due to
00:50:59
Assange's psychological state, he would
00:51:02
not be extradited. A half-hearted
00:51:04
victory for his supporters as the United
00:51:06
States is still not giving up.
00:51:08
The lawyers for the US government
00:51:10
indicated they would appeal the
00:51:12
decision. They should not. And there
00:51:15
should be a call out and pressure on the
00:51:19
US side to drop the appeal to say enough
00:51:24
is enough.
00:51:25
Julian Assange is not in the clear just
00:51:28
yet. The Wikileaks founder is still
00:51:30
facing extradition to the United States.
00:52:03
Free
00:52:06
Free
00:52:07
free free
00:52:10
ass
00:52:12
free free
00:52:14
[Music]
00:52:20
ass free free
00:52:24
ass free free
00:52:29
ass free free ass free free ass free