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Chomsky: Arrest of Assange Is “Scandalous” and Highlights Shocking Extraterritorial Reach of U.S.

Posted on 19. Juni 201919. Juni 2019 By Jürgen Günther

13.04.2019 – Demo­cra­cy Now!

Att­or­neys for Wiki­Leaks foun­der Juli­an Assan­ge are vowing to fight his pos­si­ble extra­di­ti­on to the United Sta­tes fol­lo­wing his arrest in Lon­don, when Bri­tish poli­ce for­ci­b­ly remo­ved Assan­ge from the Ecua­do­re­an Embas­sy, whe­re he had taken asyl­um for almost seven years. On Thurs­day night, Demo­cra­cy Now!’s Amy Good­man spo­ke to Noam Chom­sky about Assange’s arrest, Wiki­Leaks and Ame­ri­can power.

Tran­script
This is a rush tran­script. Copy may not be in its final form.

AMY GOODMAN: This is Demo­cra­cy Now! I’m Amy Good­man in Bos­ton, as we sit down with Noam Chom­sky for a public con­ver­sa­ti­on. I asked him about the arrest of Juli­an Assan­ge.

NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, the Assan­ge arrest is scan­da­lous in seve­ral respects. One of them is just the effort of governments—and it’s not just the U.S. govern­ment. The Bri­tish are coope­ra­ting. Ecua­dor, of cour­se, is now coope­ra­ting. Swe­den, befo­re, had coope­ra­ted. The efforts to silence a jour­na­list who was pro­du­cing mate­ri­als that peo­p­le in power didn’t want the ras­cal multi­tu­de to know about—OK?—that’s basi­cal­ly what hap­pen­ed. Wiki­Leaks was pro­du­cing things that peo­p­le ought to know about tho­se in power. Peo­p­le in power don’t like that, so the­r­e­fo­re we have to silence it. OK? This is the kind of thing, the kind of scan­dal, that takes place, unfort­u­na­te­ly, over and over.
To take ano­ther exam­p­le, right next door to Ecua­dor, in Bra­zil, whe­re the deve­lo­p­ments that have gone on are extre­me­ly important. This is the most important coun­try in Latin Ame­ri­ca, one of the most important in the world. Under the Lula govern­ment ear­ly in this mill­en­ni­um, Bra­zil was the most—maybe the most respec­ted coun­try in the world. It was the voice for the Glo­bal South under the lea­der­ship of Lula da Sil­va. Noti­ce what hap­pen­ed. The­re was a coup, soft coup, to eli­mi­na­te the nefa­rious effects of the labor par­ty, the Workers’ Par­ty. The­se are descri­bed by the World Bank—not me, the World Bank—as the “gol­den deca­de” in Brazil’s histo­ry, with radi­cal reduc­tion of pover­ty, a mas­si­ve exten­si­on of inclu­si­on of mar­gi­na­li­zed popu­la­ti­ons, lar­ge parts of the population—Afro-Brazilian, indigenous—who were brought into the socie­ty, a sen­se of digni­ty and hope for the popu­la­ti­on. That couldn’t be tole­ra­ted.
After Lula’s—after he left office, a kind of a “soft coup” take place—I won’t go through the details, but the last move, last Sep­tem­ber, was to take Lula da Sil­va, the lea­ding, the most popu­lar figu­re in Bra­zil, who was almost cer­tain to win the forth­co­ming elec­tion, put him in jail, soli­ta­ry con­fi­ne­ment, essen­ti­al­ly a death sen­tence, 25 years in jail, ban­ned from rea­ding press or books, and, cru­ci­al­ly, bar­red from making a public statement—unlike mass mur­de­rers on death row. This, in order to silence the per­son who was likely to win the elec­tion. He’s the most important poli­ti­cal pri­soner in the world. Do you hear any­thing about it?
