Convicted for Revealing Crimes of U.S. Imperialism-Free Bradley Manning!
Workers Vanguard No. 1028 |
9 August 2013
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Convicted for Revealing Crimes of U.S. Imperialism-Free Bradley Manning!
Bradley Manning, the courageous and self-sacrificing truth-teller
who further revealed the exploitative everyday workings of U.S. imperialism as
well as its heinous war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, was found guilty by a
military judge on charges carrying a possible 136-year sentence. Imprisoned for
more than three years before trial, including torture in solitary confinement,
Manning persevered, aiming to change U.S. policy through exposure and public
debate.
Manning’s conviction in this court-martial was a foregone
conclusion. Indeed, he pleaded guilty to lesser charges that could put him away
for 20 years. That was not good enough for the vindictive U.S. government. Now
in the sentencing phase, this show trial is a government experiment in political
cryogenics to see how deeply it can freeze free speech and dissent by making an
example of Manning. It is intended to set the stage for prosecution of
WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange, still sheltered in the Ecuadorian embassy in London,
while U.S. lawmakers scream for his blood. Throwing the book at Bradley Manning
also foreshadows what the U.S. would like to do to Edward Snowden, who was just
granted temporary asylum in Russia. Fundamentally, the prosecution of Manning is
intended to frighten everyone else into passive acceptance of U.S. outrages at
home and abroad.
Manning was not convicted of aiding the enemy. This
not-insignificant development was widely applauded by the capitalist press,
which felt directly threatened by the prosecution’s assertion that publication
of documents constitutes direct or indirect aid to the enemy because someone,
somewhere, sometime might use that information against the U.S. government.
However, the judge left open the future use of this ominous catchall by denying
a defense motion to throw out the charge. In the end, the court merely found
that the prosecution had not proved its case on that count.
Manning’s defense team eventually got the government to name two of
the three enemies Manning allegedly aided (Al Qaeda and Al Qaeda of the Arabian
Peninsula), but the third remained classified information. A July 27 posting on
the ProPublica investigative journalism Web site reports that the Pentagon told
them that “revealing who we’re actually at war with would do serious damage to
national security.” ProPublica added: “The main reason? They think those groups
would use the info as good publicity and allow them to recruit more.”
Whether targeted by the CIA or the Pentagon, the people being shot
at and bombed are aware that they are being shot and bombed. Some elements in
the American ruling class are uncomfortable with the Pentagon’s “logic.” The
Obama administration’s fanatical prosecution of whistle-blowers alarms some.
Even more are aghast at the revelations by Edward Snowden et al. of the
boundless domestic spying on the population, which includes them too. This
disquiet in ruling circles no doubt had an impact on the judge.
Among other charges, Manning was convicted of six counts under the
1917 Espionage Act. The prosecution reached into a Cold War-era tool kit to
construct a red scare and portray Manning as an “anarchist.” Civil libertarians
complain that “whistle-blowing” is not spying, and they’re right. But in fact,
the draconian Espionage Act has historically been wielded to repress domestic
political opposition to imperialist war.
John Reed, a journalist and founding member of the American
Communist Party, was prosecuted under the Espionage Act for articles against
World War I published in the radical journal, The Masses. Reed and others
associated with the journal defeated the government in court, but the Feds then
yanked the publication’s mailing permit because it “skipped” an issue—the one
seized by the government as allegedly seditious! Reed aptly summed up the
workings of capitalist “justice”: “In America law is merely the instrument for
good or evil of the most powerful interest, and there are no Constitutional
safeguards worth the powder to blow them to hell” (“One Solid Month of Liberty,”
The Masses, September 1917).
It is urgently necessary to continue to fight in defense of Bradley
Manning. The organized labor movement, minorities, all opponents of the
depredations of U.S. imperialism have an interest in this fight. As we wrote in
“Truth-Teller on Trial: Free Bradley Manning,” (WV No. 1026, 14 June):
“Lifting the veil on the U.S. war machine was a gutsy act of conscience that
objectively helps the victims and opponents of the imperialist system.” Key
information from the government’s own sources that Manning provided to WikiLeaks
included:
• Iraq war logs, including a civilian death count, showing that
for every dead Iraqi officially classified as a combatant, two civilian men,
women or children were killed
• U.S. military support to repression of political dissidents in
Iraq and Afghanistan and tolerance of torture as policy toward political
prisoners
• Guantánamo detainee files showing the innocence of prisoners
and their torture by the U.S. military
• FBI training of torturers for the deposed Mubarak regime in
Egypt
• State Department-led opposition to raising the minimum wage in
Haiti, the poorest country in the Western hemisphere
• the Obama administration’s drone bombing campaigns in
Yemen
• Hillary Clinton’s authorization of theft of the U.N. Secretary
General’s DNA [!]
