Today
Is Bradley Manning's 1,000th Day Without a Trial
What
the treatment of the WikiLeaks detainee says about our government's
most damning secret
23
February, 2013
Saturday,
February 23, marks Bradley Manning's 1,000th day in prison without a
trial. In 2010, he was arrested for allegedly passing a trove of
diplomatic cables and military reports to WikiLeaks, a nonprofit
sunshine organization that publishes state secrets. Manning has been
charged with everything from bringing discredit upon the armed forces
to "aiding the enemy." Much of his first year of
confinement was spent in humiliating suicide watch and Prevention of
Injury conditions.
The
actions of Bradley Manning offer a moment to reflect on the meaning
of secrecy in the information age. Regardless of one's opinion of the
young private (traitor or hero, disturbed or determined, ideological
or idiotic), he put the entire secrecy apparatus to the test. Manning
downloaded a perfect geologic slice of what we don't know, and
presented that information to the world. He took the catastrophic
loss of "secret" information out of the theoretical and
into the real world. He initiated the government secrecy industry's
worst-case scenario.
What
is perhaps most astonishing is that the U.S. government had no
substantive contingency plans or response mechanisms in place for
such an event, aside from a shameful mistreatment of a harmless, if
unwell, twenty-three year old. And though Manning's actions have
proven to be a black swan event, when one considers that 2.4 million
people have access to sensitive material, coupled with the decisive
societal shift away from privacy and toward openness and
"oversharing," it's astonishing that we're not seeing
Manning-like incidents every day.
Bradley Manning is also the true -- and admirable -- ideological
case. He wasn't cashing in. He wasn't attempting to overthrow the
Republic. He wasn't blackmailed. He had no firsthand knowledge of
torture. He wasn't an agent for foreign intelligence. Instead, he
released the information for the cause of openness itself.
It
seems clear that what everyone expected to find in the diplomatic
cables were unspeakable horrors committed by the tentacles of the
U.S. government. It is therefore interesting that instead, most of
what came to light was fairly laudable -- a State Department that
actually tries to do what it says it will do. Insofar as there were
surprises, they typically came in the form missing puzzle pieces and
instances of "I knew it!" A clear-eyed reading of much of
the classified material suggests a more accountable government than
WikiLeaks's Julian Assange -- or anyone, really -- ever imagined.
A
more pressing problem revealed by the cable leak, and certainly a
more long-term problem, is the banality and stupidity of the
overwhelming majority of government secrets. The edifice of the
American deep state is crumbling, and this is in large part because
of a rampant, unchecked, and sometimes nefarious habit of
over-classification. With too many secrets come too many persons
requiring access. That is how an evidently troubled Army private at a
forward operating base lacking even the slightest defensible pretense
of "need to know" gained access to the entirety of the
State Department's secret files.
What
the U.S. government needs to accept with due diligence is that it is
only going to get easier for others to do what Bradley Manning did.
Instead of circling the wagons and imposing draconian punishments on
people like Manning, and attempting to find ways to hermetically seal
inane and ersatz secrets, the government should instead work to
declassify as much material as it possibly can as quickly as it can.
The state would have far greater success keeping under wraps a few
necessary secrets -- continuity of government plans, the movements of
nuclear weapons, the security of the president of the United States
-- than it does with the present landfill of frivolity that currently
passes for "state secrets."
How
blind is the entrenched government secrecy apparatus to this problem?
Consider that in the aftermath of the cable release, the U.S.
government instructed its employees to continue treating the cables
as secret, and to never access them. It would be a cliche to say the
executive branch instructed its functionaries to stick their heads in
the sand, but that's exactly what they did. Even worse, it means that
the foreign officials whom our representatives are interacting with
definitively know more about the ongoing actions of the American
government than do the members of the American government.
A
final point, this one on the government's charge against Manning of
"aiding the enemy." Shortly after the New
York Times
published the first
round of leaked cables,
Robert Gates offered an honest appraisal of the situation to the
press. There are few men alive today who know the secrets that Gates
knows; he was Secretary of Defense then, during a time of war, and
before that a Director of Central Intelligence. His opinion is
therefore quite worthy of deep consideration. Gates pointedly
questioned the alarmists in Washington at the time. He said:
Let
me just offer some perspective as somebody who's been at this a long
time. Every other government in the world knows the United States
government leaks like a sieve, and it has for a long time. And I
dragged this up the other day when I was looking at some of these
prospective releases. And this is a quote from John Adams: "How
can a government go on, publishing all of their negotiations with
foreign nations, I know not. To me, it appears as dangerous and
pernicious as it is novel."
When
we went to real congressional oversight of intelligence in the
mid-70s, there was a broad view that no other foreign intelligence
service would ever share information with us again if we were going
to share it all with the Congress. Those fears all proved unfounded.
Now,
I've heard the impact of these releases on our foreign policy
described as a meltdown, as a game-changer, and so on. I think -- I
think those descriptions are fairly significantly overwrought. The
fact is: governments deal with the United States because it's in
their interest, not because they like us, not because they trust us,
and not because they believe we can keep secrets.
Many
governments -- some governments deal with us because they fear us,
some because they respect us, most because they need us. We are still
essentially, as has been said before, the indispensable nation. So
other nations will continue to deal with us. They will continue to
work with us. We will continue to share sensitive information with
one another. Is this embarrassing? Yes. Is it awkward? Yes.
Consequences for U.S. foreign policy? I think fairly modest.
Fairly
modest. In the years that followed the actions of Bradley Manning,
it's hard to peg exactly what horrors have befallen the U.S.
government aside from the Gates-prophesied embarrassment. The
meandering war in Afghanistan certainly didn't need Manning's help to
get that way. If he "aided the enemy," perhaps someone
should tell that to the enemy. For all that Bradley Manning revealed,
he didn't really reveal much. But by its shameful non-application of
justice in Manning's prosecution -- 1,000 days in chains for a
nonviolent offense, without the dignity of a trial by jury -- the
U.S. government has itself revealed the most terrible truth
imaginable.
Some
of the material in this article appears in Deep
State: Inside the Government Secrecy Industry,
by Marc Ambinder and D.B. Grady, available in hardcover in April
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