Interesting facet of the new revelations about the UK government campaign to get Assange out of embassy was how it chimed with an apparent campaign by the Guardian which ran from May to November 2018, culminating with the now infamous front-page Manafort / Assange story.
In his diaries, Alan Duncan says the Ecuadorian government were concerned in mid-2018 about the "domestic reaction" in Ecuador to rescinding Assange's asylum and that this was delaying them taking the final decision.
In May 2018, the Guardian began an apparent campaign with 10 articles on “Operation Hotel”, Ecuador’s Assange embassy operation. Authored by 3 Guardian - and 2 Ecuadorian - journalists, the main article was based on “documents seen by the Guardian” and anonymous “sources”.
It is not clear who leaked these documents or who these sources were but it's possible it was the Ecuadorian intelligence apparatus trying to smear Assange to prepare the conditions domestically (and internationally) for the eviction of Assange.
The apparent campaign continued for many months, consistently alleging with little or most minimal circumstantial evidence that Assange had ties to Russia or the Kremlin.

The articles can be viewed here:
https://www.theguardian.com/media/julian-assange?page=8
https://www.theguardian.com/media/julian-assange?page=9
https://www.theguardian.com/media/julian-assange?page=10
Sir Alan Duncan's diaries note that the Ecuadorian's had originally planned to expel Assange six weeks after the Guardian's Manafort/Assange article, on 9 January 2019, but it was delayed due to a technicality.
The Manafort story significantly increased pressure on the Ecuadorians to expel Assange, further linking the WikiLeaks publisher with Trump and Russia.

Assange was eventually expelled from embassy in April 2019 and has been in Belmarsh prison ever since. https://twitter.com/SenFeinstein/status/1072977963421978625
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