THE JUDICIAL LYNCHING OF BRADLEY MANNING
June 16, 2013 – 4:46 am
The trial of Bradley Manning borders on inhuman rights. The whistleblower has been told the material he revealed is classified, hence it cannot be mentioned in court so he cannot argue why he released the information. Manning is also forbidden by the court to challenge the government’s unverified assertion that he harmed national security. All that’s missing is the kangaroo. By Chris Hedges.
The military trial of Bradley Manning is a judicial lynching. The government has effectively muzzled the defense team. The Army private first class is not permitted to argue that he had a moral and legal obligation under international law to make public the war crimes he uncovered. The documents that detail the crimes, torture and killing Manning revealed, because they are classified, have been barred from discussion in court, effectively removing the fundamental issue of war crimes from the trial.
Manning is forbidden by the court to challenge the government’s unverified assertion that he harmed national security. Lead defense attorney David E. Coombs said during pretrial proceedings that the judge’s refusal to permit information on the lack of actual damage from the leaks would “eliminate a viable defense, and cut defense off at the knees.” And this is what has happened.
Manning is also barred from presenting to the court his motives for giving the website WikiLeaks hundreds of thousands of classified diplomatic cables, war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq, and videos. The issues of his motives and potentially harming national security can be raised only at the time of sentencing, but by then it will be too late.
The draconian trial restrictions, familiar to many Muslim Americans tried in the so-called war on terror, presage a future of show trials and blind obedience. Our email and phone records, it is now confirmed, are swept up and stored in perpetuity on government computers. Those who attempt to disclose government crimes can be easily traced and prosecuted under the Espionage Act.
Whistleblowers have no privacy and no legal protection. This is why Edward Snowden - a former CIA technical assistant who worked for a defense contractor with ties to the National Security Agency and who leaked to Glenn Greenwald at The Guardian the information about the National Security Council’s top-secret program to collect Americans’ cellphone metadata, e-mail and other personal data - has fled the United States.
The draconian trial restrictions, familiar to many Muslim Americans tried in the so-called war on terror, presage a future of show trials and blind obedience.
The First Amendment is dead. There is no legal mechanism left to challenge the crimes of the power elite. We are bound and shackled. And those individuals who dare to resist face the prospect, if they remain in the country, of joining Manning in prison, perhaps the last refuge for the honest and the brave.
Coombs opened the trial last week by pleading with the judge, Army Col. Denise Lind, for leniency based on Manning’s youth and sincerity. Coombs is permitted by Lind to present only circumstantial evidence concerning Manning’s motives or state of mind. He can argue, for example, that Manning did not know al-Qaida might see the information he leaked.
Coombs is also permitted to argue, as he did last week, that Manning was selective in his leak, intending no harm to national interests. But these are minor concessions by the court to the defense. Manning’s most impassioned pleas for freedom of information, especially regarding email exchanges with the confidential government informant Adrian Lamo, as well as his right under international law to defy military orders in exposing war crimes, are barred as evidence.
Manning is unable to appeal to the Nuremberg principles, a set of guidelines created by the International Law Commission of the United Nations after World War II to determine what constitutes a war crime. The principles make political leaders, commanders and combatants responsible for war crimes, even if domestic or internal laws allow such actions.
The Nuremberg principles are designed to protect those, like Manning, who expose these crimes. Orders do not, under the Nuremberg principles, offer an excuse for committing war crimes. And the Nuremberg laws would clearly condemn the pilots in the “Collateral Murder” video and their commanders and exonerate Manning. But this is an argument we will not be allowed to hear in the Manning trial.
Military prosecutors are pursuing all 22 charges against him. These charges include aiding the enemy, wanton publication, espionage, stealing U.S. government property, exceeding authorized access and failures to obey lawful general orders-charges that can bring with them 149 years plus life.
Manning has admitted to 10 lesser offenses surrounding his leaking of classified and unclassified military and State Department files, documents and videos, including the “Collateral Murder” video, which shows a U.S. Apache attack helicopter in 2007 killing 12 civilians, including two Reuters journalists, and wounding two children on an Iraqi street.
His current plea exposes him to penalties that could see him locked away for two decades. But for the government that is not enough. Military prosecutors are pursuing all 22 charges against him. These charges include aiding the enemy, wanton publication, espionage, stealing U.S. government property, exceeding authorized access and failures to obey lawful general orders-charges that can bring with them 149 years plus life.
“He knew that the video depicted a 2007 attack,” Coombs said of the “Collateral Murder” recording. “He knew that it [the attack] resulted in the death of two journalists. And because it resulted in the death of two journalists it had received worldwide attention. He knew that the organization Reuters had requested a copy of the video in FOIA [Freedom of Information Act] because it was their two journalists that were killed, and they wanted to have that copy in order to find out what had happened and to ensure that it didn’t happen again. He knew that the United States had responded to that FOIA request almost two years later indicating what they could find and, notably, not the video.
