There Should be No Sighs of Relief in Manning Verdict
A Devastating Verdict
by ALFREDO LOPEZ
The Bradley Manning verdict may seem a victory of sorts for the 
defense — it’s certainly being treated that way in the mainstream media — but 
the decision handed down Tuesday by Court Marshal Judge Colonel 
Denise Lind is actually a devastating blow not only to Manning, who was 
convicted of unjustifiably serious charges brought by an aggressive 
administration seeking to make an example of him, but also to Internet 
activity in general and information-sharing in particular.
Judge Lind found the young Army private not guilty of the most 
serious charge he faced: “aiding the enemy”. But it was the most serious 
because he could have faced life imprisonment as a result. Now he faces a 
sentencing hearing on 17 charges of which he was convicted.
Much of the media reaction reflected relief:
“We won the battle, now we need to go win the war,” Manning’s trial 
lawyer David Coombs told a press conference. “Today is a good day, but 
Bradley is by no means out of the fire.”
Or as Marcy Wheeler wrote in Salon: “But the big news — and very good news — is 
that Manning is innocent of the aiding the enemy charge. That ruling averted a 
potentially 
catastrophic effect on freedom of speech in this country.”
The relief may be misguided. We have not averted a catastrophe; we 
have experienced one. Manning’s convictions include five counts of 
“espionage” under the 1917 Espionage Act and therein lies the poison. 
The logic of that espionage finding means that any of us could 
potentially be convicted of the very same crime if we were to publish 
anything on the Internet that the government considers “dangerous” to 
its functioning or activities.
Hand in hand with the recently-revealed system of surveillance that 
effectively models a police state, this verdict is spectacularly 
pernicious.
That may be easier to understand when the decision is matched with the facts of 
the case.
Bradley Manning, an intelligence technologist with the Army, released a large 
number of documents to Wikileaks, among them the famous video 
tape of U.S. pilots bombing a wedding in Afghanistan and laughing as 
they killed many of the people in attendance. He was arrested and 
imprisoned in 2010 and then charged thereafter, after being held in a 
military brig for eight months under conditions human rights activists 
and a UN reporteur termed “torture,” including being kept in solitary, 
naked in an unheated cell.
He has never denied that he released the information and has offered 
to plead guilty to 10 of the charges leveled against him — basically 
that he released information against the rules of the Army and the 
regulations governing his security clearance. He did all that, he said, 
to spark a debate about a foreign policy he had come to deeply question 
during his work in the Army; he felt that important debate that was 
being quashed by government secrecy. In short, Manning admitted to being a 
whistle-blower who was completely clear, competent, missions-driven 
and ready to go to prison for what he considered a service to his 
country.
His best-known statement, which went viral on-line, reflects, not 
some confused and unbalance kid, but rather a mature, thoughtful and 
courageous young man who was ready to make a huge sacrifice for his 
country and humanity in general. In order to take that principles 
stance, Manning had to acknowledge that he leaked the stuff and he knew 
it would be circulated. Hence his guilty plea on those charges.
But he consistently rejected the government’s charges of espionage and aiding 
the enemy. That’s where things get creepy.
The government argued that Manning knew that anything he released on 
the Internet could be read by the enemies of the United States. This 
means that, effectively, he was involved in espionage and “aiding the 
enemy”. There’s a difference between those charges.
“Aiding the enemy” is a charge leveled at military personnel during 
times of conflict. It means you gave some assistance, material or moral, to the 
people your armed forces are fighting. It’s among the most 
serious charges a person can face, the very essence of “traitor”, and 
would have sent Manning away for the rest of his life. It was scary 
enough when Judge Lind agreed to consider the charge but apparently she 
did so to finally and firmly dispel it.
In finding him not guilty of that charge, Judge Lind did something 
else that was missed by a lot of coverage. It was about the bombing 
video. “While Manning admitted accessing the video,” Wheeler explains, 
“the government insisted he had leaked it months before Manning admitted to 
accessing it (and before forensic evidence showed he had). This 
claim — one Lind said they did not prove — was key to their claims that 
Manning had planned to leak to WikiLeaks from the start of his 
deployment to Iraq.” Had he been found guilty of that, the ruling would 
have logically labelled WikiLeaks a spy agency rather than a news 
outlet. That failed and it’s a victory for a “freer” press.
Espionage, on the the hand, is spying and both civilians and military can be 
found guilty of it. It means giving classified information to an enemy or 
