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The Guardian: The madness of Bradley Manning (video)

Miss*Bijou

Sexy Troublemaker
Nov 9, 2006
3,138
44
48
Montréal


Bradley Manning, the man held over the leaking of confidential cables to WikiLeaks, was a 'mess of a child' who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian.
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Bradley Manning 'should never have been sent to Iraq'

Guardian exclusive:
Soldier held over US intelligence leak was known to be mentally fragile and unsuited to army life


The American soldier at the centre of the WikiLeaks revelations was so mentally fragile before his deployment to Iraq that he wet himself, threw chairs around, shouted at his commanding officers and was regularly brought in for psychiatric evaluations, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian.

Bradley Manning, who was detained a year ago on Sunday in connection with the biggest security leak in US military history, was a "mess of a child" who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an officer from the Fort Leonard Wood military base in Missouri, where Manning trained in 2007.

The officer's words reinforce a leaked confidential military report that reveals that other senior officers thought he was unfit to go to Iraq. "He was harassed so much that he once pissed in his sweatpants," the officer said.

"I escorted Manning a couple of times to his 'psych' evaluations after his outbursts. They never should have trapped him in and recycled him in [to Iraq]. Never. Not that mess of a child I saw with my own two eyes. No one has mentioned the army's failure here – and the discharge unit who agreed to send him out there," said the officer, who asked not to be identified because of the hostility towards Manning in the military.

"I live in an area where I would be persecuted if I said anything against the army or helped Manning," the officer said.

Despite several violent outbursts and a diagnosis of adjustment disorder, a condition that meant he was showing difficulty adjusting to military life, Manning was eventually sent to Iraq, where it is alleged he illegally downloaded thousands of sensitive military and diplomatic documents and passed them on to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

In Iraq, Manning retained his security clearance to work as an intelligence specialist.

Two months after his arrival, the bolt was removed from his rifle because he was thought to be a danger, his lawyer, David Coombs, has confirmed.

A Guardian investigation focusing on soldiers who worked with Manning in Iraq has also discovered there was virtually no computer and intelligence security at Manning's station in Iraq, Forward Operating Base Hammer. According to eyewitnesses, the security was so lax that many of the 300 soldiers on the base had access to the computer room where Manning worked, and passwords to access the intelligence computers were stuck on "sticky notes" on the laptop screens.

Rank and file soldiers would watch grisly "kill mission" footage as a kind of entertainment on computers with access to the sensitive network of US diplomatic and military communications known as SIPRNet.

Jacob Sullivan, 28, of Phoenix, Arizona, a former chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear specialist, was stationed at FOB Hammer in Manning's unit.

"A lot of different people worked from that building and in pretty much every room there was a SIPRNet computer attached to a private soldier or a specialist," Sullivan said

"On the computers that I saw there was a [sticky label] either on the computer or next to the computer with the information to log on. I was never given permission to log on so I never used it but there were a lot of people who did."

He added: "If you saw a laptop with a red wire coming out of it, you knew it was a SIPRNet. I would be there by myself and the laptops [would] be sitting there with passwords. Everyone would write their passwords down on sticky notes and set it by their computer. [There] wasn't a lot of security going on so no wonder something like this transpired."

Manning is facing multiple charges of downloading and passing on sensitive information. No one else at the base has been charged. Manning denies all the charges. If convicted he could face up to 55 years in jail.

The US Defence Security Service is also investigating why Manning, who had been sent for psychiatric counselling before he was deployed to Iraq, was not screened more fully before he was allowed to work in intelligence.

Eyewitness accounts by soldiers who served with him there and friends in the US who spoke to the Guardian paint a picture of an increasingly unstable and at times violent man.

One soldier who served with him describes him "blowing up and punching this chick in the face".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/27/bradley-manning-wikileaks-mentally-fragile?intcmp=239





-------------------------------------------------​





Bradley Manning: the bullied outsider who knew US military's inner secrets

Exclusive:
Having been on the brink of discharge from the US army, Bradley Manning was posted to a desolate Iraq base where secret intelligence was the TV entertainment


Bradley Manning, the 23-year-old army private from Oklahoma alleged to have been behind the biggest US government leak of all time, is now in Fort Leavenworth military jail, Kansas. He faces 34 charges, and if convicted could face a prison sentence of up to 52 years.

