The dirty war on WikiLeaks is now trial by media in Sweden


In an article for the Guardian in London, John Pilger describes the attacks on WikiLeaks and the smearing of its editor Julian Assange that now permeate much of the Swedish media. A decision by the UK Supreme Court on Assange’s extradition to Sweden is now imminent, over which hangs the prospect of his transfer to the United States where a fabricated indictment awaits him.

It’s time we recognised the Blair government’s criminality

John Pilger reviews the paperback of Gareth Peirce’s ‘Dispatches from the Dark Side: on Torture and the Death of Justice’. Peirce, Britain’s pre-eminent human rights lawyer, argues that the Labour government of Tony Blair, in its pursuit of rapacious war and in support of policies of rendition and torture, was criminal.

The Assange case means we are all suspects now

As the Supreme Court in Britain hears the Julian Assange case, John Pilger examines the implications of an intensified US campaign to silence WikiLeaks and prosecute Assange for a crime that doesn’t exist, threatening the principle of free speech and all unfettered journalism.

The world war on democracy

John Pilger argues that, behind its democratic facade, the true nature of western political culture is that of American-led violence and ruthlessness in the cause of enduring dominance. He pays tribute to Lisette Talate, who has died. A Chagos islander forcibly expelled from her homeland by Britain in order to make way for a US military base, her resistance and that of people like her all over the world offer real hope, not the counterfeit slogans of those like Barack Obama.

The Son of Africa claims a continent’s crown jewels

John Pilger analyses President Obama’s decision to send special forces to Uganda, Congo and Central African Republic. This amounts to a US invasion of the African continent – following the West’s de facto conquest of Libya. The dangers and ironies ought to be clear.