The US met a Tuesday deadline to submit assurances requested by the British High Court to move forward with the extradition case of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, setting up a May 20 hearing to determine if he can be sent to America.
Within a diplomatic letter sent by its embassy in London to the British Foreign Office, the US stated that the Australian citizen would not face the death penalty should he be extradited.
These so-called assurances have done nothing to ease the worries over its prosecution against Assange, serving only as a standard guarantee against the death penalty. Free speech defenders should be deeply concerned over its potential legal implications as the Biden administration is likely to present the First Amendment as an unprotected right under the Espionage Act.
Julian Assange is no journalist. Not only did he publish millions of stolen classified documents, he indirectly helped repressive regimes in Iran and China, as well as terror organizations such as al-Qaida, by disseminating that material. Such actions put US soldiers and sources in extreme danger – the US is right to after Assange as they deem fit.