Bradley Manning Trial: After 3 Years, Army Whistleblower Begins
Court-Martial Shrouded in Secrecy  
Democracy Now with Amy Goodman  
Monday, June 3rd 
www.democracynow.org/2013/6/3/bradley_manning_trial_after_3_years  

More than three years after he was arrested, Army whistleblower Bradley
Manning goes on trial today accused of being behind the biggest leak of
classified information in U.S. history. Manning faces life in prison for
disclosing a trove of U.S. cables and government documents to the
whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. On Saturday, hundreds of Manning
supporters rallied outside the barracks at Fort Meade, Maryland, where the
trial will be held. We're joined by two guests: Firedoglake reporter Kevin
Gosztola, who is at Ft. Meade covering the trial, and attorney Chase Madar,
author of "The Passion of Bradley Manning."
Transcript
AMY GOODMAN: Today marks the first day of the military trial of Private
Bradley Manning, accused of disclosing a trove of U.S. cables and government
documents to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks in the largest leak of
state secrets in U.S. history. Bradley Manning is 25 years old. He has
already pled guilty to misusing classified material he felt, quote, "should
become public," but has denied the top charge of aiding the enemy. For much
of the last three years since his arrest, Bradley Manning has been kept in
harsh military detention, including many months in solitary confinement,
prompting the U.N.'s top torture expert to criticize the U.S. for "cruel and
degrading" treatment. He could face life in prison, possibly the death
penalty.
On Saturday, hundreds of protesters gathered outside the barracks in Fort
Meade, Maryland, where the trial will be held, to show their support for
Manning. Protesters included Pentagon Papers whistleblower Daniel Ellsberg.
DANIEL ELLSBERG: Bradley was an extraordinary American who went on record
and acted on his awareness that it was wrong for us to be killing
foreigners. He was not doing it only for American citizens, although-I'll
come back to that in a moment-I think he saved American lives, but he was
concerned that the people of the world should be informed of the way, as he
put it, the First World, or the West, he said, treats the Third World. And,
of course, these Europeans are not in the Third World, but they do have an
interest in the fact that America has been asking for-acting for a long
time, and above all, in the last decade, as if the lives of foreigners meant
nothing.
AMY GOODMAN: Daniel Ellsberg, speaking Saturday at a protest in support of
Bradley Manning outside Fort Meade.
Last month, a military judge ruled that some testimony in Manning's trial
will be kept from the public. Colonel Denise Lind granted the government's
request to call 24 witnesses behind closed doors. The Obama administration
has argued for the secretive testimony by citing the need to protect
classified information.
The trial begins today, is expected to run to the end of August. A leaked
audio recording emerged earlier this year of the statement Manning delivered
at his pretrial hearing at Fort Meade in February. Manning acknowledged he
gave the classified documents to WikiLeaks and explained what he wanted
people to learn from his revelation. It is not an easy, clear recording, so
listen carefully.
BRADLEY MANNING: I wanted the American public to know that not everyone in
Iraq and Afghanistan were targets that needed to be neutralized, but rather
people who were struggling to live in the pressure-cooker environment of
what we call "asymmetric warfare."
AMY GOODMAN: The audio isn't clear because it was leaked, but Bradley
Manning explained that he wanted the American people to know, quote, "that
not everyone in Iraq and Afghanistan were targets that needed to be
neutralized, but rather people who were struggling to live in the
pressure-cooker environment of what we call," he said, "'asymmetric
warfare.'"
Well, to talk about this trial, we're joined by two guests. We're going to
begin at Fort Meade at the trial site by Kevin Gosztola. Kevin has been
blogging about the trial. He's a civil liberties blogger at Firedoglake
<http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/author/kgosztola/>  and co-author of the
ebook Truth and Consequences: The U.S. vs. Bradley Manning. He's a plaintiff
in a lawsuit brought by the Center for Constitutional Rights that challenges
government secrecy in Manning's court-martial, as, by the way, is Democracy
Now!
Kevin, welcome back to Democracy Now! Explain today, this morning, what
exactly is happening at the trial. It was very unclear what would happen for
the journalists, for how this trial will be covered.
KEVIN GOSZTOLA: Well, I expect that we'll have some sort of opening
arguments that will have any sort of housekeeping issues that have to be
dealt with before they can really proceed with the trial. And what I can
tell you about the media, having just come in, is that there happens to be
an overwhelming amount of media. I don't think that the military were
prepared to handle as many cars as were coming, even though they-you know,
they granted 70 requests, and the number was that there were about 350 or so
requests that were put in to the military for credentials. And you've had
people turned away and denied access. Importantly, for this issue of the
media, you've got the story of this court-this crowd-funded court reporter
or stenographer that Freedom of the Press Foundation funded, happens to
actually be going in, is going to be using the credentials of the Bradley
Manning Support Network in order to be covering the proceedings today.
