Expansion of Indefinite Detention under NDAA Compounds Extradition Fears of WikiLeaks’ Assange
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
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I don't think it was too wild an assertion when I offered this the other day.
Expansion of Indefinite Detention under NDAA Compounds Extradition Fears of WikiLeaks’ Assange
I wouldn't put it past the US to even snatch the man, and who in this country would say boo, if they did just that? We have witnessed very recently what kind of backbone this country displays when dealing with its masters. The Manning Assange Connection: We're Off!
Expansion of Indefinite Detention under NDAA Compounds Extradition Fears of WikiLeaks’ Assange
Rolling Stone journalist Michael Hastings was with WikiLeaks founder and editor-in-chief Julian Assange when the pretrial military hearing for accused Army whistleblower Private Bradley Manning was taking place in Fort Meade, Maryland, last month. Hastings says the military’s case against Manning, coupled with President Obama’s recent authorization of a measure expanding indefinite detention anywhere in the world in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), has added further urgency to Assange’s effort to avoid extradition from Britain. "Julian Assange’s fear is that he will be extradited to Sweden...and then there will be some kind of media campaign where the U.S. government or the Swedish government starts leaking things about 'Oh, Assange helped the Iranians' or 'Assange helped the Taliban with this information,'" Hastings notes. "And then they’ll say, 'Well, you know, we need to try him as a spy.' And though that case might be very, very difficult to prove, it’s the threat of it that, in my mind, is so damning." transcript
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