So why did the US army ignore warnings from officers that Manning was unstable? Why did it send him – a 5ft 2in gay man with a history of being bullied in the military – to one of the most isolated and desolate bases in Iraq? Why was security so lax on the base that passwords for secret military computers were posted on sticky notes nearby?

A year after his arrest, a Guardian investigation reveals a trail of ignored warnings, beatings and failed personal relationships that led to Manning's arrest on 29 May 2010.

Manning, the son of a former naval intelligence analyst, Brian Manning, and his wife Susan, was brought up in the small town of Crescent, Oklahoma. Neighbours watched the family disintegrate as Susan Manning turned to drink to ease the final years of the marriage.

"I never saw her plastered, but … I'd go by there at two o'clock in the morning and the lights would be on. I think she did her drinking when he'd go to bed," one neighbour, Bill Cooper, said.

In 2001, when Manning was 13, his parents divorced and he moved with his mother to her home town of Haverfordwest, in west Wales, where he joined the local school, Tasker Milward comprehensive. Small, geeky and speaking with an Oklahoma accent, Manning was an obvious target for teasing, and he reacted furiously to it, friends recalled.

"Bradley's sense of humour was different to the rest of ours, whereby the rest of the school kind of goad and tease each other," said schoolfriend Tom Dyer. "He was far too literal for that, and so would often snap back if he thought the joke had gone too far, which would cause laughter for everyone else."

When he was 17, by which time he was openly gay, Manning returned to Crescent to live with his father, who had remarried. The software job his father promised in Tulsa didn't work out – and neither did his relationship with his stepmother and her son. "I am nobody now, Mom," he wrote to his mother.

In March 2006 his stepmother called the police, saying that he was "out of control". Manning left home, and for the next year slept on friends' couches or in his pickup truck in other people's driveways, earning money in a series of casual jobs in restaurants and coffee shops.

Manning was keen to work with computers but quickly realised there would be no job for him without a degree. Joining the US army, he decided, would be his best chance of getting one as they would help pay for it through the GI bill's provision for soldiers' education.

"He joined the army because he wanted to go to university," said Keith Rose, a friend of Manning's from time he spent in Boston.He said the army's attitude towards gay people did not put Manning off. "I asked him that night how he could join, given the army's attitude towards gays. He told me he was a patriot but there were benefits too. He wanted to go to university."

In October 2007, Manning joined up. He was far from typical soldier material. He was smart, gay, physically weak and politically astute. "He knew all kinds of things," said Rose. "He was heavily educated in science. He knew math. He knew what was going on in the world."

He enlisted in October 2007 and was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, for basic training, but in just over a month he was moved to a discharge unit and on the verge of expulsion.

One man who befriended Manning in the unit, but who wishes to remain anonymous, explained what being in the discharge unit meant. "He was not bouncing back. He's going home. You don't just accidentally end up in a discharge unit one day. You just have somebody one day saying, 'You know what, he is no good – let's get him out of here'. There are a lot of steps to go to before you even hit a discharge unit."

Manning was picked on, the friend said, and used to wet himself. "[Once] there were three guys that had him up front and cornered. And they were picking on him and he was yelling and screaming.

"We got up there – it was me and a couple of the guys – and we started breaking it up. We were saying, "Get the hell out of there, back off," and everything – and started pulling Manning off. The other guys were taking care of the ones that were picking on him and stuff. I got Manning off to the side there and yeah, he pissed himself. It wasn't the only time he did that, but that was the only time that I remember. It happened a few other times, the other guys will probably tell you the same story. Just a different circumstance."

Despite the concerns of his immediate superiors, Manning was "recycled" instead of being discharged. The war in Iraq was in its fourth year and the army was short of recruits.

In August 2008, after training as an intelligence analyst, he was stationed at Fort Drum in upstate New York while he awaited deployment to Iraq. Here he was considered a "liability" by superior officers.

