Julian Assange's ghost writer breaks silence on failed
autobiography
WikiLeaks founder a mercurial
character who could not bear his own secrets, according to writer Andrew O'Hagan
Esther Addley
The Guardian, Friday 21 February 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/media/2014/feb/21/julian-assange-ghost-writer-autobiography-wikileaks
The ghostwriter who collaborated with Julian Assange on his
abortive 2011 autobiography has broken his silence to describe his months
working with the WikiLeaks founder, which culminated in the acrimonious
collapse of one of the highest profile and most lucrative book deals of recent
times.
Three years after he was first introduced to the Australian,
Andrew O'Hagan has now spoken out about how he worked with Assange on the book,
which he said the publishers Canongate had sold in more than 40 countries for a
total of US$2.5m before the deal dramatically imploded. In a lengthy, nuanced
essay for the London Review of Books, a version of which he delivered in a
lecture in London on Friday, O'Hagan describes working with a mercurial
character who was, by turns, passionate, funny, lazy, courageous, vain,
paranoid, moral and manipulative.
The book deal ultimately collapsed, O'Hagan writes, because
"the man who put himself in charge of disclosing the world's secrets
simply couldn't bear his own. The story of his life mortified him and sent him
scurrying for excuses. He didn't want to do the book. He hadn't from the
beginning."
Assange, he writes, was persuaded to agree to the
autobiography by his lawyers who said the huge sums on offer would cover his
mounting legal costs. He had initially been enthusiastic about the project,
telling his ghostwriter that he "hoped to have something that read like
Hemingway", and suggesting ever more avant garde styles for the book to
take, such as writing the first chapter with one word, the second with two, and
so on.
But O'Hagan reveals that as the deadline to deliver a
manuscript approached, Assange was "totally shocked" at the prospect
of his own story being told, describing people who write about their family as
"prostitutes".
Exasperated at their author's non-co-operation and hoping to
reclaim a proportion of their significant stake, Canongate published a version
of O'Hagan's manuscript as Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Biography in
September 2011 without the Australian's consent.
Though Assange denounced its publication, he told O'Hagan
that he was covertly encouraging sales and tweeting links to its Amazon page.
That strategy failed: despite its huge advance and publicity, the book sold
fewer than 700 copies in its first week, a spectacular publishing failure.
O'Hagan, an award-winning, Booker-nominated novelist and
non-fiction writer, was brought into the project in January 2011 when Assange
was living with a group of supporters at Ellingham Hall in Norfolk, while on
bail over allegations of rape and sexual assault in Sweden.
The "studenty WikiLeaks charabanc" was at times
bold and highly effective, writes O'Hagan – during the Egyptian uprising, when
president Mubarak tried to close the country's phone network which was routed
through Canada, he describes Assange and other staffers hacking into the
Canadian telecom firm from their Norfolk kitchen table to reverse the Mubarak
shutdown, then leaning back to eat chocolates as the revolution continued.
Former Cuban president Fidel Castro, the ghostwriter was
told, had sent a message to say WikiLeaks was the only website he liked.
But the Australian's suspicion of the authorities led to a
broader paranoia, writes O'Hagan, describing one car journey in which Assange
demanded the writer pull off a small country road to avoid a white Mondeo that
he was convinced was tailing them, but which turned out to be a taxi dropping a
child off from school.
A trip to the local police station, which Assange was
obliged to visit daily as a condition of his bail, was completed only after
Sarah Harrison, described by O'Hagan as Assange's PA and girlfriend, had
checked the bushes for assassins.
It was, by O'Hagan's account, an occasionally surreal life:
one of those who flew to Ellingham Hall by helicopter to pay court was the
billionaire Matthew Mellon, who later sent a delivery of Savile Row suits by
designer Oswald Boateng which Assange then wore constantly.
When a group of company presidents offered a fee of £20,000
for an hour's Skype time with Assange, he told Harrison: "If Tony Blair –
a war criminal – can get £120,000, I should get at least £1 more than
him."
The WikiLeaks founder was highly vocal on the subject of
former collaborators whom he now regarded as "enemies" – a long list
to which his publishers would ultimately be added, writes O'Hagan, but among
which the Guardian and New York Times were judged as particular offenders.
Assange regarded this newspaper as having
"double-crossed" him, writes O'Hagan. "It was an early sign of
the way he viewed 'collaboration': the Guardian was an enemy because he'd
'given' them something and they hadn't toed the line, whereas the Daily Mail
was almost respected for finding him entirely abominable."
He describes the Australian as being "a little put out
by the global superstardom" of Edward Snowden following his leaks to Glenn
Greenwald and the Guardian. While Snowden was marooned in Moscow airport,
writes O'Hagan, "Julian was keen to help him and keen to be seen to be
helping him"; shortly afterwards Assange sent Harrison to Moscow where she
acted for a time as the American's "legal advisor".
When he asked Assange "just how good" was Snowden,
O'Hagan writes, he was told: "He's number nine." "In the world?
Among computer hackers? And where are you?" "I'm number three."
The relationship between O'Hagan and Assange remained
amicable throughout their collaboration – even as the book deal collapsed,
Assange described it as a "close friendship" – and the two have
remained on good terms until recently. (The Australian, he concedes, will
"hate this" – meaning his lecture – but in signing on with a
ghostwriter, Assange "forgot what a writer is, someone with a tendency to
write things down and seek the truth".)
However, O'Hagan says Assange's contradictions "could
rock you off your feet": during the making of The Fifth Estate, the recent
Assange biopic (based in part on a book by Guardian journalists) which he
angrily denounced, O'Hagan describes being called by Assange one day to suggest
that the writer offer himself as a consultant to the movie and split his fee
with him.
But while the ghostwriter writes of feeling "a kind of
loyalty to Julian's vulnerability, especially (not in spite of) his role as
enemy to himself", the "clarifying" moment in their relationship
came in May 2011 when Assange had tried persuade O'Hagan to join him in flying
to the Hay festival in a Daily Telegraph helicopter, to promote a book that by
that time "we both knew he would never produce".
"He wanted me to see him on the helicopter and he
wanted me to assist him in living out that version of himself he so craves. He
was flying in from Neverland with his own personal JM Barrie ... What could be
nicer for the lost boy of Queensland with his silver hair and his sense that
the world of adults is no real place for him?"
Pondering on the enigma that is Assange, O'Hagan concludes
that it is difficult to determine whether the WikiLeaks founder is another
Daniel Ellsberg, the Pentagon Papers leaker, or John Wilkes, the 18th-century
radical politician, or the fictional character Charles Foster Kane, who was
"abusive and monstrous in his pursuit of the truth that interests him, and
a man who, it turns out, was motivated all the while not by high principles but
by a deep sentimental wound. Perhaps we won't know until the final frames of
the movie."
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