He also remembered to thank his supporters - and what a long list there was.
Virtually every government in South America earned an honorary mention, along with individuals from all over the world, not forgetting Sweden. He also reminded the world that he is a family man.
"To my family and to my children who have been denied their father - forgive me, we will be reunited soon," he said, to cheers.
If this speech was all his own work, it confirms that Assange is highly intelligent.
Or if he took professional advice on public speaking, his advisers served him well, except in one respect, his appearance.
Far from giving him a Churchillian look, his blue shirt, crimson tie and cropped hair created - as one wag pointed out on Twitter - a curious resemblance to John Inman, from the 1970s sitcom Are you Being Served?
But what was much more serious - the elephant in the room, so to speak - was Assange's failure to say anything about the reason Swedish police want to question him.
He spoke as if he had had to flee into the Ecuadorean Embassy with the US Government agents hot on his heels.
If that were true, if he really were engaged in a struggle to avoid imprisonment in the US over his work for WikiLeaks, rather than to avoid answering a grubby accusation of sexual misconduct, then the crowd outside the embassy would have numbered rather more than a few hundred.
The Swedish judicial system will, in the end, have to decide whether or not Assange is guilty of a criminal offence.
However, what cannot be disputed is that two women who trusted and admired him enough to go to bed with him were put through experiences horrible enough to cause them to complain to the authorities.
Does Assange care? If he does, he certainly didn't seem to consider it worth a mention.
- Independent