Bradley Manning
plea statement: Americans had a right to know 'true cost of war'
From RT
After
admitting guilt in 10 of 22 charges, soldier reveals how he came to
share classified documents with WikiLeaks and talks of 'bloodlust' of
US helicopter crew
28
February, 2013
Bradley
Manning, the solider accused of the biggest unauthorised disclosure
of state secrets in US history, has admitted for the first time to
being the source of the leak, telling a military court that he passed
the information to a whistleblowing website because he believed the
American people had a right to know the "true costs of war".
At
a pre-trial hearing on a Maryland military base, Manning, 25, who
faces spending the rest of his life in military custody, read out a
35-page statement in which he gave an impassioned account of his
motives for transmitting classified documents and videos he had
obtained while working as an intelligence analyst outside Baghdad.
Sitting
at the defence bench in a hushed courtroom, Manning said he was
sickened by the apparent "bloodlust" of a helicopter crew
involved in an attack on a group in Baghdad that turned out to
include Reuters correspondents and children.
He
believed the Afghan and Iraq war logs published by the WikiLeaks
website, initially in association with a consortium of international
media organisations that included the Guardian, were "among the
more significant documents of our time revealing the true costs of
war". The decision to pass the classified information to a
public website was motivated, he told the court, by his depression
about the state of military conflict in which the US was mired.
Manning
said: "We were obsessed with capturing and killing human targets
on lists and ignoring goals and missions. I believed if the public,
particularly the American public, could see this it could spark a
debate on the military and our foreign policy in general [that] might
cause society to reconsider the need to engage in counter-terrorism
while ignoring the human situation of the people we engaged with
every day."
In
a highly unusual move for a defendant in such a serious criminal
prosecution, Manning pleaded guilty to 10 lesser charges out of his
own volition – not as part of a plea bargain with the prosecution.
He admitted to having possessed and willfully communicated to an
unauthorised person – probably Julian Assange – all the main
elements of the WikiLeaks disclosure.
That
covered the so-called "Collateral Murder" video of an
Apache helicopter attack in Iraq; some US diplomatic cables including
one of the early WikiLeaks publications the Reykjavik cable; portions
of the Iraq and Afghanistan war logs; some of the files on detainees
in Guantánamo; and two intelligence memos.
The
charges to which the soldier pleaded guilty carry a two-year maximum
sentence each, committing Manning to a possible upper limit of 20
years in military prison.
But
the plea does not avoid a long and complex trial for the soldier,
that is currently scheduled to begin on 3 June. Manning pleaded not
guilty to 12 counts which relate to the major offences of which he is
accused by the US government.
Specifically,
he denied he had been involved in "aiding the enemy" –
the idea that he knowingly gave help to al-Qaida and caused secret
intelligence to be published on the internet, aware that by doing so
it would become available to the enemy.
As
he read his statement, Manning was flanked by his civilian lawyer,
David Coombs, on one side and two military defence lawyers on the
other. Wearing full uniform, the soldier read out the document at
high speed, occasionally stumbling over the words and at other points
laughing at his own comments.
He
recounted how he had first become aware of WikiLeaks in 2009. He was
particularly impressed by its release in November that year of more
than 500,000 text messages sent on the day of the 9/11 terrorist
attacks.
He
had originally copied the war logs as a good housekeeping measure to
have quick access to the information. But the more he read into the
data, he said, the more he was concerned about what it was
uncovering.
He
decided to take a copy of the data on a memory stick when he went
back from Iraq to the US on leave in January 2010. There, having
failed to interest the Washington Post and the New York Times in the
stash of information, he turned to WikiLeaks.
On
his return to Iraq, he encountered a video that showed an Apache
helicopter attack from 2007 in which a group of people in Baghdad
came under US fire. The group was later found to have included
civilians, children and two Reuters correspondents who died.
Manning
said he was "troubled" by the resistance of the military
authorities to releasing the video to Reuters, and a claim from on
high that it might not still exist. When he looked through the video
on a secure military database he was also troubled by the attitude of
the aerial weapons team in the Apache – "the bloodlust they
seemed to have, they seemed not to value human life".
The
soldier related that in the video a man who has been hit by the US
forces is seen crawling injured through the dust, at which point one
of the helicopter crew is heard wishing the man would pick up a
weapon so that they could kill him. "For me that was like a
child torturing an ant with a magnifying glass."
After
he had uploaded the video to WikiLeaks, which then posted it as the
now notorious "Collateral Murder" video, Manning said he
was approached by a senior WikiLeaks figure codenamed "Ox".
He assumed the individual was probably Julian Assange, and gave him
his own codename – Nathaniel Frank – after the author of a book
he had recently read.
Of
the largest portion of the WikiLeaks disclosures – the 250,000 US
diplomatic cables – Manning said he was convinced the documents
form embassies around the world would embarrass but not damage the
US. "I thought these cables were a prime example of the need for
more diplomacy. In many ways they were a collection of cliques and
gossip," he said.
After
reading his statement, Manning entered into in several hours of
questions from the trial judge, Colonel Denise Lind, who has the duty
of ensuring that the accused made his guilty plea voluntarily and in
full knowledge of its implications. Lind found Manning made his plea
without coercion and in knowledge of its impact, and accepted it.
In
the course of the questioning, Lind tried to get to the bottom of an
apparent contradiction in Manning's comments. In his statement, he
expressed strong moral reasons for his actions that suggested he was
justified in leaking confidential information for the greater good.
Yet
in his guilty plea, he admitted that he had acted without
authorisation and that his conduct had been "prejudicial to good
order and discipline and of a nature to bring discredit upon the
armed forces".
Lind
referred to these two seemingly polar positions and asked: "How
can they co-exist?"
Manning
replied: "Regardless of my opinions, it's beyond my pay-grade,
it's beyond my authority to make these decisions. There are channels
you are supposed to go through. I didn't even look at those channels
– that's not how we do business."
At
another point, the judge asked him what would happen if someone at
the top of the military chain of command made a decision, and lower
ranks decided to ignore it according to their own morale code. "You
would have junior ranks making their own decisions until the
organisation seizes up," Manning replied.
From RT
To
see Guardian video The madness of Bradley Manning? GO
HERE
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