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tv   Going Underground  RT  July 5, 2024 9:00pm-9:31pm EDT

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the. 2 2 the time action or time, see welcome back to going underground. broadcasting all around the world. from the u. a. julian assange is free. you can watch our interviews with them, exposing google hillary clinton's attempt as a birth us democracy and blame russia. that alone nato will crimes in iraq and all around the world. it was wiki leaks that exposed jake sullivan. biden's, now national security advisor ryan speaking, how kind it was on the same side as the usa. it was waking leaks that exposed the present head of the ca, explaining the u. s. propagation of russia that would lead to war in europe. well is of course,
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before his torture by britain and the u. s. u k. plans to assassinate him. some who have called for his release on going underground never got to see him go free fashion, designer, vivian westwood, mentor, gavin mccloud, in pentagon whistleblower down ellsberg and the grades on pills. you all have him passed away while a silence was tortured with me. here in, due by his julian's brother gabriel shipped in his documentary, it's like a shot at the struggle to free julian assange. gabriel, thank so much for coming on the show. and i just need you to going underground. i got to ask you, 1st of all, where, where are you? and you heard the news that jo biden's, justice department, had been defeated by a man who had been tortured in london. who we know was the target of assassination attempts by britain and the united states under the connivance of city of stomach and u. k. authorities. well, i went to see julian probably around around a month ago, action and he did mention to me at the time that there was probably going to be
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a resolution in down the track, possibly 3 weeks. 4 weeks time, which i took was a grand assault at the time of the photo. okay. yeah, let's see what happens. and then about a week, a week before he was put on the jet, i was getting calls from him very excited calls from julian going through all the little bits of logistics that had been set up every day. there was some progress legit getting locked in his movement from inside the prison at the very early hours in the morning so he could be undetected type into stance to the airport and the little bits and pieces that were all falling into place. so it was very, very hard to keep that a secret and it was, you know, essentially a political miracle that this was able to be pulled off. and i think i
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or credit due to people like you who have been reporting on this a little felt the many, many is the last 1314 years. and the growth roots efforts by normal people around the world as sort of restores your faith in humanity to really say no more people giving up that time giving up the money, the connections, the if it to save, join us on. i know so inspiring all those thousands of people, tens of thousands through rain and chime outside those courtrooms. but you didn't think it was a sign of julian's mental mental problems that he was so hopeful that this was another because he had a really bad medical problems in britain's suplex prison. as far as i understand that roger waters is being on the show, i mean, he was shocked and we could see him visibly shop. john pilcher was shot so many
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times after seeing your brother. yeah, it was hot breaking going and seeing him inside the inside the prison action. a cell neighbor committed suicide while he was there. yes, one of his friends, a brazilian man committed suicide, but there's regularly depths inside the prison. he, the inmates is keeping company with the sort of the worst of it was, murder is all thoughts of those sorts of prisoners. and those of the people he keeps company with. he was an a 2 by 3 made a cell, but in 2019 with nose. no. so the you in special repertoire and torture went to see him and took those 2 independent doctors. they found he the suffering, the effects of psychological torture. and that was in 2019 and his situation didn't change. he had the never ending extradition to a country that add port a to kill him hanging over his head,
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the prison conditions bearing down on his body and his mind. but you know, that's all over now action and now he has time to be with his family. he's out in the straight and bush, enjoying the sunshine, enjoying the bird songs, putting his feet in the sand. so. so i think happier times ahead and i'll go and see him this week. actually i'm going to go and see him and very so i was just but it was his birthday. really forgive brittany. do you think? i mean, a, i believe, forget the guardian newspaper where i started my career on it still printed so many equivocal pieces over the years, double crossed and lied about passwords. or i think because we have noticed that the guardian, who's been on the street with the form of you in repertory torture, now with the red cross, said it was these newspapers and media there are pos with the psychological torch, and that they were. so that's a putting upon your brother, your look even now,
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even now you can see the legacy made here and a lot of these so called journalist sort of wanting to go out and signal to the friends and intelligence community. you know that they're still faithful home to them. they are repeating of me is notes means that on even that the us save the colors about their thing here. oh, that's about he killed people really relations and we really reality exactly what i mean. are you going to sue every single one of them and get the car and, and the new york times sellersburg a family 0 times today, to me about james clapper the form and national security office of national intelligence. the said this show was somehow a threat to the united states. yeah. game is saying things like, you know, he gave things on redacted. this was a problem, little digs it. yeah. so it's still going on now and, but i think the person that putting julian's free will, the, the hard work is paid off the, the millions around the world,