His weekends at Fort Drum were occupied by visiting his first serious boyfriend, Tyler Watkins, a student at Brandeis University, near Boston. Watkins began taking Bradley to events at his university's gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender society, Triskelion, and introduced his computer-loving boyfriend to Danny Clark, a student at MIT. Through Clark, the Boston "hacktivist" scene – consisting of some of the world's most prominent and smartest hackers – opened up to Manning.

Here Manning appeared to have found his place. He appears in photographs looking tanned and happy in Pika House, a clapboard communal student residence in the suburbs of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The pictures appeared in a Facebook album Bradley captioned: "Randomly hung out with some pikans." Bradley's snaps were mostly of the tie-dyed T-shirt wearing Clark. The rest of the pictures are of the jumble of gadgets, electronics and posters that cover the house.

The day Manning was posted to Iraq in October 2009, Watkins went to a gay march wearing a placard that read "Army wife". Manning was deployed to Forward Operating Base Hammer, one of the most isolated US posts in Iraq, in the desert close to the Iranian border. Veterans recalled a desolate place built mainly from freight containers.

"There was a fog that would come in almost every morning that was pollution from nearby that smelled sour and nasty, and would just wave through and linger," said Jacob Sullivan, who served alongside Manning at Hammer.

Hammer's overriding culture was one of boredom and casual bullying, where bored non-commissioned officers picked on juniors. "They had a saying, 'Shit rolls downhill,' " said Jimmy Rodriguez, 29, an infantry soldier who was stationed at the base with Manning.

For entertainment, soldiers would download porn to workstations or access footage from Apache attack helicopters showing civilians being shot at, often through SIPRNet, the classified intelligence network used by the state department and department of defence.

It was data downloaded from this network that would later find its way to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

According to Sullivan, security was extremely lax. "If you saw a laptop with a red network wire going into it, you knew it was on SIPRNet. If you had the password you could access SIPRNet. Everybody would write their password on sticky notes and set it by their computer. There is no wonder something like this transpired."

According to Peter van Buren, a civilian reconstruction team leader on the base, there was a sense of a security free-for-all about SIPRNet.

"Soldiers would call it 'war porn' or 'the war channel' or just 'war TV'. It was hypnotic to watch, even when not much was happening, just this lazy overhead view of the world around you. For many soldiers, it was all they ever saw of Iraq," Van Buren said.

"I saw them using the SIPRNet for entertainment. That's what most of the people did most of the time," said Rodriguez. "They would watch these videos of different things and some of them were videos of helicopters attacking people or drones or whatever the case, or maybe fighter jets. But they were watching military footage.

"We were pretty much bored all the time," he recalled. "When you got to Iraq, we got to Baghdad and ended up in Forward Operating Base Hammer. They would [say to] us: 'Here's the videos; here's the internet; here's all the interesting games.' "

In January 2010 Manning went on leave and visited his friends in Boston, including Watkins. It became clear their relationship – one of the most significant in his life – was near its end.

That January, Rose recalled, "Bradley was really down. Tyler was like an anchor for Bradley and the one constant for that entire year. He gave me a two-hour earful about all the things in the relationship that he didn't understand. He had gone in the military and come back and he didn't have his relationship anymore."

While his relationship with Watkins was souring, Manning socialised with Clark at the launch party for Builds – a hackers' playground in Boston University's computer science faculty where they would simulate unlocking codes and bypassing online security.

Film footage shows him leaning against a table – a soldier in his collared shirt, he looks very different from the grungy student hackers at a top university. Nevertheless, he appears comfortable inside this elite circle. Less than a week later, Manning was back at his intelligence analyst's computer in Iraq.

"I live in a very real world, where deaths and detainments are just statistics; where idealistic calls for 'liberation' and 'freedom' are utterly meaningless," Manning wrote in a final message to Watkins on Facebook. "I don't have a real place to call home, except for a trailer with a bunk, a laptop, and an alarm clock. Please don't let the LAST PERSON that I trust and care about go away. I haven't given up."

On 5 May he wrote of being "beyond frustrated with people and society at large", and a day later, on 6 May, he wrote: "Bradley Manning is not a piece of equipment." On 7 May Manning was found in a foetal position in a storeroom after stabbing a chair with a knife as he tried to carve the words "I want" into the seat. He had punched his commanding officer, a woman, in the face.

