In 1972 Stanley K Sheinbaum, chairman of the Pentagon Papers Fund,聽聽that both Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo had 鈥渟truck a blow for us all when they gave the Pentagon Papers to the press and to the Senate: against the war in Vietnam and against new adventures in Cambodia, Laos, or elsewhere鈥.
He continued, writing, that they struck against government secrecy in domestic and foreign policy, directing a blow 鈥渇or freedom of the press, freedom of the American people to be informed of what crimes their government might be committing in their name鈥.
The Richard Nixon administration was keen as聽聽to lock up Ellsberg for what would have been 115 years, and Russo for 35. The charges were for conspiracy, espionage and larceny.
Central to this vicious effort was the release of the Pentagon Papers, a government document running into 7000 pages, that was at odds with public statements made by respective presidential administrations on the US鈥 involvement in the Indo-China War.
Both men had been analysts and researchers at the RAND Corporation, with Ellsberg tasked with nuclear war gaming scenarios. Russo had aided Ellsberg in the mammoth task of copying the papers.
The treatment dished out by the US state was very much the blueprint for what is taking place against the WikiLeaks founder: initial indictment, followed by further grand jury hearings, followed by another round of indictments.
As Sheinbaum remarked, the absurdity of the charges was self-evident. 鈥淐onspiracy against whom?鈥 he asked. 鈥淭he American people to whom the documents belonged in the first place? The press to whom the Pentagon Papers were given 鈥 not sold 鈥 so that they could better inform the people on how a succession of administrations had deceived them and wasted this country鈥檚 lives, resources, and honor?鈥
The case, thankfully, collapsed.
The presiding judge, William M. Byrne jr, even before the jury鈥檚 verdict was in, dismissed the action in May 1973, citing serious government misconduct (the office of Ellsberg鈥檚 psychiatrist had been burgled by the infamous 鈥淲hite House plumbers鈥), not to mention illegal wiretapping.
The judge also revealed that he had been offered the role of FBI director by John Ehrlichman, the President鈥檚 assistant for domestic affairs.
Initially a supporter of the Cold War rollback of communism, Ellsberg came to have trouble with the narrative of one鈥檚 country, right and wrong. He became something of a model whistleblower: a figure initially besotted, a believer in the role of US power, only to then find evidence at odds with that belief.
While working at RAND, he visited Haverford College in August 1969, where his attendance at a conference of the War Resisters鈥 International proved turning.
Ellsberg had initially found the participants, as he recalled in his memoir聽, unduly simplistic, unnecessarily negative, dogmatic and extremist. It took a demonstration outside the trial of draft resister Bod Eaton to invest him with necessary confidence. 鈥淚 had become free of the fear of being absurd, of looking foolish, for stepping out of line,鈥 he wrote.
Then came a moving talk by peace activist Randy Kehler. The impression left by Kehler, far from being banally corny and naff, helped complete the conversion: the RAND employee would commit to the task of ending a war effort he had been complicit in advancing.
As Spencer Ackerman聽聽on June 16, Ellsberg鈥檚 whistleblowing came from a figure so highly placed in the national security apparatus he had the ear of presidential advisors.
In the post-9/11 era, there has been no equivalent.
The leaks and disclosures have come from such individuals as Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden and Daniel Hale, all vitally important, yet all several steps removed from the centre of power.
鈥淭he people of Ellsberg鈥檚 equivalent rank and early career promise more typically chose to serve the War on Terror, not resist it, going along with atrocities abroad and democratic destabilization at home,鈥 Ackerman wrote.
Ellsberg鈥檚 tenacious advocacy for Assange, for whom he acted as witness in the extradition trial in September 2020, was fortifying.
鈥淢y own actions in relation to the Pentagon Papers and the consequences of their publication have been acknowledged to have performed such a radical change of understanding,鈥澛犅爄n his statement to the court. 鈥淚 view the WikiLeaks publications of 2010 and 2011 to be of comparable importance.鈥
He also warned about the most odious feature of the聽Espionage Act of 1917, upon which 17 of the 18 charges against Assange have been framed.
Motivation, he recalled in his own 1973 trial, was dismissed by government lawyers as irrelevant: the offences imputed 鈥渟trict liability鈥.
础蝉听聽the Central Criminal Court in London, the聽础肠迟听effectively disallowed genuine whistleblowing to permit 鈥測ou to say you were informing the polity. So I did not have a fair trial, no one since me had a fair trial on these charges and Julian Assange cannot remotely get a fair trial under those charges if he was tried鈥.
As Ellsberg revealed last December, he聽聽been the WikiLeaks 鈥渂ackup鈥澛爁or releasing the documents that were eventually published in 2010. Assange, he told the BBC鈥檚 HARDtalk program 鈥渃ould rely on me to get it [the information] out鈥.
In any final reflections on what Ellsberg did, the conscientious duty of a figure to disclose evidence of government misconduct, to enlighten the citizenry more broadly as political agents rather than obedient subjects, shines.
鈥淔rom the point of view of a civilization and the survival of eight or nine billion people, when everything is at stake, can it be worth even a small chance of having a small effect?鈥 he reflected in an聽听飞颈迟丑听Politico. 鈥淭he answer is: Of course.鈥
[Binoy Kampmark currently lectures at RMIT University.]