Well, Assan­ge is a simi­lar case: We’ve got to silence this voice. You go back to histo­ry. Some of you may recall when Mussolini’s fascist govern­ment put Anto­nio Gramsci in jail. The pro­se­cu­tor said, “We have to silence this voice for 20 years. Can’t let it speak.” That’s Assan­ge. That’s Lula. The­re are other cases. That’s one scan­dal.
The other scan­dal is just the extra­ter­ri­to­ri­al reach of the United Sta­tes, which is sho­cking. I mean, why should the United States—why should any—no other sta­te could pos­si­bly do it. But why should the United Sta­tes have the power to con­trol what others are doing else­whe­re in the world? I mean, it’s an out­lan­dish situa­ti­on. It goes on all the time. We never even noti­ce it. At least there’s no com­ment on it.
Like, take the trade agree­ments with Chi­na. OK? What are the trade agree­ments about? They’re an effort to pre­vent China’s eco­no­mic deve­lo­p­ment. It’s exact­ly what they are. Now, Chi­na has a deve­lo­p­ment model. The Trump admi­nis­tra­ti­on doesn’t like it. So, the­r­e­fo­re, let’s under­mi­ne it. Ask yours­elf: What would hap­pen if Chi­na did not obser­ve the rules that the United Sta­tes is try­ing to impo­se? Chi­na, for exam­p­le, when Boe­ing or Micro­soft, some other major com­pa­ny, invests in Chi­na, Chi­na wants to have some con­trol over the natu­re of the invest­ment. They want some degree of tech­no­lo­gy trans­fer. They should gain some­thing from the tech­no­lo­gy. Is the­re some­thing wrong with that? That’s how the United Sta­tes deve­lo­ped, stealing—what we call stealing—technology from Eng­land. It’s how Eng­land deve­lo­ped, taking tech­no­lo­gy from more advan­ced countries—India, the Low Count­ries, even Ire­land. That’s how every deve­lo­ped coun­try has rea­ched the stage of advan­ced deve­lo­p­ment. If Boe­ing and Micro­soft don’t like tho­se arran­ge­ments, they don’t have to invest in Chi­na. Nobo­dy has a gun to their heads. If any­bo­dy real­ly belie­ved in capi­ta­lism, they should be free to make any arran­ge­ment they want with Chi­na. If it invol­ves tech­no­lo­gy trans­fer, OK. The United Sta­tes wants to block that, so Chi­na can’t deve­lop.
Take what are cal­led intellec­tu­al pro­per­ty rights, exor­bi­tant patent rights for medi­ci­nes, for Win­dows, for exam­p­le. Micro­soft has a mono­po­ly on ope­ra­ting sys­tems, through the World Trade Orga­niza­ti­on. Sup­po­se Chi­na didn’t obser­ve the­se. Who would bene­fit, and who would lose? Well, the fact of the mat­ter is that con­su­mers in the United Sta­tes would bene­fit. It would mean that you’d get che­a­per medi­ci­nes. It would mean that when you get a com­pu­ter, that you wouldn’t be stuck with Win­dows. You could get a bet­ter ope­ra­ting sys­tem. Bill Gates would have a litt­le less money. The phar­maceu­ti­cal cor­po­ra­ti­ons wouldn’t be as super-rich as they are, a litt­le less rich. But the con­su­mers would bene­fit. Is the­re some­thing wrong with that? Is the­re a pro­blem with that?
Well, you might ask yours­elf: What lies behind all of the­se dis­cus­sions and nego­tia­ti­ons? This is true across the board. Almost any issue you pick, you can ask yours­elf: Why is this accept­ed? So, in this case, why is it accep­ta­ble for the United Sta­tes to have the power to even begin to give even a pro­po­sal to extra­di­te some­bo­dy who­se crime is to expo­se to the public mate­ri­als that peo­p­le in power don’t want them to see? That’s basi­cal­ly what’s hap­pe­ning.

https://www.pressenza.com/2019/04/chomsky-arrest-of-assange-is-scandalous-and-highlights-shocking-extraterritorial-reach-of-u‑s/

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