WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has pushed back after US Vice President Joe Biden blasted him as a dangerous "hi-tech terrorist".
The 39-year-old Australian also told the Spanish daily El Pais that he was in "a condition of high-tech arrest" although he was released on bail by a British court last week while he fights extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over allegations of sex crimes.
Asked whether he thought Assange was a hi-tech terrorist or a whistleblower akin to those who released the Pentagon Papers -- a series of top-secret documents revealing US military policy in Vietnam -- Biden said on Sunday: "I would argue that it's closer to being hi-tech terrorist."
And he said the US Justice Department was mulling how to take legal action against the Australian.
But Assange responded by noting that "terrorism is defined as the use of violence for political purposes".
"Biden's administration continues to take offence at our organisation and the press with a violent or political objective, so who are the terrorists?" he said.
Assange has enraged Washington by obtaining a cache of some 250,000 US diplomatic cables and slowly releasing the documents through his whistleblowing website, often causing huge embarrassment in world capitals.
He complained to El Pais that he was "in a condition of high-tech arrest".
"That is I have electronic jewellery which means if I leave the house outside of curfew times then an alarm will go off. It is very Orwellian," he said.
Assange said he was also required to report to a police station once a day, which means he cannot stray far from his house.
"That does interfere with my work, it means no secret meetings with government sources or others who may be willing to assist me," he added.
"It means it is much easier to monitor my communication. That is a strong and wrongful impediment to my work."
He is staying at Ellingham Hall, a mansion on a friend's 600-acre country estate in eastern England, where he must live while on bail, pending ongoing extradition proceedings which may take months.
Media reports suggest that US prosecutors are trying to build a case against him on the grounds that he encouraged a US soldier, Bradley Manning, to steal US cables from a government computer and pass them to WikiLeaks.
Assange has denied knowing Manning.
Commentary by the Ottawa Mens Centre
Assange's highly affluent friends either don't read the news or carry out the
most basic of an investigation before providing incredible support to a man who
faces the extremely serious probability of becoming a world famous Australian
Rapist who will bring into discredit, every other Australian male who travels
overseas.
He should enjoy his next few days of luxury at Ellingham hall as he will shortly
be in private flight to Sweden, in handcuffs and he can reflect on his decision
to force at least two women to have unprotected sex and his refusal to take a
HIV test.
www.OttawaMensCentre.com