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Pre-Trial Hearing
Begins for Wikileaks Suspect Private First Class Bradley Manning
William Ide
December 19, 2011
The
U.S. Army soldier accused of leaking thousands of classified and
sensitive documents to the anti-secrecy Web site WikiLeaks made his
first public appearance in court Friday. In a pre-trial hearing expected
to last five days, prosecutors contend that Private First Class Bradley
Manning should be tried in a military court.
At a vigil outside the base, supporters raised their voices for Manning
as his pre-trial hearing began.
For Manning's supporters, the case goes beyond the allegations he leaked
thousands of documents - documents that often provided a blunt and
unflattering picture of U.S. views of world leaders' private and public
lives.
For them, the case is also about the treatment Manning has received,
even before his trial began.
Former military officer Dan Choi was among those at the rally. He said
that even if Manning did what he is accused of, he was trying to do what
he thought was right.
"A soldier who did nothing but stand for the values of America, not
tried yet, but held in solitary confinement for a year and a half. In
solitary confinement, stripped, interrogated, not able to see the
sunlight or his family or his friends. Nobody can say that justice can
be served," said Choi.
Max Obuszewski believes Manning is being used to set an example.
"Why did they put Bradley Manning in a Quantico brig [jail]? Keep him in
a cell 23 hours a day? Have him strip naked when he comes out, etc, etc,
etc.? They did it because they want to let other people know, especially
military and other people in the government. Don't blow the whistle. You
don't know what we're going to do to you," said Obuszewski.
Human rights groups have raised concerns and the United Nations' torture
investigator is preparing to release a report on Manning's treatment.
In April of this year, Manning was moved from Quantico to a military
prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. The Pentagon has rejected claims
that the decision had anything to do with his treatment at Quantico.
The Obama administration has criticized the release of the classified
information and documents that were eventually posted on the
anti-secrecy Wikileaks web site. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
said the leaks put people's lives in danger and threaten national
security.
"I think that in an age when so much information is flying through
cyberspace, we all have to be aware of the fact that some information,
which is sensitive, which does affect the security of individuals and
relationships, has to be protected," said Clinton.
Manning's pre-trial hearing is expected to conclude early next week. At
the end, the presiding officer will decide if Manning, who turns 24 on
Saturday, should face a court martial [military trial]. His defense
attorney on Friday argued the hearing officer has a conflict of
interest. The defense has argued the leaks did no damage.
In
addition to the documents that Manning is alleged to have leaked, he
also is suspected of leaking a video of a U.S. helicopter crew in Iraq
that shows soldiers gunning down 12 men. It was reported later that a
Reuters news photographer and his driver were among those killed.
The video is one example frequently cited by supporters that shows that
if Manning did what he is accused of, he was just trying to reveal the
truth.
But military analyst Michael O'Hanlon disagrees.
"There is no defense for leaking tens of thousands of files. There maybe
is for leaking a few hundred if you feel that the government has gone
way off track and you've got someway to prove it. In that case, the way
our system works, you better be ready to pay the price if you feel that
strongly," said O'Hanlon.
If convicted, the price Manning ultimately may have to pay is life in
prison. He faces several charges including aiding the enemy, which is a
capital offense. But prosecutors say they are not seeking the death
penalty. |