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the world leaders who have been advocating for julian, it's all paid off. so they sorts of attacks and it's me is, you know, everybody can say now that what you say that the chief prosecution i wrote because saying there was no one was killed. now because of these, this genuine journalism, the julian is on shade. but matthew miller, united to the blinking state, the palm and repeated repeated the lie to the press. who i don't know whether you saw that dismal press conference on the day, your brother was released for 2 days made headlines here. what is the do by newspaper golf? news that's the biggest story in the world, even bigger than gaza. yep. and the girl as a genocide, hassan and your brother to be freed. a free man after 14 years. that is the biggest story. but matthew miller says, what did you think of that press conference? you know, i've seen matthew miller, he well, he worked in the obama justice department and he's actually done interviews. and before he went to the state department saying there's a reason why we didn't pursue this case, that it posed
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a threat to the 1st amendment. and that's why the a mom or justice department didn't pursue it. and matthew met and it was on record about saying that. and so it's a very interesting to watch him change his june now and now he's inside the state department, but i think you really have to look at what the judge who accepted julian's play. deal said. they said the us government cannot find a victim in related, in relation to the so called chronic journalism that julian, committed a so i think that's a, that's what's on the record and that, that's what the judge said during that hearing. so you just have to look back to those sort of factual elements that were accepted by us judge and hold them up to a slide to what matthew mill is saying, and it just his arguments fall apart, right? it just doesn't make sense and actually exposes then those sorts of people for what they really are in my opinion. yeah. and the reductions,
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i think the one point really nice me of a team there to for they redact, i feel they went too far. sometimes in the redactions, why are they making out that the guardian in particular, which is the one you might have to tell a view, is remind them that it was them that linked to pos which own redacted, wicked expel? that's right. loo cutting and david lee who rushed out a book about the wiki leaks league. so the village and all that, they rushed out this book and one of the chapter headings was a password to the encrypted file of the diplomatic cable set up. and that was the password the julian had given them. he even had, there was an element of that possible cool. the salt, and julian's explained to them this element, you can never write down. you can never share. because that sort of gives the possible even most strings having that sold element. and these journalists, you know,
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in the recklessness or published the whole password to this encrypted file. and so from that, from that chapter, hitting a different tag was able to research and find out that that was the password to the encrypted file. and then crypt on the website run by john young. a us website, krypton dot old was the 1st to publish the i'm rejected a cable set. so julian and wiki legs when even the 1st to publish this, this on rejected the cable set. and i think that part of the education process that we've been doing in this campaign is telling that story that the, the, the people actually responsible for this on rejected lake. uh, the uh, the guardian june was david lee and lew cutting. interestingly, julian developed some tools that allowed the reduction of these boss strows of information such as the program that would look for
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that, use the dictionary to search these. these will files and will logs for problem nouns and would take out those 9. so he was at the forefront of this process of reduction. and at the time journalists who are working with in said the people inside the traditional news rooms were actually more reckless than julian was when it came to rejecting these names. and as for more bad guys in the story, is it? well, we know that need don't shape a guy who double called you know, in the early days he destroyed perhaps valuable cables. it would have given us an insight into the so called war on terra in afghanistan and iraq, world l. so to be destroyed or it was nothing really destroyed as part of the pre, the, i know how to get on to discovery,
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which was an element of simply deal as well. but to what was this had to be destroyed. you need a so i just tried an affidavit that kristin robinson has been on this row many times over the years i've destroyed what it was, anything unpublished related to the chelsea. many lakes is that's my understanding from what very public julia. it doesn't matter if somebody else has it already. well, it was a dead man switch file. well, i guess so, but you know, it was an instruction from the courts to julian in which he likes to destroy any, any of those falls that hadn't, hadn't been published published already. i mean, interestingly, when julian left this after he was given permission to leave sweden after answering questions in relation to into this a 6 or somebody's political asylum. yes. yeah. and so i am i and i at that time he's bags went missing. when he took that flight from sweden to the united kingdom and that those, those bags actually had even more of the chelsea, many
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a lake that never sold a lot of di, including some of the very well known method because in, in afghanistan. so the video, the so those are things that you know, will never, will never say from this lake that will never know about. and so the historical impact of wiki leaks is, speaks for itself really in, in what it was able to achieve over the use. and what these lakes actually meant to normal people, people who are not, who are just trying to make their lives better, who are trying to make correct decisions about who to vote for how to make a simple educated decisions about who they want the latest to be for uh, the war and a rock, for instance, that famous cable that well, i will, i'll just stop here. how gabriel wore that in part 2 more from the brother wiggs
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found to julie. this jack for this break the the the welcome back to going on the garden. i'm still here with the
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brother of wiggs one of the junior massage. gabriel shifting gabriel, you were interrupted by me in part one when you were talking about the importance to normal everyday people. if people don't know who julian assange is just knowing vaguely and legal proceedings that have been talked about for 14 years, it was, it was, as you say, the was in iraq and afghanistan. i was talking about this stuff that was destroyed . there was no public interest defense. i knew when a legal scholars, when the biden's justice department, in the plea deal told them you have to destroy some information that hadn't previously unpublished. there was no defense on the sides of the legal team to go. but what if some of it is in the public interest? no, no, no, no, julian, actually one thing that julian did say, during this hearing is that the he didn't realize that the espionage act trumps the 1st amendment. and i think that's clearly, that was
