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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Wed Jul 31, 2013, 01:42 PM Jul 2013

The Trials of Bradley Manning

http://www.thenation.com/article/175512/trials-bradley-manning#axzz2aYXlnCa1

In late July, the trial of Bradley Manning finally came to a close in a heavily air-conditioned courtroom in Fort Meade, Maryland, where the young private from Crescent, Oklahoma, was prosecuted for the largest security breach in US history.

Manning had already pleaded guilty to ten of the lesser charges against him—for instance, unauthorized possession and improper storage of classified material, which together carry a maximum twenty-year term. But this was not enough for the prosecution: it pressed on with a dozen more serious offenses, including the potential capital crime of aiding the enemy as well as charges stemming from the Espionage Act of 1917, which Richard Nixon retooled as a weapon against domestic leakers in his vendetta against Daniel Ellsberg. (Such a use of the statute has never been decided on the legal merits until this case.) Judge Denise Lind announced a verdict that splits the difference, acquitting the soldier of aiding the enemy but convicting him on the Espionage Act charges. Private Manning could still face a prison term of more than 130 years (the sentence will be determined in a separate proceeding). The consequences for American journalism are grave, as the government now has even greater incentive to prosecute as a spy any confidential source who passes classified information to the press, criminalizing what has long been a vital (and tacitly accepted) conduit of essential public information. Such collateral damage to the Fourth Estate will not be mourned by a government that has become aggressively intolerant of leaks, whistleblowers and, it often seems, a well-informed citizenry.

Fort Meade is the too-perfect setting for Manning’s court-martial: an Army base, it is also home to the National Security Agency, now famous for its powers of digital intrusion after the spectacular revelations of whistleblower Edward Snowden. The NSA is the largest bureaucracy in the bloated US security complex, a farrago of draconian harshness coupled with casual indiscipline, dodgy legality with solemn appeals to the rule of law, and state-of-the-art IT with chronic power outages and a shambolic incapacity to run a search of its own employees’ e-mails.

Private Manning was an Army intelligence analyst deployed at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Hammer in Iraq when, in 2010, he amassed 90,000 field logs from the Afghan War and 392,000 from Iraq, files on the Guantánamo prisoners and 250,000 State Department diplomatic cables—a huge trove, but still less than 1 percent of what Washington classified in 2010. Manning passed them all to WikiLeaks, which published most of them through well-established newspapers and magazines.



Read more: The Trials of Bradley Manning | The Nation http://www.thenation.com/article/175512/trials-bradley-manning#ixzz2ae7hVVa5
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The Trials of Bradley Manning (Original Post) xchrom Jul 2013 OP
........ daleanime Jul 2013 #1
Another very sad day for America. sabrina 1 Jul 2013 #3
It's all relative.... daleanime Jul 2013 #4
More like trials & tribulations. nt William769 Jul 2013 #2

sabrina 1

(62,325 posts)
3. Another very sad day for America.
Wed Jul 31, 2013, 01:51 PM
Jul 2013

Manning is a hero. Lots of heroes have ended up in jail throughout history, but time has often revealed who the real criminals were and they have received their honored place in history. Nelson Mandela was one of them. Sometimes it has to wait for many years and the heroes are often dead before receiving their place of honor in history.

I believe Manning will be one of those heroes. Hopefully sooner, rather than later.

daleanime

(17,796 posts)
4. It's all relative....
Wed Jul 31, 2013, 02:02 PM
Jul 2013

Inform the American people about the actions of their government, go to jail for the rest of your life; condone/encourage/excuse torture receive millions. My head hurts just thinking about it.

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