Workers Vanguard No. 1014 |
7 December 2012
|
Accused of Lifting Veil on U.S. War Machine-Bradley Manning Pretrial Hearing: Drop All Charges!
(Class-Struggle Defense Notes)
DECEMBER 4—Army private Bradley Manning spoke publicly last week
for the first time since he was detained in May 2010 for allegedly handing over
a trove of classified documents to WikiLeaks that exposed U.S. imperialism’s
schemes and wartime atrocities. Charging Manning with 22 offenses including
espionage and “aiding the enemy,” military prosecutors are threatening him with
life imprisonment, having decided not to pursue the death penalty. Taking the
stand at a hearing on a defense motion to dismiss all charges on the grounds of
unlawful pretrial punishment, Manning recounted the torturous conditions of his
confinement, which one prison psychologist described as worse than at Guantánamo
or on death row. The hearing is continuing as we go to press.
The suffering and deprivation inflicted on Manning is meant as a
message: the U.S. imperialists will not tolerate any light shed on their
workings. This vendetta was also designed to break him so that he would
implicate WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange, who remains holed up in the
Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid extradition to the U.S., via Sweden (see
“Hands Off Julian Assange!” WV No. 1010, 12 October). In the past week,
protests demanding Manning’s freedom have taken place from the court site, Fort
Meade near Baltimore, to Berlin and other cities.
Last month, Manning offered to accept responsibility for providing,
as an act of conscience, at least some of the 250,000 diplomatic cables, 500,000
Army reports from Iraq and Afghanistan and video from Baghdad that WikiLeaks
made public. Shortly before Manning testified last week, the presiding military
judge accepted the framework that would allow him to plead guilty to some lesser
charges, which carry a maximum sentence of 16 years. Manning has not yet filed a
formal plea. Even if the plea were to be accepted, Manning still faces trial on
the maximum charges unless the case is dismissed and could receive a life
sentence if found guilty of only one of them. The court martial is now slated to
begin in March.
If Manning did make available the material attributed to him in the
tentative plea, he provided a major service to working people and the oppressed
the world over. In seeking to galvanize proletarian opposition to the capitalist
order, we welcome even a slight lifting of the veil on the imperialists’ war
machine. The video Manning is accused of leaking shows an Apache helicopter
gunning down and killing at least 12 people in Baghdad in 2007, including a
Reuters journalist and his driver, while the pilots laugh and gloat. The war
logs document 120,000 civilian deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan and a formal
military policy of covering up torture, rape and murder. The cables address all
manner of lethal operations within U.S. client states, from the “drug war” in
Mexico to drone strikes in Yemen.
With over 20 supporters attending the court hearing, Manning
detailed the depravity of his enraged military jailers. His first two months in
custody were spent in what Manning described as an “animal cage” in Kuwait,
where he was kept isolated and disoriented. “I just thought I was going to die
in that cage,” he told the court. Returned to the U.S., he was thrown into what
he called “a shark-attack environment” at the Quantico Marine brig in Virginia,
where he was kept for nine months. He spent at least 23 hours a day alone in a
six-by-eight-foot cell with no window or natural light, forbidden to exercise,
lie down or even lean against a wall if not sleeping. Even when he was allowed
to sleep, he was periodically awakened by guards who also subjected him to daily
strip searches and forced nudity.
Quantico commanders justified their handling of Manning by
classifying him first as a “suicide risk” and then putting him on “prevention of
injury” status. While Manning had been driven to despair by the unrelenting
abuse he suffered in Kuwait, at least 16 official reports from brig
psychiatrists at Quantico concluded that Manning was not a threat to himself or
others. Nevertheless, his status did not change until he was transferred to Fort
Leavenworth in April 2011 amid international condemnation of his treatment. By
the admission of the colonel in charge of Quantico at the time, a blind eye was
turned to these reports because a staff dentist made assessments more to the
liking of the brass!
Court documents show that one base commander instructed staff to
“do whatever we want” to Manning. The parameters of the torture regime were run
up the chain of command to the Pentagon. Meanwhile, the handprint of the White
House is all over the case. With a push from the Obama administration, Manning
was charged under the 1917 Espionage Act, with the Commander-in-Chief himself
declaring last year that Manning “broke the law.”
The government is intent on painting a portrait of Manning as a
traitor who aided and abetted Al Qaeda, with the judge even giving the go-ahead
to prosecutors to introduce the contents of Osama bin Laden’s hard drives. The
prosecution does not feel compelled to present evidence that any tangible aid
was provided to an “enemy.” Rather, it argues that it is sufficient to establish
that Manning knew that U.S. adversaries could access the information that was
now in the public domain. Thus Washington equates disclosure of classified
information by “whistleblowers,” journalists or anyone else with treason. And by
the lights of the “war on terror,” an “enemy” could mean virtually any opponent
of the U.S. government.
It is the norm for the imperialists to accompany their depredations
around the world with official silence and secret dealings. In 2011 alone, U.S.
officials classified more than 92 million documents. Revolutionary leader Leon
Trotsky observed in November 1917: “Imperialism, with its dark plans of conquest
and its robber alliances and deals, developed the system of secret diplomacy to
the highest level.” Opponents of imperialist occupations and war must be won to
the understanding that it will require a series of socialist revolutions around
the world to put an end to the capitalist order, which maintains itself through
systematic violence and lies.
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