AMY GOODMAN: I just want to say, Kevin, you're reporting to us from your car
right outside the proceedings. Explain what is at stake today and what you
expect will happen in this first day of the trial.
KEVIN GOSZTOLA: Well, there's a lot that I'm going to find out here when I
get off of this segment with you, because I have not received the morning
briefing. The military did not advertise what exactly the first day is going
to be about. But what I can tell you from my experience covering this since
December 2011, because this has been one of the longest court-martials that
I've ever-seems fairly long, and in the first day, we don't know exactly
what's going to happen. They'll establish the business. And what we know is
that there's probably going to be some kind of an entering of the charges.
Manning probably will be read his rights. I think that the first day could
be pretty standard, and maybe the word would be "perfunctory."
AMY GOODMAN: Among the protesters outside Fort Meade, Maryland, on Saturday
was Sarah Shourd. She was jailed for 14 months in Iran after she and two
other Americans, Shane Bauer and now her husband-who is now her husband, and
Josh Fattal, were detained by Iranian border forces on July 31st, 2009, for
allegedly hiking across the Iraqi border into Iran, which they don't believe
is the case. She spoke to Al Jazeera from the protest.
SARAH SHOURD: My name is Sarah Shourd. I'm an author and an advocate against
the use of solitary confinement. And I was held as a political hostage by
the Iranian government for 410 days in solitary confinement, along with my
now-husband Shane Bauer and my friend Josh Fattal.
Bradley Manning doesn't deserve to be in prison. And I know what it's like
to sit in a prison cell and know that you don't deserve to be there. Bradley
Manning was held for nine months in extreme conditions of solitary
confinement, very similar to my own conditions in Iranian prison. We were
both under lockdown 23 hours a day, with-under sensory deprivation. There's
really no way to describe the depth of loneliness. You really just have to
get through one day at the time, and every day is a monumental task.
*But the fact that people are coming out for Bradley Manning-and I'm sure he
knows about it, word will get to him-I'm sure will give him the strength
that he needs and help remind him that a lot of people really appreciate
what he did for our country and for the world. It's a level of bravery and
heroism that really takes-takes me aback.
PROTESTERS: Free Bradley Manning! Free Bradley Manning! Free Bradley
Manning!
SARAH SHOURD: Bradley Manning is a modern-day hero. And the Obama
administration is on the wrong side of history when it comes to the
persecution of Bradley Manning.
AMY GOODMAN: We're also joined right now by Chase Madar. He is the author of
The Passion of Bradley Manning: The Story Behind the WikiLeaks
Whistleblower. And he's blogging
<http://www.thenation.com/authors/chase-madar>  about the Manning trial for
The Nation magazine. He'll be covering the court-martial from the courtroom
next week. He is with us right now, also a plaintiff in the lawsuit, along
with Democracy Now!, Firedoglake and others, brought by the Center for
Constitutional Rights that challenges government secrecy in Manning's
court-martial. Chase, the significance of what is happening today?
CHASE MADAR: Well, the court-martial of Bradley Manning is really the last
ugly chapter of our sordid and ugly Iraq War. A war that we rushed into
catastrophically, in no small part because of extreme government secrecy, is
now ending in the trial of a truth teller behind a veil of extreme
government secrecy. Now, none of the CIA torturers, much less Bush and
Cheney, were put on trial, but Washington has finally found a scapegoat in a
young Army private who leaked these important documents. Now, to put things
in perspective, this is the biggest security breach in U.S. history, but
it's also less than 1 percent of what Washington classifies in a given year.
It has not put us on the brink of total transparency. It has not caused
diplomatic Armageddon. And there is no concrete evidence whatsoever that any
civilian or soldier has been harmed by the leaks. On the other hand, we have
a very clear understanding of what the Iraq War was really all about and
what our Afghan War is still all about. And the leaks have sparked important
debates and even reforms, and in the case of Tunisia, did help spark an
uprising that overthrew a hated dictator there. What's not to like?
AMY GOODMAN: Well, last week, Democracy Now! spoke to WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange
<http://www.democracynow.org/2013/5/29/assange_us_probe_of_wikileaks_show> .
He spoke to us from the Ecuadorean embassy in London, where he's been holed
up for 11 months to avoid extradition to Sweden. He fears that, from there,
he would then be extradited to the United States, where he fears a grand
jury has secretly indicted him for publishing the diplomatic cables leaked
by Bradley Manning. Assange talked about the implications of Bradley
Manning's trial.
JULIAN ASSANGE: He's also facing a quite decent chance of life imprisonment.
And the life imprisonment charge comes from a very new ambit claim of the
Pentagon, that is-and the Department of Justice, that is, communicating with
a journalist is communicating to the public, is communicating to al-Qaeda.
And there's no allegation that Bradley Manning intended to communicate to
al-Qaeda. The only allegation is that he indirectly did so as a result of
communicating with journalists, who communicated to the public. If that
