The pre-trial hearing for Pfc. Bradley Manning, accused of releasing classified information to WikiLeaks, concluded with the government revealing in its closing argument for the first time the enemy, which they believe Manning’s actions aided: the terrorists.
Calling what Manning did a “six month-long enterprise of indiscriminately harvesting information,” Cpt. Ashden Fein stated in the prosecution’s closing argument that Manning had actual knowledge that what he gave to WikiLeaks would end up in the hands of the enemy and that enemy was Al Qaeda, Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and similar enemies.
An Al Qaeda propaganda video was shown. Subtitled, the video featured a figurehead of the organization discussing the released information, like the State Department cables. The figurehead said the cables revealed “foreign dependencies.” He said something about relying on Allah for actions against the US and then said before taking actions jihadists should rely on the “wide range of resources on the Internet” now.
Fein asserted that AQAP is “urging followers to collect and archive WikiLeaks information.” Manning “knowingly gave intelligence through WikiLeaks to the enemy.” He “wantonly caused the release of this information.” It was “not just good for declared enemies” but also accessible to “all other enemies with Internet access.”
Manning, Fein added, released over 700,000 documents that were on SIPRnet “during a time of war and while deployed.” He was “never authorized to make classification decisions to affect the national security of the United States.” He was given “unfettered access” to the information and “multiple enemies received” this information.
Now, it is clear: the effect of Manning’s prosecution has the potential to criminalize national security journalism. Not only would successfully putting Manning in prison for life without parole make an example for other soldiers to deter any others from responding to their moral conscience if they came across files that contained evidence of possible war crimes, but this would make it possible for the government to go after journalists who cover documents from the military or security industrial-complex.
This also cements the fact that WikiLeaks is viewed as a terrorist organization by the US government (or at least one that aids terrorist organizations through the publication of classified information). Anyone who releases information to WikiLeaks can count on being pursued by the government and, when caught, charged with “aiding the enemy”—terrorists, because they have access to the Internet and could read material that was once-secret.
Unsurprisingly, the defense’s closing argument given by David Coombs sharply contrasted with this rather incendiary condemnation of Manning. Coombs presented Manning as a “young and idealistic” man with a “strong moral compass.”
“Obviously, in your early twenties, you believe you can change the world,” Coombs stated. “In your early twenties, you believe you can make a difference and that’s a good thing. In your early twenties, when your president says, ‘Yes We Can,’ you actually believe that.”
He wholly condemned the government’s overreaction to the release of documents by WikiLeaks and there insistence that the documents have done “extreme harm” and so Manning must pay with his life.
“What was the result of these leaks?” Coombs asked. It would be possible to know if the original classification authorities (OCAs) had been in court to testify. They were not. They instead submitted “unsworn statements” indicating “relevant information could cause harm.”
Coombs said the OCAs were reinforcing the “Chicken Little response of the US government” that began with Pentagon spokesperson Geoff Morrell going around saying, “The sky is falling, the sky is falling,” and continues most recently with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton saying “the sky is falling, the sky is falling.”
“The sky is not falling and the sky will not fall,” declared Coombs.
Moments before calling out the OCAs, he spoke of the profound suffering Manning had been experiencing as a member of the military who had gender identity disorder. He cited an email to Sgt. Paul Adkins, who escaped testifying during the hearing by invoking his right to not incriminate himself.
All throughout the hearing this email was frequently referenced because it included a photo of Manning dressed up as a woman. For the first time, Coombs read what Manning had written to Adkins.
“This is my problem. I’ve had signs of it for a very long time. I’ve been trying very, very hard to get rid of it.” It is not going away. It is haunting me more and more as I get older. Now the consequences are getting harder. “I am not sure what to do with it. It’s destroying my ties with family. It is preventing me from developing as a person. It’s the cause of my pain and confusion. It makes the most basic things in my life very difficult. He said the only help that seems available is severe punishment. “I have a fear of getting caught” and have gone to “great lengths to conceal my disorder.”
The email continued: “It is difficult to sleep and impossible to have conversations. It makes “my entire life feel like a bad dream that won’t end. “I don’t know what to do. I don’t know what will happen to me. But at this point I feel like I am not here anymore. Signed, Bradley Manning.”
Coombs appropriately concluded by paraphrasing a quote many attribute to the late Justice Louis Brandeis, “Sunlight has always been the best disinfectant.”
He quoted Martin Luther King Jr., a flourish that surely pleased supporters of Manning:
An individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust, and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its injustice, is in reality expressing the highest respect for the law.
“[A] hallmark of our democracy is the ability of our government to be open with its public,” Coombs stated. “History will ultimately judge my client.”
This was the first clear instance during the entire hearing that Coombs conceded that Manning had, in fact, released the information to WikiLeaks, but the government should not get away with prosecuting Manning because he was simply doing what he thought to be just. And there is no justification for persecuting someone, who sought to raise the public’s awareness of gross injustices, and move the government to effectively resolve and end an era of corruption and lawlessness under President George W. Bush’s administration.



23 Comments

So, what did Al Qaeda learn from Wikileaks, and how did they use that information to their advantage?
Perhaps a few military men should be reminded of the Nuremberg Trials when this issue is raised again.
Any time these days I hear “National Security” invoked it means to me that the PTB are threatened, not the country, which they could give two sh*ts about.
And what does Manning’s “gender identity crisis’ have to do with the price of beans?
Maybe the US Government should stop committing War Crimes and Crimes Against Humanity.
Then they won’t need a fainting couch when people report about it.