“He knew that David Finkel, an author, had written a book called ‘The Good Soldiers,’ and when he read through David Finkel’s account and he talked about this incident that’s depicted in the video, he saw that David Finkel’s account and the actual video were verbatim, that David Finkel was quoting the Apache air crew. And so at that point he knew that David Finkel had a copy of the video. And when he decided to release this information, he believed that this information showed how [little] we valued human life in Iraq. He was troubled by that. And he believed that if the American public saw it, they too would be troubled and maybe things would change.”
“He was 22 years old,” Coombs said last Monday as he stood near the bench, speaking softly to the judge at the close of his opening statement. “He was young. He was a little naive in believing that the information that he selected could actually make a difference. But he was good-intentioned in that he was selecting information that he hoped would make a difference.”
The moral order is inverted. The criminal class is in power. We are the prey. Manning, in a just society, would be a prosecution witness against war criminals. Those who committed these crimes should be facing prison. But we do not live in a just society.
“He wasn’t selecting information because it was wanted by WikiLeaks,” Coombs concluded. “He wasn’t selecting information because of some 2009 most wanted list. He was selecting information because he believed that this information needed to be public. At the time that he released the information he was concentrating on what the American public would think about that information, not whether or not the enemy would get access to it, and he had absolutely no actual knowledge of whether the enemy would gain access to it. Young, naive, but good-intentioned.”
The moral order is inverted. The criminal class is in power. We are the prey. Manning, in a just society, would be a prosecution witness against war criminals. Those who committed these crimes should be facing prison. But we do not live in a just society.
The Afghans, the Iraqis, the Yemenis, the Pakistanis and the Somalis know what American military forces do. They do not need to read WikiLeaks. They have seen the bodies, including the bodies of their children, left behind by drone strikes and other attacks from the air. They have buried the corpses of those gunned down by coalition forces.
With fury, they hear our government tell lies, accounts that are discredited by the reality they endure. Our wanton violence and hypocrisy make us hated and despised, fueling the rage of jihadists and amassing legions of new enemies against the United States. Manning, by providing a window into the truth, opened up the possibility of redemption.
Manning showed us through the documents he released that Iraqis have endured hundreds of rapes and murders, along with systematic torture by the military and police of the puppet government we installed. He let us know that none of these atrocities were investigated. He provided the data that showed us that between 2004 and 2009 there were at least 109,032 “violent deaths” in Iraq, including those of 66,081 civilians, and that coalition troops were responsible for at least 195 civilian deaths in unreported events.
He offered hope for a new relationship with the Muslim world, one based on compassion and honesty, on the rule of law, rather than the cold brutality of industrial warfare. But by refusing to heed the truth that Manning laid before us, by ignoring the crimes committed daily in our name, we not only continue to swell the ranks of our enemies but put the lives of our citizens in greater and greater danger. Manning did not endanger us. He sought to thwart the peril that is daily exacerbated by our political and military elite.
Manning showed us through the documents he released that Iraqis have endured hundreds of rapes and murders, along with systematic torture by the military and police of the puppet government we installed. He let us know that none of these atrocities were investigated. He provided the data that showed us that between 2004 and 2009 there were at least 109,032 “violent deaths” in Iraq, including those of 66,081 civilians, and that coalition troops were responsible for at least 195 civilian deaths in unreported events.
He allowed us to see in the video “Collateral Murder” the helicopter attack on unarmed civilians in Baghdad. It was because of Manning that we could listen to the callous banter between pilots as the Americans nonchalantly fired on civilian rescuers. Manning let us see a U.S. Army tank crush one of the wounded lying on the street after the helicopter attack.
The actions of the U.S. military in this one video alone, as law professor Marjorie Cohn has pointed out, violate Article 85 of the First Protocol to the Geneva Conventions, which prohibits the targeting of civilians, Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions, which requires that wounded be treated, and Article 17 of the First Protocol, which permits civilians to rescue and care for wounded without being harmed. We know of this war crime and many others because of Manning. And the decision to punish the soldier who reported these war crimes rather than the soldiers responsible for these crimes mocks our pretense of being a nation ruled by law.
“I believed if the public, particularly the American public, could see this, it could spark a debate on the military and our foreign policy in general as it applied to Iraq and Afghanistan,” Manning said Feb. 28 when he pleaded guilty to the lesser charges. He said he hoped the release of the information to WikiLeaks “might cause society to reconsider the need to engage in counterterrorism while ignoring the situation of the people we engaged with every day.”
But it has not. Our mechanical drones still circle the skies delivering death. Our attack jets still blast civilians. Our soldiers and Marines still pump bullets into mud-walled villages. Our artillery and missiles still raze homes. Our torturers still torture. Our politicians and generals still lie. And the man who tried to stop it all is still in prison.
Trial transcripts used for this report came from the nonprofit Freedom of the Press Foundation, which, because the government refused to make transcripts publicly available, is raising money to have its own stenographer at the trial. Transcripts from the pretrial hearing came from journalist Alexa O’Brien.
