Anti-Semitism Goes Missing In Julian Assange Doc

https://forward.com/culture/371664/anti-semitism-goes-missing-in-julian-assange-doc/




Look at how they look at him, Julian Assange’s cadre of cyber vigilantes. In a 
private home in Norfolk, in livery cabs with Daniel Ellsberg in the passenger 
seat, in windowless rooms in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, members of 
Assange’s Wikileaks organization fawn over him and defer to him, give him the 
floor first and let him have the last word. In “Risk,” director Laura Poitras’s 
latest dispatch from the fight for suppressed information, she gives us 
unprecedented access not only to the white-haired international man of mystery, 
but to his loyal followers as well.

Poitras shot the film over the course of six years. She followed Assange from 
the release of 250,000 State Department cables, in 2010, to his retreat in 2012 
into London’s Ecuadorean Embassy to avoid extradition to Sweden allegations of 
rape and sexual assault. The film was first screened at the Cannes Film 
Festival last summer, but was recut to include Assange’s involvement in the 
2016 U.S. election. It also now alludes to the widespread allegations of sexual 
assault made against his close associate, Jacob Appelbaum, a hacker and major 
force behind the anonymous internet communication platform Tor. It is a kind of 
follow-up to Poitras’ 2014 film “Citizenfour,” about her partnership with 
Edward Snowden in releasing his trove of NSA documents. That illuminating film 
won an Oscar for Best Documentary.



Throughout the film, the title cards and Poitras’s voiceovers (often announced 
as notes from her “Production Diary”) are in present tense, which lends the 
film a sense of immediacy. This is to the film’s advantage, since while its 
subject is eminently newsworthy, Poitras lost her access before Wikileaks’ most 
recent starring role in U.S. politics — its alleged cooperation with Russia in 
releasing emails from Hillary Clinton’s campaign and the DNC. Unlike 
“Citizenfour,” “Risk” gets its gravity not from a thriller-like plot, but sheer 
proximity to the cult of Assange.

Poitras has a knack for being in the room where it happens — with a camera, no 
less. She has an unshakeable sense of presence, which she builds by training 
multiple cameras — some on tripods off in the corner, some gracefully handheld 
— on a single conversation. The effect is less “fly on the wall” than 
novelistic omniscient narrator. (Poitras also has the benefit of hindsight, 
considering that most of her principal photography for the film dates to 
Obama’s first term.)

Yet this approach gave way to one of my central frustrations with the film: 
Poitras is so intent on making a film about journalistic perspective that she 
does not deign to actually investigate any of the claims brought against 
Assange or his friend Jacob Appelbaum. As Poitras recently told Vox.com, “I 
don’t go and do interviews and talk about things from the past. I film what’s 
in front of me.”

As with New Yorker writer Janet Malcom’s meta-journalistic classic, “The 
Journalist and the Murderer,” the question at hand is not the guilt of the 
accused, but the relational aspects of the story. Poitras, as the director of 
this film, does not seem to be interested in whether Assange committed the 
crimes of which he is accused. Rather, she wants see how he manipulates those 
around him into sticking to the party line: that Assange is Robin Hood on the 
run from every government agency he can name, the victim not only of 
institutional stalking but also of a feminist conspiracy.

The irony here is that the statute of limitations on three of Assange’s sexual 
assault crimes (two counts of sexual molestation and one count of unlawful 
coercion) expired while he was holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy. Without a 
thorough investigation into those charges, the public may only get the chance 
to know the truth about Assange the cultish transparency advocate, and not 
Assange the alleged rapist. But while the first Assange is scrutinized closely 
and the second is only glimpsed, a third — Assange the anti-Semite — is nowhere 
to be seen.

Assange has made no secret of his distrust of Jews, particularly Jews in the 
media. In 2011 he spoke to the editor of the British magazine Private Eye about 
a conspiracy, led by Jewish journalists at the Guardian, against him. In 2015 
he tweeted on how the “Jewish pro-censorship lobby” aided attacks on the French 
satirical paper Charlie Hebdo.


Off Twitter, Assange aided an avid Holocaust denier, Israel Shamir, by giving 
him access to 90,000 as-yet-unpublished State Department cables relating to the 
Middle East, Russia and Eastern Europe. Shamir turned around and reportedly 
shared those cables with Alexander Lukashenko, the president of Belarus since 
1994 — a man who the Guardian has said presides over “Europe’s last 
dictatorship.”

All of this goes unmentioned in “Risk.” Poitras’ concern lies elsewhere; 
whether this represents a partial abdication of her responsibilities as a 
documentarian is a matter of your priorities. What is more interesting, the 
character or the crimes? What is more important, allegations of rape or 
clear-cut global surveillance? Poitras makes no attempt to answer these 
questions, as they are but a matter of perspective.

But Assange has his own convenient answer.

When Poitras asks him about how much his work has to do with power, (the 
implication being that Assange enjoys his position of power) he responds with a 
trite metaphor. If you are a gardener, your area of concern is your garden, he 
says. But if you expand your area of concern to the whole world, the garden 
becomes unimportant.

“Acting locally is completely inconsequential,” Assange says. “If your 
perception has been globalized, the area that I care about is the whole world.”

How convenient

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