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a very clear and in direct message to everybody out there. what this what this play deal and what this persecution actually means is that did you go? because in this colonial magistrate, us colonial magistrate, the islands with the us flew. that'd be 29 to murder people in the rush. we mega psyche and all that way. it's so close and julia. so i'm still said watch out judge. there's a conflict between yo constitution and the espionage. well, did you go? no, i mean this is, this is you, i'm going to get a bad us onto you. i, i, you know, i, i think he would have had decided something and he's very deliberate and very thoughtful about things like that that he wants to say and, and frame things around around the things that he thinks are important. so i have
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a trust julian, i have faith and he's, you know, he's ability to raise and make these determinations. but it was nerve wracking. i was watching live the, i'm show many, many people out there were watching the log footage and, and just hoping that it was all going to go through because, you know, i'm not sure i really trust the united states and the justice system, but they were starting diplomats there within the u. k hoc commissioner, steven smith, the ex prime minister care was run right. they? oh yes, sorry. the u. k. how good as you said in your strategy and the mattress. yes. that's right. and the ex prime minister, kevin rod, who is now the ambassador to united states for a stranger. they were there with him as a sort of, i guess, guarantor of his safety and that he would get, they needed someone that important to give us a little bit of a piece of gone through this trial. and it's because your sister in law,
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the wife of julie design sellers on show the press part of the play deal means we could now look into discovery into what they were doing. as regards the assassination attempt, albriton in the united states brought into the bones in london, car chase is mud, your brother vento allowed but and then she looked pointedly at the president, australia, the prescott said, you can do that throughout julian's way of these freedom of information rights in the united states, but the rest of the press haven't obviously, so i think it's up to them to really dig around and get to the bottom of what's happened in this case. i think you mentioned those plots to kill julian that were going around sketches and plans within the c i plus thinking that julian that made it as high as the white house. and i think there's still a lot to uncover it in that. and in julian's persecution
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famously kissed um as emails when he was at the cps, that mysteriously disappeared relating to his trips to washington. while julian was in the ecuadorian, m. c. so there is lots of new, i be prime minister. and as i can style the assignment, this recording is not, but yes, and this will be a cloud, i think of his prime minister ship if it is. so i think there's still a lot to uncover. and many people who have involved themselves in julian's persecution of the youths who have go do it on their hands. you don't take suitcases. com is a view that all the other documents were destroyed as was the, as was the procedure he was head of the crown prosecution service, which was desperately trying to extradite your brother to sweden. for perhaps, i think most of us believe extradition to the united states. by a different route than the espionage. right? yeah, that's right. he was the head of the safety of the,
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at that time during that whole process, the longest running preliminary investigation in swedish history. and those, those famous emails that were if a lot less to find the emergency with the sweet as prosecutors emailing the u. k. prosecutors saying we want to drop this we, we were to come and question him so that we can move on and, and get rid of this. and because no charges of any sexual car, no, nothing, no charges of a light. and they actually communicated to the c p a, so they wanted to close it and bring it to an end. and the response was, this is more, this is about more than a, an x, normal extradition don't, you know, don't get cold feet. and so i think that evidence is out there, and there, there will be more to come, i believe, as, as time goes by, as things become uncovered. i'm old journalists dig into the records around julian's persecution about the new british prime minister to find him. everything was read on the show,
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the great italian join. this is already on said your sister in law school, put it for aaron. i understand. she's not getting anything go 2025. randy credit go with the great american active schools. famously on covering positive b. u. c. global investigation into what was happening as regards trumps funded one of jump fund is that we were involved the company that was spying on. perhaps you, your district or illegal julia is on his legal council. medical doctors also max blumenthal, of course, how safe is he in australia? you know, we, i think john pills you would always sometimes mention golf with them and how he was brought down by the british government to form a bridge. the australian prime minister. he opposed the vietnam war, u. s. foreign policy was just taken out by the british government. that's what i'll say. it happened, so it was really politician to pay a post united states. albanese seems to be said foss with your brother, julian,
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his andre hasn't been killed. that alone deposed or will. i think the struggling government is walter, real todd, right. in this situation. they've given the intelligence community to national security d o j a conviction. but they've also managed to secure julian's freedom. and so i think that's satisfied both parties in that sense and implied that man in the middle diplomatic role. you know, you, you spoke about change classes before this, you know, he's come out saying, well, we've got what we wanted. julian served his time, we've got a conviction. so this is sort of messaging from the intelligence community that they should be happy with. this conviction, this conviction and play deal that a history and government was able to was able to broker in terms of julian safety in australia. he's incredibly popular with these training people that day when he stepped off that plane onto the time back. i've got thousands of messages,