He was disciplined and demoted and told he was to be finally discharged from the army on grounds of "adjustment disorder". In the space of a few weeks, he had lost his job, his boyfriend and his chance of a university education.

During the following fortnight, Manning turned back to his computer and his hacker friends. He began chatting with someone who didn't even know him, hacker Adrian Lamo.

In the early hours of 25 May, Manning had his last conversation with Lamo. The following day Lamo reported him to the authorities and he was escorted from his computer room. After three days of questioning he was charged in relation to the biggest intelligence leak in US military history.

The US military has refused to make any comment on Manning's mental health record other than to confirm it is being investigated. He is due to be courtmartialled in December.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/27/bradley-manning-us-military-outsider?intcmp=239
 

frog3

New member
Apr 23, 2008
5
0
1
Manning

:doh:

He did what he did - he is a traitor - put a bullet in his head and forget him.


Bradley Manning, the man held over the leaking of confidential cables to WikiLeaks, was a 'mess of a child' who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian.
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Bradley Manning 'should never have been sent to Iraq'

Guardian exclusive:
Soldier held over US intelligence leak was known to be mentally fragile and unsuited to army life


The American soldier at the centre of the WikiLeaks revelations was so mentally fragile before his deployment to Iraq that he wet himself, threw chairs around, shouted at his commanding officers and was regularly brought in for psychiatric evaluations, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian.

Bradley Manning, who was detained a year ago on Sunday in connection with the biggest security leak in US military history, was a "mess of a child" who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an officer from the Fort Leonard Wood military base in Missouri, where Manning trained in 2007.

The officer's words reinforce a leaked confidential military report that reveals that other senior officers thought he was unfit to go to Iraq. "He was harassed so much that he once pissed in his sweatpants," the officer said.

"I escorted Manning a couple of times to his 'psych' evaluations after his outbursts. They never should have trapped him in and recycled him in [to Iraq]. Never. Not that mess of a child I saw with my own two eyes. No one has mentioned the army's failure here – and the discharge unit who agreed to send him out there," said the officer, who asked not to be identified because of the hostility towards Manning in the military.

"I live in an area where I would be persecuted if I said anything against the army or helped Manning," the officer said.

Despite several violent outbursts and a diagnosis of adjustment disorder, a condition that meant he was showing difficulty adjusting to military life, Manning was eventually sent to Iraq, where it is alleged he illegally downloaded thousands of sensitive military and diplomatic documents and passed them on to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

In Iraq, Manning retained his security clearance to work as an intelligence specialist.

Two months after his arrival, the bolt was removed from his rifle because he was thought to be a danger, his lawyer, David Coombs, has confirmed.

A Guardian investigation focusing on soldiers who worked with Manning in Iraq has also discovered there was virtually no computer and intelligence security at Manning's station in Iraq, Forward Operating Base Hammer. According to eyewitnesses, the security was so lax that many of the 300 soldiers on the base had access to the computer room where Manning worked, and passwords to access the intelligence computers were stuck on "sticky notes" on the laptop screens.

Rank and file soldiers would watch grisly "kill mission" footage as a kind of entertainment on computers with access to the sensitive network of US diplomatic and military communications known as SIPRNet.

Jacob Sullivan, 28, of Phoenix, Arizona, a former chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear specialist, was stationed at FOB Hammer in Manning's unit.

"A lot of different people worked from that building and in pretty much every room there was a SIPRNet computer attached to a private soldier or a specialist," Sullivan said

"On the computers that I saw there was a [sticky label] either on the computer or next to the computer with the information to log on. I was never given permission to log on so I never used it but there were a lot of people who did."

He added: "If you saw a laptop with a red wire coming out of it, you knew it was a SIPRNet. I would be there by myself and the laptops [would] be sitting there with passwords. Everyone would write their passwords down on sticky notes and set it by their computer. [There] wasn't a lot of security going on so no wonder something like this transpired."

Manning is facing multiple charges of downloading and passing on sensitive information. No one else at the base has been charged. Manning denies all the charges. If convicted he could face up to 55 years in jail.

