Recording Of Bradley Manning's Statement In Court Leaked
from the in-his-own-words dept
We've discussed before just how secretive the court martial process has been for Bradley Manning. Part of that is that there is no recording allowed in the courtroom, and thus there was no recording or official transcript of Manning's long statement to the court, even though some reporters tried to piece together a statement from their notes. However, it appears that someone snuck a recorder into the room, and recorded Manning's statement, which has now been leaked by the Freedom of the Press Foundation. As they note, this is actually the first time that the public has been able to hear Bradley Manning speak. As the FPF notes:A group of journalists, represented by the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), has been engaged in a legal battle to force the court to be more open. While the government has belatedly released a small portion of documents related to the case, many of the most important orders have been withheld—such as the orders relating to the speedy trial proceedings or the order related to Manning’s prolonged solitary confinement.Meanwhile, Glenn Greenwald highlights why this is so important:
Michael Ratner, president emeritus of CCR, called the government "utterly unresponsive to what is a core First Amendment principle." Ratner noted this is a public trial, the information being presented is not classified, and that contemporaneous access to information about the trial is necessary to understanding the proceedings. Nonetheless, the lawsuit has been tied up in the appeals court for months.
The US government and its military has carefully ensured that people hear about Manning from the government, but do not hear from Manning himself. It is way past time for Manning's voice to be heard.Greenwald has also broken down the statement and highlighted some key points. For example, he notes that many of Manning's critics argued that Manning released information willy nilly with no concern for what was in the documents, and whether releasing them would cause harm. From the transcript, we learn that this is simply untrue. He did review the content, and came to the conclusion that the documents he was releasing needed to be released for the benefit of the US, and not to harm the US. He admitted they might be embarrassing, but that's very different from harmful.
Up to this point, during the deployment, I had issues I struggled with and difficulty at work. Of the documents release, the cables were the only one I was not absolutely certain couldn't harm the United States. I conducted research on the cables published on the Net Centric Diplomacy, as well as how Department of State cables worked in general.It really is a travesty that the US government has kept all of this so closed, and has refused to release a recording or a transcript. Are they really so afraid that the public might hear Bradley Manning explain himself?
"In particular, I wanted to know how each cable was published on SIRPnet via the Net Centric Diplomacy. As part of my open source research, I found a document published by the Department of State on its official website.
"The document provided guidance on caption markings for individual cables and handling instructions for their distribution. I quickly learned the caption markings clearly detailed the sensitivity of the Department of State cables. For example, NODIS or No Distribution was used for messages at the highest sensitivity and were only distributed to the authorized recipients.
"The SIPDIS or SIPRnet distribution caption was applied only to recording of other information messages that were deemed appropriate for a release for a wide number of individuals. According to the Department of State guidance for a cable to have the SIPDIS caption, it could not include other captions that were intended to limit distribution.
"The SIPDIS caption was only for information that could only be shared with anyone with access to SIPRnet. I was aware that thousands of military personnel, DoD, Department of State, and other civilian agencies had easy access to the tables. The fact that the SIPDIS caption was only for wide distribution made sense to me, given that the vast majority of the Net Centric Diplomacy Cables were not classified.
"The more I read the cables, the more I came to the conclusion that this was the type of information that should become public. I once read and used a quote on open diplomacy written after the First World War and how the world would be a better place if states would avoid making secret pacts and deals with and against each other.
"I thought these cables were a prime example of a need for a more open diplomacy. Given all of the Department of State cables that I read, the fact that most of the cables were unclassified, and that all the cables have a SIPDIS caption.
"I believe that the public release of these cables would not damage the United States, however, I did believe that the cables might be embarrassing, since they represented very honest opinions and statements behind the backs of other nations and organizations."
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Filed Under: bradley manning, court marshal, journalism, recording, secrecy
Companies: freedom of the press foundation
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* read everything the government creates about other people
* they can read everything the government creates about you
* and the government can read everything you create.
See the problem?
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* read everything the government creates about other people
* they can read everything the government creates about you
I see the problem, but it isn't the one you see. The government shouldn't be creating things about its citizens. That is the problem. The fact that the government, many times against its own laws, creates massive databases about its people is the biggest problem in this case.
