Given that he used to be frozen in ice for a few decades, we should not be surprised that Captain America has been a little slow in addressing the Wikileaks scandal. That silence was cracked in this weekâs Secret Avengers issue no. 12.1 (recommended on Kotaku earlier this week).
https://lastchance.cc/infamous-is-cool-but-900-issues-of-action-comics-is-ex-5794074%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
In the comic, Americaâs most patriotic super-hero doesnât call out Wikileaks mastermind Julian Assange by name. Thatâs because New Avengers writer Nick Spencer has wrapped the gauze of fiction around the whole affair. Thereâs no Assange in the comic and technically no Wikileaks. Instead, thereâs a man who dresses in a version of the Captain America uniform that was popular in the late 80s. This guy plays the Assange role, collecting a trove of information about the U.S. governmentâs secret dealings with members of super-villain terrorist organizations. He plans to release the information, complete with un-redacted references to confidential informants, in order to expose the arrogance of governments, to show them that they are not above the law. (Sound familiar?) His outlets of choice for the disclosure are The New York Times, The Guardian, and The Daily Bugle, the last of which wasnât leaked anything by the real Assange.
Captain America, not wearing his trademark uniform for complicated Marvel Comics reasons, leads a striketream to shut down this Marvel Assange. Cap isnât outright against fake-Assange. In fact, it seems like he could have been swayed, but for the problem that those informantsâ names werenât blacked out. âWeâd never let people die just to prove our damn point,â he said.
Somehow, this works. Nick Spencerâs Secret Avengers no. 12.1 is on sale now from Marvel Comics for $3.