Britain | Britain’s unwanted house guest

Julian Assange’s plea deal: a suitable end to a grubby saga

America was right to have sought his extradition. But a bit of compassion now does not go amiss

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange looks out a plane's window June 25, 2024.
Photograph: Reuters

WHEN an unwanted house guest finally departs, the relief is palpable. So it is with the news that Julian Assange has left Britain. On June 24th the founder of WikiLeaks, a website that publishes classified and sensitive information, walked out of Belmarsh, a high-security prison in south-east London where he has spent the past five years, and hopped on a plane to Thailand. From there he flew to the Northern Mariana Islands, an American territory in the Pacific, where he pleaded guilty to one charge of violating America’s espionage laws. That fulfilled his side of a deal with the American government, which in return allowed him to go home to Australia. On June 26th he landed in Canberra, a free man.

This appears to mark the end of a long and unedifying legal drama. Mr Assange was first arrested in Britain in 2010 after Sweden said it wanted to question him over sex-crime allegations (these were later dropped, and he denied them). He claimed asylum in Ecuador’s embassy in London, where he lived for seven years. After Ecuador ran out of patience with him (at one point it claimed that he had smeared faeces on the embassy wall), British police removed Mr Assange and arrested him again.

The Economist today

Handpicked stories, in your inbox

A daily newsletter with the best of our journalism

More from Britain

On shame, Liz Truss and the turnip Taliban

A local group is trying to eject the former prime minister from her seat

The British election is not close. But the race in Bicester is

A potential Tory leader-in-waiting is in a three-way fight


Why the next Westminster scandal is already here

In British politics scandals are not exposed. They are simply noticed


More from Britain

On shame, Liz Truss and the turnip Taliban

A local group is trying to eject the former prime minister from her seat

The British election is not close. But the race in Bicester is

A potential Tory leader-in-waiting is in a three-way fight


Why the next Westminster scandal is already here

In British politics scandals are not exposed. They are simply noticed


Britons vote according to feelings of economic security

The latest edition of our Blighty newsletter

The Economist’s final prediction points to a Tory wipeout in Britain

Opposition parties are inflicting damage on the Conservatives from all directions

What the remaking of Labour reveals about Sir Keir Starmer

How might Britain’s would-be prime minister approach the job?