• the notorious “collateral damage” video showing the military’s
blood lust in gunning down Reuters reporters and Iraqi civilians
In publicizing this material, and more, Bradley Manning and Julian
Assange have helped open the eyes of the working class to the systematic
workings of the state run by and for the capitalist class. But as Marxists, we
understand that the whole system of capitalist exploitation cannot be changed by
simply providing information. This system is based on the exploitation of labor
for private profit, buttressed in the U.S. by systematic racial oppression.
Imperialist war and subjugation of the Third World are inherent outgrowths of
capitalism and will continue until politically conscious workers sweep away the
whole system and replace it with an egalitarian socialist society.
Frame-Ups and Omissions by the Capitalist Press
The prosecution of Bradley Manning has provided a diagnostic X-ray
of the capitalist media. The New York Times, which flatters itself with
the motto “All the news that’s fit to print,” did not initially find the hugely
valuable and unassailable evidence of U.S. war crimes that Manning offered them
“fit to print.” Neither did the Washington Post. So Manning submitted the
Iraq and Afghanistan war logs and a trove of diplomatic cables to WikiLeaks. The
Times did not find the lengthy pre-trial detention and torture of Bradley
Manning fit to print either; indeed, the paper barely covered the case until its
own public editor lodged a protest. Then the coup de grace: upon
his conviction, the Times ran a creepy, character-assassinating portrait
of Manning as a psychologically unstable social misfit on the front page.
There is a purpose driven by big economic interests that dictates
the behavior of the so-called “free press.” As Bolshevik leader V.I. Lenin
wrote, “Under capitalism, a newspaper is a capitalist enterprise, a means of
enrichment, a medium of information and entertainment for the rich, and an
instrument for duping and cheating the mass of working people” (“Work of
People’s Commissariat for Education,” 7 February 1921). In defense of the
interests of their class, the government and its mouthpieces in
the bourgeois press portray their opponents as criminal and/or of unsound mind.
By its own perverse standards, what the ruling class considers normal is
dropping atomic weapons, ordering drone attacks on civilians and unleashing the
Lieutenant Calleys who burned down entire villages in Vietnam, and later the
kill-crazy mercenaries in Iraq and Afghanistan.
The government’s need to conduct its dirty work in secret and the
subservience of the capitalist media to their masters made it a massive struggle
simply to get the news about Manning’s court-martial. Hundreds of journalists
were denied media credentials by the Army, including those from Workers
Vanguard who managed anyway to get into the Fort Meade courtroom to cover
the initial part of the trial.
We are indebted to a few politically committed independent
journalists, without whom little to nothing would be known about the dirty war
against Manning. For a year and a half, Alexa O’Brien published the only
available transcripts of the pre-trial proceedings. Her daily reports from the
court-martial punctured the “managed obscurity” (her term), despite intimidation
by armed soldiers snooping over her shoulder in Fort Meade’s media pit. Daily
trial reports by Nathan Fuller on the Bradley Manning Support Network’s Web site
and by Kevin Gosztola on the Firedoglake Web site have also been invaluable.
Since the U.S. military refuses to release transcripts of the pre-trial hearings
and court-martial, the Freedom of the Press Foundation raised funds to hire
court stenographers for those sessions that were open to the public.
The Fraud of Bourgeois Democracy
In the wake of the September 11, 2001, attacks on the World Trade
Center and the Pentagon, the U.S. vastly increased its security apparatuses to
spy on, well, almost everyone. This created its own security nightmare for the
ruling class. The Augean stables of classified information require armies of
employees with digital trowels to move the crap around. Close to five million
people have security clearances, of which more than 1.4 million are cleared for
“top secret” material. Bradley Manning was one with the moral and political
conscience to oppose what he discovered U.S. imperialism does every day all over
the world, and he had the rare courage to act on his convictions, at great
personal sacrifice. His act encouraged Edward Snowden to reveal PRISM—the
National Security Agency’s vacuuming of metadata from virtually everyone’s
e-mails and Web searches, in cahoots with corporations like Google, Microsoft
and Facebook.
Snowden flew to Hong Kong to reveal the nefarious workings of the
U.S. intelligence net and then spent more than a month in the transit zone of a
Moscow airport while fighting for asylum, which Russia has granted him for one
year. The spectacle of Attorney General Eric Holder, who presides over a justice
system that massively incarcerates black people and railroads many to death row,
promising Moscow that Snowden would not be tortured (like Bradley Manning) or
face the death penalty, was a hoot. Here in the “belly of the beast,” it is
delightful to see U.S. imperialism get a black eye and have its pretensions to
rule the world on behalf of “democracy” further exposed for the lie it is.
