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A document that was included in the U.S. Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files shows a diagram prepared by the FBI attempting to chart the network of Epstein's victims, February 2, 2026. /AP
A document that was included in the U.S. Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files shows a diagram prepared by the FBI attempting to chart the network of Epstein's victims, February 2, 2026. /AP
Editor's note: Adriel Kasonta, a special commentator for CGTN, is a London-based foreign affairs analyst and commentator. He is the founder of AK Consultancy and former chairman of the International Affairs Committee at Bow Group, the oldest conservative think tank in the UK. The article reflects the author's opinions and not necessarily the views of CGTN.
The renewed public eruption around the Epstein files is not merely another scandal in an age that seems addicted to them. It is something more corrosive, more unsettling and ultimately more revealing. What began years ago as a criminal investigation into the grotesque abuse of minors by a wealthy financier has metastasized into a far-reaching interrogation of Western power itself: Who holds it, how it protects itself, and how often it escapes accountability.
The shock of the files lies not only in their content – though the allegations, testimonies and patterns of silence are undeniably harrowing – but in their implications. The documents implicate figures who sit at the summit of political, financial and cultural life in both the United States and Europe. Presidents and princes, donors and diplomats, academics and media personalities drift in and out of Epstein's orbit like ghosts of an elite consensus. The story is no longer about Epstein. It is about the architecture that made Epstein possible.
For years, defenders of the system insisted that this was an aberration: a lone predator exploiting his wealth and charisma, eventually caught by the long arm of the law. That narrative collapsed the moment Epstein secured a scandalously lenient plea deal in 2008 – a legal sleight of hand that should have ended careers but instead passed with minimal consequence. His death in a federal jail cell in 2019, under circumstances that remain unclear at best, sealed public suspicion that something far larger was at work. The release and discussion of the files have only deepened that conviction.
What the Epstein case exposes, with uncomfortable clarity, is not simply criminality at the top, but impunity. Western democracies rest on the premise that the rule of law applies equally to all. Yet the Epstein saga demonstrates how wealth, connections and institutional capture can hollow that promise out from within. Prosecutorial discretion becomes prosecutorial deference. Oversight bodies become ornamental. Justice, in practice, becomes negotiable.
The sign for the U.S. Department of Justice is seen on the building, Washington, D.C., February 6, 2026. /CFP
The sign for the U.S. Department of Justice is seen on the building, Washington, D.C., February 6, 2026. /CFP
This is why the controversy has long since transcended the particulars of Epstein's crimes. The case now functions as a proxy war over institutional credibility. In the United States, especially, a country already riven by distrust in courts, law enforcement and political elites, the Epstein files land like accelerant on smoldering embers. Polling consistently shows collapsing confidence in Congress, the judiciary and federal agencies. Against that backdrop, every unanswered question – Who knew? Who intervened? Who was protected? – feeds a growing belief that the system is not merely flawed but structurally dishonest.
Europe, often tempted to view the Epstein affair as an American pathology, would be wise to resist that complacency. The files do not respect borders. Nor do the networks they hint at. Transatlantic elites share schools, boardrooms, charities and social circuits. They attend the same conferences, fund the same causes and circulate through the same revolving doors between public office and private influence. To imagine that these networks suddenly become virtuous when they cross the Atlantic is to indulge in fantasy.
There is also a deeper philosophical unease at play. Liberal democracies have long claimed moral authority by contrasting themselves with openly corrupt or authoritarian regimes. They speak the language of transparency, accountability and human rights. The Epstein files puncture that self-image. They suggest that beneath the rhetoric lies a familiar pattern: power insulating itself from consequence, victims marginalized and truth deferred indefinitely in the name of "stability."
This is where the international ripple effects become unavoidable. When a leading Western power appears incapable – or unwilling – to hold its own elites accountable, it weakens its standing abroad. Calls for judicial reform, anti-corruption measures, or human rights protections ring hollow when accompanied by visible double standards. Authoritarian governments are quick to exploit this hypocrisy, weaponizing Western scandals to deflect criticism and legitimize their own abuses. The damage is not abstract; it reshapes diplomatic leverage and moral credibility in real time.
At home, the danger is even more acute. A crisis of judicial credibility does not remain politely confined to courtrooms. It seeps into the political bloodstream. Citizens who believe the law protects predators with the right surnames are unlikely to trust electoral outcomes, public health mandates, or foreign policy decisions. Conspiracy theories flourish where transparency fails. Populist demagogues thrive by promising to "burn it all down," even if they have little intention of rebuilding anything fairer in its place.
None of this requires believing in grand, omnipotent conspiracies. The tragedy of the Epstein case is more banal – and more damning – than that. It reveals a system in which incentives align toward silence, delay and mutual protection. No single mastermind is required when institutional inertia does the work.
The question now facing Western societies is not whether the Epstein files are embarrassing. That ship sailed long ago. The question is whether democracies can confront what the case has come to symbolize: the slow erosion of equal justice under law. If they cannot, the files will remain open – not as legal documents, but as a standing indictment of a political order that mistook prestige for virtue and access for accountability.
In that sense, the Epstein affair is less a scandal than a stress test. And so far, the results are not encouraging.