precedent is allowed to be erected, it will do two things. Firstly, it means
it's a potential death penalty for any person in the military speaking to a
journalist about a sensitive matter. Secondly, it also embroils the
journalist and the publication in that chain of communicating, they would
say, to the enemy, and therefore making them susceptible, as well, to the
Espionage Act, which also has capital offenses. And that is part of the
U.S.-that latter part is part of the U.S. attack on WikiLeaks, including
myself.
AMY GOODMAN: That was Julian Assange speaking to Democracy Now! last week
from the Ecuadorean embassy. Ecuador has granted him political asylum, but
the British government threatens to arrest him if he steps foot outside the
embassy to try to go to Ecuador.
Meanwhile, a New York Times op-ed
<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/11/opinion/keller-private-mannings-confidant
.html>  suggested when government secrets are leaked, responsibility lies
with the whistleblower alone, not the media that publicized their leaks. Max
Frankel, The New York Times Washington bureau chief during the Pentagon
Papers leak, said, quote, "When the government moved to prosecute Ellsberg,
we felt no obligation to assist him. He was committing an act of civil
disobedience and presumably knew that required accepting the punishment. We
were privately pleased that the prosecution overreached and failed, but we
did not consider ourselves his partner in any way." Chase Madar, your
response?
CHASE MADAR: Well, this is just a shocking betrayal of an important source.
Both Daniel Ellsberg and Bradley Manning have supplied the world's greatest
newspapers and magazines with cover stories and headlines that number in the
thousands. And it's just shameful the way The New York Times, in particular,
has turned on Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks and has made an actual point of
sliming both of them with the insinuations that Bradley Manning did what he
did because he's weird or because he's crazy or gay, or gay and crazy.
Enough of this. This is an important act that has enlightened the public,
and we have paid a very heavy price in blood and money, and inflicted
horrible destruction around the world, because we did not know what our
government is doing.
AMY GOODMAN: Kevin Gosztola, in the car outside the Fort Meade courtroom,
describe for us what that courtroom is like and who can actually go into the
courtroom where Bradley Manning is being tried and what you're allowed to
bring with you in terms of taking notes, reporting out. I mean, the audio we
just played of Bradley Manning was not authorized, of course. It was
forbidden. But someone actually recorded his voice. Talk about where the
reporters will be and how you'll convey information through this trial.
KEVIN GOSZTOLA: Well, first I'll say quickly that the military's view of
freedom of the press is such that they have told us the media center is a
privilege, not a right. And they have also said if there is a leak again,
everyone will feel the pain, and they want us to police ourselves and be
informing on our fellow journalists, which I take-I don't like this at all,
and I completely oppose.
But I should say that, going into it, there are going to be 70 seats inside
of a media center. People will watch a feed from the courtroom. They will
have 10 media that will be allowed to go into the court proceeding and see
whatever is going on, you know, how the public gallery is responding, how
the prosecutors and the judge are interacting. Inside the media center, you
can use your laptop, you can use your computer, but inside of the courtroom,
you have to only limit yourself to pen, pencil, paper, which makes it hard,
especially if what you're doing is online. And that's part of the challenge.
Part of the Center for Constitutional Rights lawsuit is just the fact that
the judge continues to not make court records available so that we can, the
day of, do the most extensive reporting that we should be doing on Bradley
Manning's court-martial.
AMY GOODMAN: Chase Madar, if you'd like to wrap up with why you not only are
covering this but chose to write a book on this, and what you think are the
significant facts, as this trial begins, for people who don't know that much
about Bradley Manning to understand.
CHASE MADAR: People need to understand that the idea that government should
be as open and transparent as realistically possible, this is not some crazy
new idea that was schemed up by a bunch of computer hackers at Julian
Assange's kitchen table a few years ago. It's a very old idea. It's a very
good idea. And it was James Madison, the primary author of our Constitution,
who wrote over 200 years ago that a popular government, without popular
information, or the means of acquiring it, is but a prelude to a tragedy or
a farce, or perhaps both. The last 10 years of U.S. foreign policy have been
a tragic farce. If we're going to snap out of it and stop making poorly
informed decisions that wind up in catastrophe, we need to know what our
government is doing.
AMY GOODMAN: Chase Madar, I want to thank you very much for being with us,
The Passion of Bradley Manning: The Story Behind the WikiLeaks
Whistleblower, is our guest. Kevin Gosztola, speaking to us directly from
the trial, from Firedoglake.


In Peace,

Frank Dorrel
Publisher
Addicted To War
P.O. Box 3261
Culver City, CA 90231-3261
 
310-838-8131
[email protected] 
[email protected]   
www.addictedtowar.com
<outbind://4-00000000B7E40A0E30A3634C8C09731835BE9ED0A4532D01/www.addictedto
war.com> 




[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to