There has been vastly more outrage expressed by bourgeois “public
opinion” over Snowden’s revelations than Bradley Manning’s because the former
hits the wealthy where they live: their e-mails, their Internet search
histories, the GPS data on their smart phones. By contrast, Manning was the
lowly working-class soldier who was supposed to protect their class privileges
by enforcing U.S. domination of the globe.
In These Times, a social-patriotic journal described by the
Democratic Socialists of America as “DSA-ish,” defended NSA spying and denounced
Snowden. A July 2 article by Louis Nayman headlined “In Defense of PRISM” railed
that a government contractor who runs with classified data to “regimes who fine,
imprison and rub out public critics” is not a “People’s Hero.” This was a bit
much even for the Democratic Party stalwarts of the DSA, which subsequently
printed a polite rebuttal to Nayman, who is described as a longtime union
organizer. We suggest that Mr. Nayman register as an agent of a foreign power in
the labor movement—the capitalist class.
Daniel Ellsberg, who more than 40 years ago leaked the Pentagon
Papers, exposing the lies designed to cover up what the U.S. was really doing in
Vietnam, has laudably and energetically defended Bradley Manning. He expresses
the views of civil libertarians who think that the prosecution of
whistle-blowers damages U.S. prestige in the world and feel embarrassed by the
protests of rival imperialist powers. Cold War liberal anti-Communism dripped
from Ellsberg’s article in the London Guardian (10 June), which, alluding
to the East German state spy agency, was titled: “Edward Snowden: Saving Us from
the United Stasi of America.” Ellsberg has no fundamental problem with NSA
spying; he just wants an informed public to pressure Congress to keep U.S.
imperialism’s bloodhounds on a somewhat shorter leash.
Liberals who uphold the fraud of U.S. “democracy” against
Soviet-era and Stasi “totalitarianism” prettify the brutally violent rule of the
rapacious U.S. ruling class that Bradley Manning exposed. As Marxists, we value
and fight hard for democratic rights, which make it easier for labor and the
oppressed to fight in their own interests. What the liberals will not tell you
is that democratic rights are extended to the working class and poor as gains of
arduous class and social struggles; they are not granted from on high by an
enlightened ruling class. Moreover, democratic rights in capitalist society are
ephemeral and can be taken away in an instant.
Liberal darling Franklin Delano Roosevelt interned Japanese
Americans during World War II, adopting the racist argument that this “enemy
race” would soon commit sabotage because they had not done so yet.
Black Panther Party members Fred Hampton and Mark Clark were gunned down in
Hampton’s apartment in Chicago in 1969 for challenging systematic racist
oppression. The same state persecution of anti-racist, anti-capitalist fighters
continues today in the frame-up and life sentence of award-winning black
journalist and MOVE supporter Mumia Abu-Jamal and the unspeakably cruel
imprisonment of leftist attorney Lynne Stewart, who is dying of cancer. The
prosecution of Bradley Manning and the drive to capture Edward Snowden and
Julian Assange form part of this larger picture.
As opposed to Ellsberg, who argues that U.S. government overreach
carries a whiff of Stalinist rule, we argue that the worst crimes of Stalinism
were not ham-fisted repression, of which we Trotskyists were the first and
foremost victims, but its appeasement of capitalist rule worldwide by abandoning
the proletarian, revolutionary and internationalist goals of the 1917 Bolshevik
Revolution. This led, ultimately, to capitalist counterrevolution and economic
immiseration in the former Soviet Union and across East Europe. We Trotskyists
fought for the unconditional military defense of the Soviet degenerated workers
state against imperialist attack and internal counterrevolution. Now, without
Soviet power to check the hand of Washington, American imperialism is riding
unbridled over most of the world. On the domestic front, a prostrate labor
officialdom and low tide of class and social struggle help enable the government
to get away with rampant surveillance and shredding of democratic rights.
The Spartacist League seeks to win opponents of this system to an
understanding that it will take a series of socialist revolutions around the
world to overturn the capitalist order and establish an internationally planned
and collectivized economy based on human need, not private profit. Indeed,
communism is America’s and the world’s last best hope.
* * *
Donate to Bradley Manning’s Legal Defense!
The Partisan Defense Committee has donated to Bradley Manning’s
defense and encourages others to do the same. Send checks or money orders
earmarked “Manning defense” and payable to: The Courage to Resist, 484 Lake Park
Avenue #41, Oakland, CA 94610.
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