The US Defence Security Service is also investigating why Manning, who had been sent for psychiatric counselling before he was deployed to Iraq, was not screened more fully before he was allowed to work in intelligence.

Eyewitness accounts by soldiers who served with him there and friends in the US who spoke to the Guardian paint a picture of an increasingly unstable and at times violent man.

One soldier who served with him describes him "blowing up and punching this chick in the face".

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/27/bradley-manning-wikileaks-mentally-fragile?intcmp=239





-------------------------------------------------​





Bradley Manning: the bullied outsider who knew US military's inner secrets

Exclusive:
Having been on the brink of discharge from the US army, Bradley Manning was posted to a desolate Iraq base where secret intelligence was the TV entertainment


Bradley Manning, the 23-year-old army private from Oklahoma alleged to have been behind the biggest US government leak of all time, is now in Fort Leavenworth military jail, Kansas. He faces 34 charges, and if convicted could face a prison sentence of up to 52 years.

So why did the US army ignore warnings from officers that Manning was unstable? Why did it send him – a 5ft 2in gay man with a history of being bullied in the military – to one of the most isolated and desolate bases in Iraq? Why was security so lax on the base that passwords for secret military computers were posted on sticky notes nearby?

A year after his arrest, a Guardian investigation reveals a trail of ignored warnings, beatings and failed personal relationships that led to Manning's arrest on 29 May 2010.

Manning, the son of a former naval intelligence analyst, Brian Manning, and his wife Susan, was brought up in the small town of Crescent, Oklahoma. Neighbours watched the family disintegrate as Susan Manning turned to drink to ease the final years of the marriage.

"I never saw her plastered, but … I'd go by there at two o'clock in the morning and the lights would be on. I think she did her drinking when he'd go to bed," one neighbour, Bill Cooper, said.

In 2001, when Manning was 13, his parents divorced and he moved with his mother to her home town of Haverfordwest, in west Wales, where he joined the local school, Tasker Milward comprehensive. Small, geeky and speaking with an Oklahoma accent, Manning was an obvious target for teasing, and he reacted furiously to it, friends recalled.

"Bradley's sense of humour was different to the rest of ours, whereby the rest of the school kind of goad and tease each other," said schoolfriend Tom Dyer. "He was far too literal for that, and so would often snap back if he thought the joke had gone too far, which would cause laughter for everyone else."

When he was 17, by which time he was openly gay, Manning returned to Crescent to live with his father, who had remarried. The software job his father promised in Tulsa didn't work out – and neither did his relationship with his stepmother and her son. "I am nobody now, Mom," he wrote to his mother.

In March 2006 his stepmother called the police, saying that he was "out of control". Manning left home, and for the next year slept on friends' couches or in his pickup truck in other people's driveways, earning money in a series of casual jobs in restaurants and coffee shops.

Manning was keen to work with computers but quickly realised there would be no job for him without a degree. Joining the US army, he decided, would be his best chance of getting one as they would help pay for it through the GI bill's provision for soldiers' education.

"He joined the army because he wanted to go to university," said Keith Rose, a friend of Manning's from time he spent in Boston.He said the army's attitude towards gay people did not put Manning off. "I asked him that night how he could join, given the army's attitude towards gays. He told me he was a patriot but there were benefits too. He wanted to go to university."

In October 2007, Manning joined up. He was far from typical soldier material. He was smart, gay, physically weak and politically astute. "He knew all kinds of things," said Rose. "He was heavily educated in science. He knew math. He knew what was going on in the world."

He enlisted in October 2007 and was sent to Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, for basic training, but in just over a month he was moved to a discharge unit and on the verge of expulsion.

One man who befriended Manning in the unit, but who wishes to remain anonymous, explained what being in the discharge unit meant. "He was not bouncing back. He's going home. You don't just accidentally end up in a discharge unit one day. You just have somebody one day saying, 'You know what, he is no good – let's get him out of here'. There are a lot of steps to go to before you even hit a discharge unit."

Manning was picked on, the friend said, and used to wet himself. "[Once] there were three guys that had him up front and cornered. And they were picking on him and he was yelling and screaming.