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people with celebrating bobbing bowls and champagne sauces. some people said this is like christmas, that that was the feeling, the feeling back back in australia. that's how popular julie i saw one person on rupert murdoch's abc sky, no sky. because sky news in australia is owned by the root of model. organizations where it goes to comcast in other countries saying he's a criminal and continuing to repeat this kind of thing. and so that is the, the, those of those, uh, these generals that on. so go generals that are out totally how to touch with the with the public sentiment. and that's why those sort of statements. they don't really have any echo they they're just sort of full flat, particularly when julians walking around free in australia. so i think really the public sentiment and, and julian's popularity straightens loveland under dog 11 on the dog story. and,
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and he's, he's one of, as he's a is astray, his son. and he will be protected by the population. and by his support, the, i believe the hatred for him a in the new york times of this week, k, i because they say, but he was against us imperialism. that makes it, that different, presumably alluding to him, tying that go without book when he was dragged out by british security forces from political asylum, the ecuadorian embassy. why is it because judy, this ons expose secrets of the russian states, boots instict, of china, of iran. why is it, do you think the wiggly, it's countries and i'll present, we not things because you know, she didn't bring or coming the would like expose. why is it these countries in the end said no, you must speaking for he and the united states has secrets because julia, so i'm just waking leaks, organization with them. power. it was a, it was truth to buy. it was exposing the secrets of the powerful it didn't matter
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where they're going and the american me why, why was the amount, why did the americans hate wiki leaks move? well, he, he embarrassed, and he embarrassed them him, passed the way that they struck the way that they ruled the world, and the way that they use the power in, in countries overseas. these conspiracies between the institutions of states, the corporate media and the corporations. julian, expose those, and it's written the whole system. it's written the whole system of how they exercise power around the world. and they were frightened. that was very, very frightened, that they wouldn't be able to hold onto that power. and so they, uh, the solution was to go up to julian. and i think you can look at the timeline from 2017 of when they made a julian of the same in 2019. and so julians of the same and 2019 and you say all
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these other factors, all these other areas where they would clamp downs on the free incident and things started to change in silicon valley. i've spoken to people in silicon valley and they said, the revolutionary spirit of the 2016, the revolutionary spirit, and the spirit of the free internet was almost turned on its head. and so we can valley off to 2016. and these, all these corporations, all these social media corporations, were turned on their heads and became sort of of the state to sense and to manipulate people. and i think what happened to julian is actually in line with that real clamp down around 2019 and, and looking forward to 2020. and the last 4 or 5 years that we've, that we've lived for live through and the sort of resurgence of the near
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conservative project. but ironically, and finally, how important is it a president, gold trump? parties him for the future of journalism journalist all around the world because he still has this felony that he's pleaded guilty to julia as well as to save his own life, pleading guilty to a crime he didn't commit. uh, how important is it for the president to as to the body? so it's important for americans. it's important for a normal americans and the people of sending congress the laws within the congress . right. have really recognize that, that what this has done with this conviction has done, has criminalized journalism. this, it describes essentially investigative journalism. it's going off to the general source relationship of publishing classified information, possessing classified information that's old become a legal now under what's happened to julian, a search and is there is
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a huge amount of concern in the united states. we just, we're talking off here about ken ross, the head of the, of human rights watch has actually come out against against this plea deal, saying that it is a real threat. and these elements that were used in the, in the initial environment. these element, they sort of the elements that the to frame julian is a heck a they would completely left out of, of, of the plea deal of the conviction. and so it's actually, julian is, is a journalist according to this, according to this conviction. and that is a legal so what i can do, i have can wrote the saying that and these yeah, i want to rush off my really actually that that's quite something gabriel shifted. congratulations and say hi to julian this on, joel. the thing with going into go, yeah, thank you. i should. thank you. i'll continue to condolences also to those bereaved by u. k. u. s. u, i'm genocide will be back on monday after this week. celebrations of opec plus is
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venezuela's independence day with the grades that is on your power bill. the new book, referencing julia sanchez, information investigates the u. s. u. k. attempt to destroy the country with the world's largest oil resources until then keep in touch by the social media of it. so extensive new country and how do i channel going? underground tv and rumbled, i'll come to watch new and old episodes. i'm going on to go and see monday, the the we may never know to what degree jo biden's obvious mental deficiencies have played in recent american foreign policy decisions, particularly when it comes to policy. but it is fair to ask if biden's dimension is leading a small into a global comes with the
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the altima 2023. a surprise attack launched against israel by how much is showing the world the no one had expected. the palestinian runs. it goes to have so many cutting edge weapons the in the aftermath of the attack militants open, a multi frame for the rocket. some missiles that rain down on these radius, this is the see the how can it be that is a shipped to the middle east.

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