Speech made on behalf of Chelsea Manning
at the annual Smedley Butler Brigade Veterans for Peace- sponsored peace event
on Armistice/Veterans Day, November 11, 2013 at Fanueil Hall in Boston
We Will Not Leave Our Sister
Behind-President Obama Pardon Chelsea Manning Now!
The headlines
of the summer are now still. The verdict, the legal verdict if not the verdict
of history, in the case of the United States vs. Private First Class Bradley
Manning has been proclaimed, guilty on 20 of 22 counts. The draconian 35 year
sentence has been imposed by the cruel blatantly pro-government military judge,
Colonel Lind. The media pundits and commentators too have had their say, mainly
that stern justice had been served by the conviction, a conviction in keeping
with their own desire to keep things secret from us and not let some lowly
enlisted soldier expose their house of cards. Some, like the ostrich-like New York Times, balked a little at the
excessive sentence and then moved on. Others had a momentary titter when
Bradley turned into Chelsea to express her real gender and then they too moved
on. All is now quiet, the case is yesterday’s news now long outside the 24/7
cycle interest. In their eyes Chelsea Manning has had her fifteen minutes of
fame and now she is reduced to just another military prisoner confined to the
maximum security barracks out in the prairies of Kansas at Fort Leavenworth to
face an uncertain future.
Chelsea
Manning now also faces the hard fate that occurs in almost all political
prisoner cases; doing the hard time while waiting for the slow cumbersome
appeals process to work its way through the military and civilian courts of
appeal. Waits in the near term for a possible reduction in sentence by the
convening officer of Private Manning’s court-martial who has the authority to
do so for the Washington Military District, General Buchanan based at Fort
McNair. And waits too, candidly, with fading hopes, for some short way home
presidential pardon from a President who wrongfully interjected himself into
the case with his comments early on. That pardon campaign took a serious turn
for the worst when the post-conviction Amnesty International/ Private Manning
Support Network White House on-line petition failed, falling seriously short of
getting the required 100,000
signatures that would have forced the Obama Administration to address the
question posed by the petition.
Chelsea must also face the
very real falloff that has already occurred in the fervent public support and
activity around her case now that the verdict and sentence are in and the media
interest has shut down around the case. There will be fewer periodic public
rallies around the world from Afghanistan to the States on her behalf,
reflecting a diffusion of focus now that supporters are not riveted to the
public presence at trial. The long list of those celebrities and average
citizens who have contributed their names, their time, their money and their
energies have and will fall off on behalf of our heroic Wikileaks
whistle-blower as well. Even strong and committed supporters who have led the
Manning efforts here in the Boston have decided to pursue other less public
strategies to gain Chelsea’s freedom. To fight that battle for her freedom on
other fronts from fund-raising events to contacting any governmental officials
who will “grease the way” to the President to give us a hearing on the pardon
application.
And that last point is
really the crux of the matter. The struggle continues, continues until Chelsea
is free. That is where Veterans for Peace comes in, people who have served in
the military, who have gotten “religion” on the right side of the angels on the
questions of war and peace and who have stood in solidarity with, and defense
of, Chelsea Manning since the beginning of her incarceration. All of us,
whether we served in wars or in “peace-time,” went through the rigors and
madness of basic training where hoary old drill sergeants beat us over the head
with the notion that you had to take care of your buddy, that your survival,
and by this they meant in the heat of battle, depended on us buying into that
concept.
Any veteran can tell you
many stories about how in the end their involvement with the military came down
to just that embedded idea when the deal went done and the dust settled. Not
letting down your buddies. Not leaving your buddies behind. Whether most of
those drilled-in military concepts we learned are worth anything is hard to
judge, fear and recklessness may in fact play a larger role. Nevertheless we
can take that "not leaving your buddy behind" concept and apply it
here. However we may end up providing support to Chelsea Manning it is with the
understanding that she is our buddy. We will not leave our sister behind.
Remember that. Remember this as well- President Obama Pardon Chelsea Manning Now!
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