"We got up there – it was me and a couple of the guys – and we started breaking it up. We were saying, "Get the hell out of there, back off," and everything – and started pulling Manning off. The other guys were taking care of the ones that were picking on him and stuff. I got Manning off to the side there and yeah, he pissed himself. It wasn't the only time he did that, but that was the only time that I remember. It happened a few other times, the other guys will probably tell you the same story. Just a different circumstance."

Despite the concerns of his immediate superiors, Manning was "recycled" instead of being discharged. The war in Iraq was in its fourth year and the army was short of recruits.

In August 2008, after training as an intelligence analyst, he was stationed at Fort Drum in upstate New York while he awaited deployment to Iraq. Here he was considered a "liability" by superior officers.

His weekends at Fort Drum were occupied by visiting his first serious boyfriend, Tyler Watkins, a student at Brandeis University, near Boston. Watkins began taking Bradley to events at his university's gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender society, Triskelion, and introduced his computer-loving boyfriend to Danny Clark, a student at MIT. Through Clark, the Boston "hacktivist" scene – consisting of some of the world's most prominent and smartest hackers – opened up to Manning.

Here Manning appeared to have found his place. He appears in photographs looking tanned and happy in Pika House, a clapboard communal student residence in the suburbs of Cambridge, Massachusetts.

The pictures appeared in a Facebook album Bradley captioned: "Randomly hung out with some pikans." Bradley's snaps were mostly of the tie-dyed T-shirt wearing Clark. The rest of the pictures are of the jumble of gadgets, electronics and posters that cover the house.

The day Manning was posted to Iraq in October 2009, Watkins went to a gay march wearing a placard that read "Army wife". Manning was deployed to Forward Operating Base Hammer, one of the most isolated US posts in Iraq, in the desert close to the Iranian border. Veterans recalled a desolate place built mainly from freight containers.

"There was a fog that would come in almost every morning that was pollution from nearby that smelled sour and nasty, and would just wave through and linger," said Jacob Sullivan, who served alongside Manning at Hammer.

Hammer's overriding culture was one of boredom and casual bullying, where bored non-commissioned officers picked on juniors. "They had a saying, 'Shit rolls downhill,' " said Jimmy Rodriguez, 29, an infantry soldier who was stationed at the base with Manning.

For entertainment, soldiers would download porn to workstations or access footage from Apache attack helicopters showing civilians being shot at, often through SIPRNet, the classified intelligence network used by the state department and department of defence.

It was data downloaded from this network that would later find its way to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

According to Sullivan, security was extremely lax. "If you saw a laptop with a red network wire going into it, you knew it was on SIPRNet. If you had the password you could access SIPRNet. Everybody would write their password on sticky notes and set it by their computer. There is no wonder something like this transpired."

According to Peter van Buren, a civilian reconstruction team leader on the base, there was a sense of a security free-for-all about SIPRNet.

"Soldiers would call it 'war porn' or 'the war channel' or just 'war TV'. It was hypnotic to watch, even when not much was happening, just this lazy overhead view of the world around you. For many soldiers, it was all they ever saw of Iraq," Van Buren said.

"I saw them using the SIPRNet for entertainment. That's what most of the people did most of the time," said Rodriguez. "They would watch these videos of different things and some of them were videos of helicopters attacking people or drones or whatever the case, or maybe fighter jets. But they were watching military footage.

"We were pretty much bored all the time," he recalled. "When you got to Iraq, we got to Baghdad and ended up in Forward Operating Base Hammer. They would [say to] us: 'Here's the videos; here's the internet; here's all the interesting games.' "

In January 2010 Manning went on leave and visited his friends in Boston, including Watkins. It became clear their relationship – one of the most significant in his life – was near its end.

That January, Rose recalled, "Bradley was really down. Tyler was like an anchor for Bradley and the one constant for that entire year. He gave me a two-hour earful about all the things in the relationship that he didn't understand. He had gone in the military and come back and he didn't have his relationship anymore."

While his relationship with Watkins was souring, Manning socialised with Clark at the launch party for Builds – a hackers' playground in Boston University's computer science faculty where they would simulate unlocking codes and bypassing online security.

