12 October 2012
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Free Bradley Manning!
U.S. Army private Bradley Manning, currently detained at Fort
Leavenworth, Kansas, awaits a February court martial on nearly two dozen charges
that include “aiding the enemy,” identified as Al Qaeda. The 24-year-old
Manning, who was stationed in Baghdad as an intelligence analyst in 2009-10, was
detained in May 2010 under allegations that he gave WikiLeaks the
much-publicized video of an Apache helicopter gunning down two Reuters
journalists and the Iraqis who tried to rescue them, with the pilots gloating
over the carnage. Manning is also accused of distributing more than 250,000
State Department cables as well as military reports detailing the torture of
Iraqis and documenting the killing of some 120,000 civilians in
imperialist-occupied Iraq and Afghanistan. He faces penalties of up to life in
military custody or even execution.
On July 27, Manning’s attorney David Coombs filed a motion to
dismiss all charges on the grounds of unlawful pretrial punishment. During his
prior nine-month detention at the Quantico Marine brig in Virginia, Manning was
placed in solitary confinement under “prevention of injury” (suicide watch)
status despite repeated protests by brig psychiatrists. He was forced to sleep
with a “tear-proof security blanket” that caused rashes and rug burns while not
protecting him from the cold. Forbidden from exercising in his cell, he was
granted only 20 minutes of sunshine daily, during which he was shackled.
When Manning pointed out the absurdity of the suicide watch
restrictions, he was vindictively forced to repeatedly stand naked at parade
rest in view of multiple guards and suffered other penalties. Finally, in April
2011, he was transferred to Fort Leavenworth, where he is allowed to socialize
with prisoners, walk around unshackled and keep personal and hygiene items in
his cell.
By the time Manning reaches his February trial, he will have spent
983 days in pretrial confinement, awaiting “his day” in a court that has
essentially declared him guilty while banning evidence that may prove his
innocence. In July, the court refused to admit government “damage assessment”
reports that would help him to refute the inflammatory charge that the WikiLeaks
postings aided Al Qaeda. At the same hearing, the court refused to admit United
Nations torture investigator Juan Méndez as a witness, the latest move by
Manning’s persecutors to cover up the fact that his confinement has amounted to
torture.
In a September 26 speech streamed into a UN panel discussion from
the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange described
Manning’s time in captivity, emphasizing that this is part of the U.S.
government’s attempt “to break him, to force him to testify against WikiLeaks
and me.” Assange denounced the White House for “trying to erect a national
regime of secrecy” by targeting whistle-blowers as well as the journalists to
whom they pass information.
Indeed, the Sydney Morning Herald (27 September) reported
that declassified U.S. Air Force documents confirm that the military has
designated Assange and WikiLeaks as “enemies” of the state—the same legal
category as Al Qaeda. The documents reveal that any military personnel who
contact WikiLeaks or its supporters may be charged with “communicating with the
enemy,” which carries a maximum penalty of death. Assange’s U.S. attorney,
Michael Ratner, stressed the danger his client faces: “An enemy is dealt with
under the laws of war, which could include killing, capturing, detaining without
trial, etc.” The Obama administration has brought criminal charges against six
government and military whistle-blowers, more than all the previous presidents
in U.S. history combined.
If Bradley Manning was indeed the source of the leaks, he performed
a valuable service to the working class and the oppressed worldwide by helping
lift the veil of secrecy and lies with which the capitalist rulers try to cover
their depredations. By persecuting Manning and WikiLeaks, the White House is
sending the message that any such exposure will bring the most severe
punishment. This only underscores that it is in the vital interests of the
working class, in the U.S. and internationally, to take up the fight for Bradley
Manning’s freedom.
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