I don't have a problem with the government knowing where I live, or what demographic I fit into (census type stuff,) but I have a real problem with big government building entire databases on me I have no access to and don't know about.
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What you have to do is simple. Arrest them and then hold them until no one remembers them. Then hold a secret tribunal. Then bring them to a hanger on an old military base and burn them.
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Wait...is that true? In the what is it? 3 years since this whole debacle came to light, only now is the defendant allowed to say something on the record?
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This was an illegal recording.
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Here's the leaked audio of Bradley's full statement, in easy-to-share YouTube form:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77ZUy5mjJyI
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Free Bradley Manning
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Re: Free Bradley Manning
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ANYONE who gets crosswise with dear ole unka sammie is going to be subjected to a propaganda campaign to impugn their character: brown people, moose limbs, file sharers, peaceniks, DFHs, scott ritter, elizabeth warren, etc, etc, etc...
you know, it *used* to be 'illegal' (whatever that means anymore) for the US gummint to propagandize the US people; but that just isn't operative any longer, much less a laudable goal in our present society...
art guerrilla
aka ann archy
eof
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http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=767&Itemid= 74&jumival=9782#.UUFPp1cs4dU
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Shame
I don't know what worries me more: that one day my daughter will return home from school and ask me why we let the government treat Bradley Manning so unjustly, or that she never knows his name, because the government sweeps this all under the rug, and the world forgets about a brave man who saw injustice and tried to stop it.
I am a veteran, and I personally believe that anyone who has sworn an oath to support and defend the US Constitution from all enemies, foreign and domestic, should support Bradley Manning as the hero he is.
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Re: Shame
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You are seriously delusional. Manning had neither the time nor the capacity to evaluate the 750,000 separate items he gave to Wikileaks:
From Wikipedia:
The material included videos of the July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike and the 2009 Granai airstrike in Afghanistan; 250,000 United States diplomatic cables; and 500,000 army reports sometimes called Iraq War logs and Afghan War logs. It was the largest set of restricted documents ever leaked to the public.[3]
Another journalistic belly-flop from Techdirt.
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The irony.... it burns
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Straight from the horses mouth so to speak
The actual Charge sheet itself [redacted pdf] from the US Army HHC, 2d BCT, 10th MTN Div
The second additional charge sheet. [redacted pdf]
I leave it to you to tally up all the documents allegedly leaked.
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So your point again?
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Sneaky Recording
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Everyone today can sneaky a recording device anywhere.
Google Glass is the dream of 60's spies come true.
Secret meeting, depositions, just about anything today can be recorded, there is no more lying about things, for better or for worse we live in a world where everyone will have to take care of what they say or do when there is anybody near.
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Also manning is in no way qualified or able to make that determination on any of the documents.
His 'opinion' about possible damage or not is not a subject that he has any right (legal or moral) to make.
If that is his 'defence' he's screwed..
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The items he leaked had all been tagged for wide release *not* classified. If he released classified info it's on the heads of those who failed to correctly categorise their reports.
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Secret trials and star chamber courts
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Manning recording
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Re: Manning recording
He did not need to research each and every document. He used the classifications that the writers of those documents or the analysts that included them in the document storage system specified.
Although I'll admit, I find your use of the handle 'DB Cooper' amusing when you call for someone else to spend the rest of their life in jail.
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Manning recording
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Sounds a bit paranoid to me.
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Its not paranoid if someone's life is in jeapordy because of material discussed in the trial. Manning only wanted to be famous for a few minutes and didnt care how many people died because of it. . He's not your friend and brought this on himself.
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Response to: billy on Mar 14th, 2013 @ 5:55am
PFC's show up to units all the time and rarely know their ass from a hole in the ground, and it's the responsibility of some stressed out NCO to teach them and several others to eventually become half way competent at their job.
No matter how brief those cables were, even if he completely neglected his job, would he have enough time during a deployment to go through all of them.
Long story short, he was in no way qualified nor did he have anywhere near the authority to make the decision that he did, and he's going to end up in prison for a long time because of it.
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Re: Response to: billy on Mar 14th, 2013 @ 5:55am
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Manning
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