Film footage shows him leaning against a table – a soldier in his collared shirt, he looks very different from the grungy student hackers at a top university. Nevertheless, he appears comfortable inside this elite circle. Less than a week later, Manning was back at his intelligence analyst's computer in Iraq.

"I live in a very real world, where deaths and detainments are just statistics; where idealistic calls for 'liberation' and 'freedom' are utterly meaningless," Manning wrote in a final message to Watkins on Facebook. "I don't have a real place to call home, except for a trailer with a bunk, a laptop, and an alarm clock. Please don't let the LAST PERSON that I trust and care about go away. I haven't given up."

On 5 May he wrote of being "beyond frustrated with people and society at large", and a day later, on 6 May, he wrote: "Bradley Manning is not a piece of equipment." On 7 May Manning was found in a foetal position in a storeroom after stabbing a chair with a knife as he tried to carve the words "I want" into the seat. He had punched his commanding officer, a woman, in the face.

He was disciplined and demoted and told he was to be finally discharged from the army on grounds of "adjustment disorder". In the space of a few weeks, he had lost his job, his boyfriend and his chance of a university education.

During the following fortnight, Manning turned back to his computer and his hacker friends. He began chatting with someone who didn't even know him, hacker Adrian Lamo.

In the early hours of 25 May, Manning had his last conversation with Lamo. The following day Lamo reported him to the authorities and he was escorted from his computer room. After three days of questioning he was charged in relation to the biggest intelligence leak in US military history.

The US military has refused to make any comment on Manning's mental health record other than to confirm it is being investigated. He is due to be courtmartialled in December.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/may/27/bradley-manning-us-military-outsider?intcmp=239
 

Miss*Bijou

Sexy Troublemaker
Nov 9, 2006
3,138
44
48
Montréal
:doh:

He did what he did - he is a traitor - put a bullet in his head and forget him.

Traitor? He`s a whistleblower... not a traitor in my books.

A bullet in his head? You gotta be kidding me. :rolleyes:


Those criminals from Wall Street did a lot worse damage and are infinitely more morally corrupt than Bradley Manning.

Have you watched the video that was released as part of the documents leaked by him? What he did is nothing compared to how disgusting that video is. He did people a favor. The traitors are those in charge who were embarrassed or exposed by the leaked info.
 

geek

New member
May 10, 2008
248
1
0
:doh:

He did what he did - he is a traitor - put a bullet in his head and forget him.
He's no traitor, he showed how badly the US was lying to everybody including itself. No different from the pentagon papers. He was very brave.

http://gawker.com/5795354/wikileaks-documents-reveal-a-stinky-crazy-guantanamo-bay

The information used to justify the years-long detainment of many Guantanamo prisoners was often ludicrously spotty, based on trivial details or unreliable testimony from informants who had been tortured and/or were mentally disturbed. No surprise that many turned out to be completely innocent. Plus side: We're super safe from Afghan taxi drivers and farmers. (Only 220 of the 780 total Gitmo detainees were classified as "dangerous international terrorists," according to the files.)

Like the poor farmer imprisoned for two years. Or the detainee who was captured with a Qaeda training manual in Arabic and spent six years convincing analysts that he couldn't speak Arabic—that he'd actually looted the manual from another fighter—and, eventually, succeeded. 89 year-old Mohammed Sadiq had senile dementia and depression when he was brought to Gitmo. He was released nearly a year later, innocent.

Al Jazeera cameraman Sami al-Hajj. He was kept for six years, interrogated about the news network, then released in 2008 and continues to work there.

A lot of detainees were screwed up in the head. 100 of the 775 total detainees at Guantanamo had psychiatric illnesses, ranging from frontal lobe damage to schizophrenia.
 

Miss*Bijou

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Nov 9, 2006
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Ellsberg: All the crimes Nixon committed against me are now legal


Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg said Tuesday that disgraced former Republican President Richard M. Nixon would "admire [President Barack] Obama's boldness" in trying to stifle whistleblowers.