Who’s next, Rand-McNally? Doesn’t the government and the top military brass know that this terrorist-supporting company publishes information that can — and will — be used by Al-Qaeda to navigate to any target in our Holy Roman Homeland? Get on the job, Herr Holder, and KEEP US SAFE!!!
I’d trade one Bradley Manning for every pussy in the military, from the lowliest order-follower all the way up to the Commander in Chief.
Not a damned thing. Hell, I’m a cluless civilian, but there hasn’t been a damned thing revealed that I didn’t know already.
Most of this “Classification” shit is for CYA, not because it’s actually secret. You just don’t want Jones to find out that you’re talking to Smith about Jones’s wife.
What a travesty. It wasn’t long ago that a US court wouldn’t even hear a case where the authorities had held a suspect incommunicado and tortured him for over a year. (Solitary confinement naked is torture by any reasonable definition – perhaps one of the worst.)
Manning “knowingly gave intelligence through WikiLeaks to the enemy.” He “wantonly caused the release of this information.” It was “not just good for declared enemies” but also accessible to “all other enemies with Internet access.”
So, let me get this straight. According to the US Government, when I finish this and press “like” and post it on my Facebook wall, I am aiding Al Qaeda (by causing the release of information through WikiLeaks to the enemy, accessible with Internet access) and can now be tortured, imprisoned without trial, or targeted for assassination. I sure as fuck wish I were joking. Oh well.
… the government should not get away with prosecuting Manning because he was simply doing what he thought to be just.” There is NOTHING wrong when Gov’t. prosecutes someone for doing what “HE” thought to be just. This is expected. There’s a tremendous problem when our Gov’t. prosecutes someone for exposing the law breaking, corrupt actions of our Gov’t.
What the heck is going on at FDL? This is so far removed from Jon Walker’s reporting of Obama’s HCR, it’s gard to believe it’s coming from the same web site.
You got it right tom.
That’s a great idea!
Hmm. I guess that reporting War Crimes is off the books everywhere then.
Sheesh!
Like the guys and girls they just sent home from Iraq are being sent right back out to Afghanistan.
I’m surprised the Army is identifying the enemy. Hell, my Dad cried in his sleep for 43 years because he didn’t know who the enemy was in the war!
Exactly!
Thank you :^)
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/global/2011/09/bin-laden-celebrate-911-reading-bob-woodward/42413/
via twitter. pretty funny too.
I’m surprised that there isn’t any mention of the gov’t assertion that they have chatlogs directly between Manning and Assange. That tells me that they are going after Assange, too, with the intention of jailing both as “enemies of the state”. Unless the EU intervenes, I think they will probably be successful, too. At least they think they will succeed, or they wouldn’t even have said that they have these logs. This is a case of them using Manning to go after Assange, who is the one that they really want. Manning isn’t playing ball, so they are going to increase the pressure. With a life sentence, or even possibly a death sentence in the mix, will they get him to cave? These fascist prosecutors are playing the hardest of hard-ball games. They intend to win and they intend to make examples of those who would dare defy the U.S. government.
KKKarl Rove skates after outing a CIA opertive and probably getting people in the field murdered but that’s ok.
I gather that probably means the likes of me and every other person who cares that war crimes are committed in illegal wars of aggression.
This country is so fucked!
Oh yeah! Terrorism by release of embarrassing information? This information contained no strategic or classified technical information. I can see why the government might object to the release of the helicopter gun ship crew video gunning down innocent people, including two children. It is something that U.S. citizens need to know so the terrorists that Bradley Manning was aiding was us.
Manning is certainly in the crucible.
I realize some of his alleged releases of classified information may have been more indiscriminate than others, but I like the Martin Luther King, Jr quote that Coombs ended with:
While Manning, the person, is being crushed by the state, he nevertheless distills the ideals of an open society harkening back to America’s sunnier times. And his sacrifice may outlive us all.
This poem below by Emily Dickenson seems apt. The essence of a rose is obtained by trauma (Screws), but then its ability to evoke summer outlasts both a rose or the lifespan of a human wearer of that essence:
Of course! IOKIYAR. PFC Manning should suffer no less a fate than Ollie North, i.e. a paying gig on CNN. /s
Didn’t the US and NATO just help the Al Qaeda rebels kill Gaddafi and bring Al Qaeda rebels to power in Libya?? Was Al Qaeda created by US gov. or CIA back in ’79? Al Qaeda is nothing more than the Military Industrial Complex’s b”””s that do the dirty work by creating unrest in the Middle East where the US wants regime change and occasionally hijack planes to create terror. WAKE the F*** UP PEOPLE! Quit listening to the Jew owned main stream mass media because it is the US governments interests are the same as their’s. Do your own homework because the war on terror is a farce! Bradley Manning did the RIGHT thing and it’s just not right that a person who reported the crimes of someone else is the one who is facing possible execution in what’s supposed to be the model of the greatest democratic society in history. Start waking up people because when all the truth about what’s really going on hits you all at once, you might not be able to handle it. Especially after being brainwashed your whole life. Best thing to do, seriously, quit watching the TV and the news on the TV and you will know when you snap out of the trance because the world you thought you knew, is nothing close to what you thought. You can go back to watching that crap after your mind is unlocked because you will know the truth and finally realize the MSM is nothing but mind control propaganda entertainment. Good Luck.
http://youtu.be/K0NtwU-HQU4
http://youtu.be/3OywA0ry610
I can see the only “organisation” that has been helped is an international war crimes tribunal.
Is that the American enemy? Justice?