Note: The above article was posted at truthdig.com and at Information Clearing House.
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12 Responses to “THE JUDICIAL LYNCHING OF BRADLEY MANNING”
Bullshit! He was willingly under the UCMJ. The entire trial should take about 10 minutes.
Prosecution: Did you realize that betraying your security clearance was against the UCMJ?
Manning: Yes
Prosecution: Were you aware that as an active duty soldier, you voluntarily and knowingly accepted punishment in accordance with the UCMJ?
Manning: Yes
Prosecution: Did you, in violation of your oath and military duty, leak thousands of classified documents?
Manning: Yes
Judge: You shall now be punished as the court so directs.
This ain’t rocket science.
I only wish that the Marines still ran “red line” Brigs where the former PFC could spend the rest of his life.
By Kevin on Jun 17, 2013
@Kevin:
Agreed. The military judicial system is wholly separate from the private sector system, and very different protocols apply. To compare Mr. Manning’s military trial to a civil one is bad journalism, even as op/ed.
Acting out of conscience may be admirable, but it has very different consequences in the military. That shouldn’t be news to a soldier.
By kingpossum on Jun 18, 2013
A soldier’s duty is to obey orders, but don’t the ones who give those orders also have a duty not to lie to us? When they say the lies are “for our own good”, don’t they really mean for THEIR own good? If Manning is to receive punishment, then so should those behind the lies Manning exposed. Or are the military and the government itself now above the law in the United States? Should the law only apply to Manning, but not to those he implicates?
By Jim Kneubuhl on Jun 21, 2013
The judicial system in the US is a joke. The ENTIRE system is corrupt from the scum bag judges to the on the take cops.
The United States is just another cover for organized crime. The president himself is the king con.
By mc pete on Jun 22, 2013
Prosecution:
Did you take an oath to defend the Constitution?
Manning: Yes.
Prosecution: What is your defense for committing treason?
Manning: My defense is that I did this to protect the Constitution and that lying to the American public violates the Constitution and therefore ALL of my commanding officers are guilty of complicity in the perversion of OUR Constitution for their own personal gain.
By your own “laws” ALL of my commanding officers MUST be executed for treason and crimes against AMERICA, including the “Commander in Chief”.
By mc pete on Jun 22, 2013
The military must be held accountable for attempting to subvert the Constitution while attempting to convince the populace that they know what is better for the citizens.
In my opinion, the greatest threat to America is the lawless military. Those that will allow them to continue to go un-checked will pay the supreme price.
By mc pete on Jun 22, 2013
No, mc pete…
If Manning found that what he was doing was untenable by his conscience, then he had the chain of command and as a last resort, the ability to communicate with his congressmen/senators. What he did was indefensible. Did he release only what he felt was important, or did he contact a hacker? Did he download as much material as he could, and release it?
Read the entire oath of enlistment, and really think about it before you allow further paranoid ravings to surface.
Hopefully, Manning will go down in history as either the next person hung as a resort of courts-martial, or for spending the rest of his life next to John Walker and Jerry Wentworth in Leavenworth.
Take an oath? Follow it, or don’t re-enlist!
Kevin, USN (Ret.)
By kevin on Jun 23, 2013
So Manning did NOT take an oath to defend the Constitution? And you choose to take orders without thinking so therefore, you feel that EVERYONE in the military should do the same. Tell me, what was your motivation to join the service. Were you just another loser? Did you join to defend the Constitution or because you wanted something out of it for yourself? Free food, housing and education? Bribes?
Maybe you have one of those phyco power trips. Maybe you just love to have your ass kicked. Who knows but I am sure that you did not sign up to defend the Constitution.
Neither did any of the bush’s.
By the way, I wouldn’t waste my time reading the “oath of enlistment” for a criminal cabal like the US military.
If more Americans were real Americans, they would tell the military to go get fucked.
By mc pete on Jun 23, 2013
“general” keith alexander is a jackass. He is a great example of the parasitic idiots employed by this fascist government.
By mc pete on Jun 23, 2013
mc pete,
One of those lovely anachronisms of our American society is that many will serve, even die for the rights of colostomy bags such as yourself to wank and whine about life in general.
Please enjoy the freedoms that many, much more worthy of drawing breath, have paid for.
Have a nice day.
Kevin
By Kevin on Jun 27, 2013
@Kevin - right on, brother.
@mc pete - you misunderstand the role of the military in American society. Our military is subject to civilian rule, always answering to the Commander in Chief - the President. The aren’t subject to the military - just the opposite. However, when a citizen makes a VOLUNTARY decision to join the military, he VOLUNTARILY subjects himself to the orders and authority of those who are superior to him; for Manning, as a Private First Class, that means just about everybody (including corporals, sergeants, commissioned officers, all the way up to and including the President). Wanna be a free agent? Wanna not have to answer to anyone other than yourself? Then don’t be a PFC in the Army.
By MrBill on Jun 29, 2013
Word omission - the *citizens* aren’t subject to the military…
By MrBill on Jun 29, 2013