(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at opinions@cgtn.com. Follow @thouse_opinions on X, formerly Twitter, to discover the latest commentaries in the CGTN Opinion Section.)
A document that was included in the U.S. Department of Justice release of the Jeffrey Epstein files shows a diagram prepared by the FBI attempting to chart the network of Epstein's victims, February 2, 2026. /AP
Editor's note: Adriel Kasonta, a special commentator for CGTN, is a London-based foreign affairs analyst and commentator. He is the founder of AK Consultancy and former chairman of the International Affairs Committee at Bow Group, the oldest conservative think tank in the UK. The article reflects the author's opinions and not necessarily the views of CGTN.
The renewed public eruption around the Epstein files is not merely another scandal in an age that seems addicted to them. It is something more corrosive, more unsettling and ultimately more revealing. What began years ago as a criminal investigation into the grotesque abuse of minors by a wealthy financier has metastasized into a far-reaching interrogation of Western power itself: Who holds it, how it protects itself, and how often it escapes accountability.
The shock of the files lies not only in their content – though the allegations, testimonies and patterns of silence are undeniably harrowing – but in their implications. The documents implicate figures who sit at the summit of political, financial and cultural life in both the United States and Europe. Presidents and princes, donors and diplomats, academics and media personalities drift in and out of Epstein's orbit like ghosts of an elite consensus. The story is no longer about Epstein. It is about the architecture that made Epstein possible.
For years, defenders of the system insisted that this was an aberration: a lone predator exploiting his wealth and charisma, eventually caught by the long arm of the law. That narrative collapsed the moment Epstein secured a scandalously lenient plea deal in 2008 – a legal sleight of hand that should have ended careers but instead passed with minimal consequence. His death in a federal jail cell in 2019, under circumstances that remain unclear at best, sealed public suspicion that something far larger was at work. The release and discussion of the files have only deepened that conviction.
What the Epstein case exposes, with uncomfortable clarity, is not simply criminality at the top, but impunity. Western democracies rest on the premise that the rule of law applies equally to all. Yet the Epstein saga demonstrates how wealth, connections and institutional capture can hollow that promise out from within. Prosecutorial discretion becomes prosecutorial deference. Oversight bodies become ornamental. Justice, in practice, becomes negotiable.
The sign for the U.S. Department of Justice is seen on the building, Washington, D.C., February 6, 2026. /CFP
This is why the controversy has long since transcended the particulars of Epstein's crimes. The case now functions as a proxy war over institutional credibility. In the United States, especially, a country already riven by distrust in courts, law enforcement and political elites, the Epstein files land like accelerant on smoldering embers. Polling consistently shows collapsing confidence in Congress, the judiciary and federal agencies. Against that backdrop, every unanswered question – Who knew? Who intervened? Who was protected? – feeds a growing belief that the system is not merely flawed but structurally dishonest.
Europe, often tempted to view the Epstein affair as an American pathology, would be wise to resist that complacency. The files do not respect borders. Nor do the networks they hint at. Transatlantic elites share schools, boardrooms, charities and social circuits. They attend the same conferences, fund the same causes and circulate through the same revolving doors between public office and private influence. To imagine that these networks suddenly become virtuous when they cross the Atlantic is to indulge in fantasy.
There is also a deeper philosophical unease at play. Liberal democracies have long claimed moral authority by contrasting themselves with openly corrupt or authoritarian regimes. They speak the language of transparency, accountability and human rights. The Epstein files puncture that self-image. They suggest that beneath the rhetoric lies a familiar pattern: power insulating itself from consequence, victims marginalized and truth deferred indefinitely in the name of "stability."
This is where the international ripple effects become unavoidable. When a leading Western power appears incapable – or unwilling – to hold its own elites accountable, it weakens its standing abroad. Calls for judicial reform, anti-corruption measures, or human rights protections ring hollow when accompanied by visible double standards. Authoritarian governments are quick to exploit this hypocrisy, weaponizing Western scandals to deflect criticism and legitimize their own abuses. The damage is not abstract; it reshapes diplomatic leverage and moral credibility in real time.
At home, the danger is even more acute. A crisis of judicial credibility does not remain politely confined to courtrooms. It seeps into the political bloodstream. Citizens who believe the law protects predators with the right surnames are unlikely to trust electoral outcomes, public health mandates, or foreign policy decisions. Conspiracy theories flourish where transparency fails. Populist demagogues thrive by promising to "burn it all down," even if they have little intention of rebuilding anything fairer in its place.
None of this requires believing in grand, omnipotent conspiracies. The tragedy of the Epstein case is more banal – and more damning – than that. It reveals a system in which incentives align toward silence, delay and mutual protection. No single mastermind is required when institutional inertia does the work.
The question now facing Western societies is not whether the Epstein files are embarrassing. That ship sailed long ago. The question is whether democracies can confront what the case has come to symbolize: the slow erosion of equal justice under law. If they cannot, the files will remain open – not as legal documents, but as a standing indictment of a political order that mistook prestige for virtue and access for accountability.
In that sense, the Epstein affair is less a scandal than a stress test. And so far, the results are not encouraging.
(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at opinions@cgtn.com. Follow @thouse_opinions on X, formerly Twitter, to discover the latest commentaries in the CGTN Opinion Section.)