another government. Ordinarily, the charge is leveled at 
intelligence people working for governments which have antagonistic 
relations with the United States and it is seldom used and hasn’t been 
popular among prosecutors for decades (probably since the anti-war 70s).
The federal prosecutors in Manning’s trial altered their definition 
of espionage to bring it back into fashion. They said it constitutes 
publishing on the Internet something potentially harmful to the 
government, the country’s security or the safety of U.S. personnel in 
other countries. Period. Because enemies of the U.S. use the Internet, 
they could presumably retrieve that information and it makes no 
difference if Manning was aware of that or not.
During the proceedings, Judge Lind ruled against that interpretation 
saying that to prove espionage the prosecution had to prove that Manning knew 
“enemies” could find that information and understood they would 
retrieve it. To prove that charge, the government showed that al-Qaida 
leader Osama Bin Laden had some of Manning’s released material on his 
computer. That, apparently, was all it took.
Under Judge Lind’s verdict, anything you publish on the Internet that could be 
harmful to the United States constitutes espionage because we 
all know our “enemies” can retrieve it. Effectively, it would have been 
impossible for Bradley Manning to be acquitted of espionage under that 
definition.
The most immediate impact here will be on whistle-blowers, the small 
army of truth-tellers the Obama Administration has been hunting down and 
jailing, having tried and imprisoned more whistle-blowers than any 
other Administration in history.
“This is the first ever espionage conviction against a whistleblower,” Julian 
Assange said in a statement today. “It is a dangerous precedent and an example 
of national security 
extremism. It is a short sighted judgment that cannot be tolerated and 
must be reversed. It can never be that conveying true information to the public 
is ‘espionage’.”
Specialist journalists and researchers in military and surveillance 
activities are also in the middle circle of the target. But there’s a 
third group of people who are now extremely vulnerable: movement 
activists.
Almost everything we write and publish, as a movement, goes on the 
Internet and is read by “enemies” of our government. At this point, the 
government’s definition of what is helpful to the enemy is fairly 
narrow: mainly government and military documents involving war and 
spying. But this is a government that is spying on you right now in a 
blanket surveillance program that goes beyond the systems described in 
even the most paranoid novels and completely violates the Fourth 
Amendment. In such a blanket surveillance climate, legal definitions can waffle 
and bend based on government policy or response to movements and protests. 
Without respect for the Constitution, governments are capable of anything and 
what you do as a movement activist could one day be 
listed as “dangerous” or “aiding the enemy”.
In fact, when linked with the surveillance programs, this definition 
of espionage becomes a current nightmare. You already probably 
communicating with someone who is considered potentially dangerous. For 
instance, I communicate with the BDS movement, a leader in the movement for 
boycott, divestment and sanctions against 
Israeli anti-Palestinian policies. There is no question that my email 
with that organization is captured and analyzed. If I email with you, 
for any reason, so is yours. The Internet is a “web” and all activists 
who use the Internet are targets of the federal surveillance program 
because our communication is scooped up, stored and analyzed.
The question is when does this communication become “dangerous” in 
the government’s eyes; I don’t know. Do you? Because, based on what 
happened to Bradley Manning, we’re in big trouble when it does.
What remains in the Manning case is the sentencing and, now that the 
“aiding the enemy” charge is no longer a threat, Judge Lind can pretty 
much do what she wants. There are no minimum sentences with any of these 
charges. Manning could actually be freed after the sentencing hearing 
(which begins July 31) since he’s already served over two years in jail. She 
could also, by the way, send this young man away for the rest of 
his life — the potential sentences amount to over 130 years in jail, if 
run consecutively.
But even if our hopes for Manning’s freedom prevail, the destructive 
impact of the convictions will remain in our lives for now on.
The one bright spot is the eruption of activity both in the courts 
and on the streets sparked by the revelations of Edward Snowden about 
the government’s surveillance programs. Surveillance, too long ignored 
by the progressive movement as an important issue, is now near the top 
of the list and given what happened in the Manning trial today, that’s 
where it belongs.
ALFREDO LOPEZ is a member of 
ThisCantBeHappening!, the new independent three-time Project Censored 
Award-winning online alternative newspaper.

http://www.counterpunch.org/2013/08/01/a-devastating-verdict/


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



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