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Good evening. It's Tuesday, June 25. Tonight: Julian Assange is now finally a free man. Though I had been hearing whispers over the last week, it was not the first time that I thought something imminent would happen, and as a result, I was unable to report it or confirm it. It was only last night – while we were in the middle of doing the show live – that we got actual confirmation that Assange had signed a plea deal with the United States Department of Justice, under which he pled guilty to one felony count under the Espionage Act in exchange for his immediate release from the British high-security prison, where he'd been unjustly detained for more than five years accompanied by his right to travel back to Australia.
Yesterday he flew to a tiny U.S. territory in the Pacific, where he landed today for a scheduled hearing before the U.S. federal judge there, to formally accept his plea deal: essentially a formality. Assange’s agreement with the Justice Department stipulates that even in the extremely unlikely event that an American judge who just sits in the middle of the Pacific rejected his plea deal, Assange would still be permitted to leave that little island to proceed to travel to Australia, the only country of which he has ever been a citizen, where he plans to reunite with his wife and their two young children and hopefully rebuild his life full of peace, happiness, health, prosperity and, if he wishes, going back to the crucial work that he has long been doing.
While it is hard on a personal level not to celebrate the video showing Julian Assange walking out of a high-security prison as a free man for the first time in almost 15 years, it is equally difficult not to feel disgust and outrage at the U.S. government, which deliberately forced him into captivity that whole time without having ever convicted him of any crimes and then, at the last minute, vindictively imposing on him one last act of unjust vengeance by conditioning his release back to Australia on a guilty plea to one of the least serious felony charges of the 17 charges in the indictment that he faced.
On air last night, I offered, more or less from the top of my head – we obviously didn't plan to discuss it – the timeline and history of the saga as best I could, but I've been covering Wikileaks and Assange ever since I first wrote about the group and interviewed him back at the beginning of 2010. But watching the reaction today to the same group of people who have long demanded and justified his imprisonment – CIA and FBI goons, jealous corporate media employees, and American liberals enraged at Assange for disclosing incriminating facts from the Obama administration and then, even worse, from their view, reporting incriminating facts about Hillary Clinton during the 2016 election – I was reminded of just how many outright lies and fabrications and propagandistic deceits and easily proven falsehoods have been circulating about Assange for years to justify his late, lengthy imprisonment. I watched media figures interview one liar after the next to spread the same falsehoods all day long to justify why Assange deserved the prison term that he got.
Now, we do have more information on the plea deal and on the dishonest situation that we had last night. We did some reporting today and found out some more details and I want to report on what it is that I now know and explain the implications of these events. Most definitely, I want to identify by name these people in media and politics in the U.S. security state who have been deliberately spreading falsehoods about the situation regarding Assange and Wikileaks to justify the U.S. imprisonment of what I think is the most consequential and important journalist of our generation.
Then: CNN is hosting the first presidential debate between Joe Biden and Donald Trump on Thursday night, in Atlanta, to be hosted by CNN personalities Jake Tapper and Dana Bash. The Trump campaign, for whatever reasons, decided to hand CNN an unprecedented level of control over the debate. This is something we were going to talk about last night and ran out of time. But essentially, early yesterday morning, a CNN host named Kasie Hunt invited the Trump campaign press secretary on the air, and she proceeded to have a remarkable on-air meltdown that culminated in her abruptly terminating the interview. We'll examine what happened not only because of how deeply entertaining it was but also because it reveals so much about the character and function of U.S. corporate media.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.