http://www.smh.com.au/world/i-did-it-to-make-the-world-a-better-place-manning-20130301-2f9y3.html

I did it to make the world a better place: Manning
  Date March 1, 2013 - 9:19AM 
Charlie Savage

 
Leaks meant to 'enlighten' on US policy 
Bradley Manning confesses that he sent material to WikiLeaks but maintains he 
did not think it would harm the United States. 

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FORT MEADE, Maryland: Bradley Manning has confessed in open court to providing 
vast archives of military and diplomatic files to the antisecrecy group 
WikiLeaks, saying he wanted the information to become public "to make the world 
a better place".

Appearing before a military judge for more than an hour on Thursday, Private 
Manning read a statement recounting how he joined the military, became an 
intelligence analyst in Iraq, decided that certain documents should become 
known to the American public to prompt a wider debate about the Iraq War, and 
ultimately uploaded them to WikiLeaks.

  I believed if the public ... had access to the information this could spark a 
debate about foreign policy in relation to Iraq and Afghanistan. 

"No one associated with WLO" – an abbreviation he used to refer to the 
WikiLeaks organisation – "pressured me into sending any more information," 
Private Manning said. "I take full responsibility."

 
Bradley Manning ... told his side of the WikiLeaks story in public for the 
first time. Photo: AP

Before reading the statement, he pleaded guilty to 10 criminal counts in 
connection with the leak, which included videos of airstrikes in Iraq and 
Afghanistan in which civilians were killed, logs of military incident reports, 
assessment files of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and 250,000 
diplomatic cables.

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The guilty pleas exposed him to up to 20 years in prison. But the case against 
the slightly built, bespectacled 25-year-old – who has become a folk hero among 
antiwar and whistleblower advocacy groups – is not over.

The military has charged him with a much more serious set of offences, 
including aiding the enemy and multiple counts of violating the Espionage Act, 
and prosecutors now have the option to press forward with proving the remaining 
elements of the more serious charges.

That would involve focusing only on questions such as whether the information 
he provided counted as the sort covered by the Espionage Act – that is, whether 
it is "national defence information" that could be used to injure the United 
States or aid a foreign nation.

In a riveting personal history, Private Manning portrayed himself as thinking 
carefully about the categories of information he was divulging, excluding the 
sort that would harm the United States. He said he was initially concerned 
about diplomatic cables in particular, but after doing research learned that 
the most sensitive ones were not placed into the database to which he had 
access, and he concluded that those might prove "embarrassing" but would not 
cause harm.

Private Manning said the first set of documents he decided to release were 
hundreds of thousands of military incident reports from Afghanistan and Iraq 
that he had initially downloaded onto a disk because he needed them for his 
work, and the computer network connection kept going down. The reports, he 
decided, showed the flaws in the counterinsurgency policy the United States was 
then pursuing in both war zones.

The military, he said, had become "obsessed with capturing or killing" people 
on a list while ignoring what the operations were doing to ordinary people in 
the two nations. The reports, he said, were not sensitive because they 
recounted events that were long over.

"I believed if the public – in particular the American public – had access to 
the information" in the reports, "this could spark a debate about foreign 
policy in relation to Iraq and Afghanistan", he said.

Private Manning said he brought the disks home when he went on leave in early 
2010 and initially decided to give them to a newspaper.

He said he first called The Washington Post and spoke to a reporter for about 
five minutes, without going into detail about what he had. He said he decided 
that the reporter did not seem particularly interested because she said the 
Post would have to review the material first and a senior editor would make the 
call.

He said he then tried to reach out to The New York Times by calling a phone 
number for the public editor, an ombudsman who is not part of the newsroom. An 
automatic answering service routed him to voicemail, and he left a message that 
no one returned, he said. He also considered visiting the offices of Politico 
but was deterred by a snowstorm.

Eventually, Private Manning said, he decided to release the information by 
uploading it to WikiLeaks. He later sent several other batches of documents and 
files to the organisation from his computer in Iraq, while striking up an 
online chatroom relationship with someone he said he assumed was a senior 
figure in the group such as Julian Assange, whose name he mispronounced as 
"as-SAHN-JAY."

Private Manning said he came to greatly value his online conversations with the 
WikiLeaks person because he felt isolated in Iraq, where he lacked close 
relationships with his fellow soldiers. For instance, he said, "I lacked a 
close relationship with my roommate due to his discomfort" with Private 
Manning's homosexuality.

But while he "enjoyed the ability to discuss pretty much anything" with the 
WikiLeaks person, whom he decided to refer to by a pseudonym taken from the 
author of a book he had read, "in retrospect I realised these conversations 
were artificial and meant more to me" than to the WikiLeaks person.

He did not elaborate. Nor did he discuss his later online conversations with 
Adrian Lamo, the former computer hacker who alerted the federal government to 
the leak.

The New York Times 


Read more: 
http://www.smh.com.au/world/i-did-it-to-make-the-world-a-better-place-manning-20130301-2f9y3.html#ixzz2MHBiwLJK


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