Bradley Manning:
A Tale Of Liberty Lost In America
By Glenn Greenwald
The US does nothing to punish those guilty of war crimes or Wall Street fraud, yet demonises the whistleblower.
By Glenn Greenwald
The US does nothing to punish those guilty of war crimes or Wall Street fraud, yet demonises the whistleblower.
December 01, 2012 "The
Guardian"
--
Over the past two and a half years, all of
which he has spent in a military prison, much has been
said about
Bradley Manning, but nothing has been heard from
him. That changed on Thursday, when the 23-year-old US
army private accused of leaking classified documents to
WikiLeaks testified at his court martial proceeding
about the conditions of his detention.
The oppressive, borderline-torturous measures to which
he was subjected, including prolonged solitary
confinement and forced nudity, have been known for some
time.
A formal UN investigation denounced those
conditions as "cruel and inhuman".
President Obama's
state department spokesman, retired air force colonel PJ
Crowley, resigned after publicly condemning Manning's
treatment.
A prison psychologist testified this week
that Manning's conditions were more damaging than those
found on death row, or at Guantánamo Bay.
Still, hearing the accused whistleblower's description
of this abuse in his own words viscerally conveyed its
horror. Reporting from the hearing, the Guardian's Ed
Pilkington quoted Manning: "If
I needed toilet paper I would stand to attention and
shout: 'Detainee Manning requests toilet paper!'"
And: "I was authorised to have 20 minutes sunshine, in
chains, every 24 hours." Early in his detention, Manning
recalled, "I had pretty much given up. I thought I was
going to die in this eight by eight animal cage."
The repressive treatment of Bradley Manning is one of
the disgraces of Obama's first term, and highlights many
of the dynamics shaping his presidency.
The president
not only defended Manning's treatment but also, as
commander-in-chief of the court martial judges,
improperly decreed Manning's guilt when he asserted in
an interview that he "broke
the law".
Worse, Manning is charged not only with disclosing
classified information, but also the capital offence of
"aiding the enemy", for which the death penalty can be
imposed (military prosecutors are requesting "only" life
in prison).
The government's radical theory is that,
although Manning had no intent to do so, the leaked
information could have helped al-Qaida, a theory that
essentially equates any disclosure of classified
information – by any whistleblower, or a newspaper –
with treason.
Whatever one thinks of Manning's alleged acts, he
appears the classic whistleblower. This information
could have been sold for substantial sums to a foreign
government or a terror group. Instead he apparently
knowingly risked his liberty to show them to the world
because – he said when he believed he was speaking in
private – he wanted to trigger "worldwide discussion,
debates, and reforms".
Compare this aggressive prosecution of Manning to the
Obama administration's vigorous efforts to shield
Bush-era war crimes and massive Wall Street fraud from
all forms of legal accountability. Not a single
perpetrator of those genuine crimes has faced court
under Obama, a comparison that reflects the priorities
and values of US justice.
Then there's the behaviour of Obama's loyalists. Ever
since
I first reported the conditions of Manning's detention
in December 2010, many of them not only cheered that
abuse but grotesquely ridiculed concerns about it.
Joy-Ann Reid, a former Obama press aide and now a
contributor on the progressive network MSNBC, spouted
sadistic mockery in response to the report: "Bradley
Manning has no pillow?????" With that, she echoed one of
the most extreme rightwing websites, RedState, which
identically mocked the report: "Give Bradley Manning his
pillow and blankie back."
As
usual, the US establishment journalists have enabled the
government every step of the way. Despite holding
themselves out as adversarial watchdogs, nothing
provokes their animosity more than someone who
effectively challenges government actions.
Typifying this mentality was a CNN interview on Thursday
night with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange conducted by
Erin Burnett. It was to focus on newly released
documents revealing secret efforts by US officials to
pressure financial institutions to block WikiLeaks'
funding after the group published classified documents
allegedly leaked by Manning, a form of extra-legal
punishment that should concern everyone, particularly
journalists.
But the CNN host was completely uninterested in the
dangerous acts of her own government. Instead she
repeatedly tried to get Assange
to condemn the press policies of Ecuador, a tiny
country that – quite unlike the US – exerts no influence
beyond its borders.
To the mavens of the US watchdog
press, Assange and Manning are enemies to be scorned
because they did the job that the US press corps refuses
to do: namely, bringing transparency to the bad acts of
the US government and its allies around the world.
Bradley Manning has bestowed the world with multiple
vital benefits. But as his court martial finally reaches
its conclusion, one likely to result in the imposition
of a long prison term, it appears his greatest gift is
this window into America's political soul.
Glenn Greenwald is a columnist on civil liberties and US
national security issues for the Guardian. A former
constitutional lawyer, he was until 2012 a contributing
writer at Salon. He is
the author of How Would a Patriot Act? (May 2006), a
critique of the Bush administration's use of executive
power; A Tragic Legacy (June, 2007), which examines the Bush
legacy; and With Liberty and Justice For Some: How the Law
Is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Powerful.
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