"Richard Nixon, if he were alive today, might take bittersweet satisfaction to know that he was not the last smart president to prolong unjustifiably a senseless, unwinnable war, at great cost in human life," Ellsberg told CNN. "And his aide Henry Kissinger was not the last American official to win an undeserved Nobel Peace Prize."

"He would probably also feel vindicated (and envious) that ALL the crimes he committed against me -- which forced his resignation facing impeachment -- are now legal," he continued.

"That includes burglarizing my former psychoanalyst's office (for material to blackmail me into silence), warrantless wiretapping, using the CIA against an American citizen in the US, and authorizing a White House hit squad to 'incapacitate me totally' (on the steps of the Capitol on May 3, 1971)... But under George W. Bush and Barack Obama, with the PATRIOT Act, the FISA Amendment Act, and (for the hit squad) President Obama's executive orders. [T]hey have all become legal."

"There is no further need for present or future presidents to commit obstructions of justice (like Nixon's bribes to potential witnesses) to conceal such acts. Under the new laws, Nixon would have stayed in office, and the Vietnam War would have continued at least several more years," Ellsberg added.

The former military analyst noted that Obama, like Nixon before him, has tried to use the Espionage Act to silence whistleblowers.

Nixon "would be impressed to see that President Obama has now brought five such indictments against leaks, almost twice as many as all previous presidents put together," he said. "He could only admire Obama's boldness in using the same Espionage Act provisions used against me -- almost surely unconstitutional used against disclosures to the American press and public in my day, less surely under the current Supreme Court -- to indict Thomas Drake, a classic whistleblower who exposed illegality and waste in the NSA."

Ellsberg has also been an outspoken supporter of Bradley Manning, the U.S. soldier accused of leaking thousands of documents to WikiLeaks. Ellsberg was arrested outside the White House in March while attending a protest in support of Manning.

"Do you believe what Bradley did was necessary and heroic?" CNN asked.

"Yes," Ellsberg replied.

PBS is set to air a two-part documentary on June 13 and 14 entitled The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers.

The U.S government announced last month that 40 years after Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to The New York Times and 18 other newspapers, the study was being declassified and released to the Richard Nixon Presidential Library.



Watch this trailer for PBS' The Most Dangerous Man in America: Daniel Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers.

Watch here (couldn't embed properly in my post for some reason!)

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Filmmakers Judith Ehrlich and Rick Goldsmith compare WikiLeaks and the Afghan War Diary to the Pentagon Papers.



POV: What did you think of the Afghan War Diary and its release on WikiLeaks and in newspapers? Can you compare the Afghan War Diary with the Pentagon Papers?


Ehrlich: I am inspired by the idea of WikiLeaks and have reservations about its implementation. In fact, I just returned from Iceland where I began production on a film on WikiLeaks and the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative, a national policy that, when fully realized, will make Iceland a free zone for whistleblowers and journalists.

The Afghan War Diary is not the fully analyzed look inside American war policy that the Pentagon Papers were; it is primarily a massive dump of secret information. I think the idea of WikiLeaks is more about letting the powers that be know that it may become harder to keep secret that which their citizens have the right to know. Now it is up to WikiLeaks or others like them to be selective, work with journalists to find the stories among the documents, and share them with readers and viewers who deserve better information than they are getting from an embedded press, as well as governments and corporations around the world who have become accustomed to keeping secrets from the people who have a right to know.


Goldsmith: The Afghan War Diary, and the army video a month or two earlier of the attack on a van in Iraq which killed several, including two Reuters correspondents, both of which came from WikiLeaks, were very akin to the Pentagon Papers leak and publication. All three leaks (including the Pentagon Papers) focused public attention on the brutal (rather than sanitized) reality of wars, providing information that the U.S. public urgently needed to make assessments and decisions about those wars. And all three exposed the status quo of government secrecy, lies and propaganda which have been used throughout our history to ensure that the American public both supports current wars and is primed to support future war ventures, no matter how misguided they may be.

Until and unless the kinds of pictures and accounts of war revealed in the Pentagon Papers and WikiLeaks become commonplace in the media — or now, perhaps, on the internet — instead of exceptions to the rule, we will continue to behave as a militaristic country that chooses war as a first, rather than last, resort to solving difficult foreign relations problems.


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