The US is going over the top in pursuit of whistleblowers and the press as the military trial of Bradley Manning gets going, and as
The Guardian reported:
On Monday Bradley Manning, the young man who leaked those diplomatic
cables, goes on trial in a military court in Maryland. He has pleaded
guilty to 10 charges which would put him behind bars for 20 years. But
that is not enough for the US military that has levelled 22 charges
against him, including espionage and "aiding the enemy",
which carries up to life in prison without parole. At the time Manning
released the diplomatic cables and military reports he wrote: "I want
people to see the truth … regardless of who they are. Because without
information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public." He hoped
by releasing the cables he would spark "worldwide discussion, debates,
and reforms".
If the leaks laid bare the hypocritical claim that
the US was exporting democracy, then the nature of his incarceration and
prosecution illustrate the fallacy of its insistence that it is
protecting both freedom and security at home. Manning's treatment since
his arrest in May 2010 has involved a number of serious human rights
violations.
At various times since his arrest he has been held in
solitary confinement for 23 out of 24 hours a day for five months in
succession, held in an 8ft by 6ft cell, been forced to sleep naked apart
from an anti-suicide smock for two months, and been woken up to three
times a night while on suicide watch. Following an investigation, the UN
special rapporteur on torture, Juan Ernesto Méndez, last year argued Manning had been "subjected to cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment".
Meanwhile, the case against him indicates the degree to which the war
on terror (a campaign that has been officially retired describing a
legal, military and political edifice that remains firmly intact)
privileges secrecy over not only transparency but humanity. This is
exemplified in one of his leak's more explosive revelations – a video that soon went viral showing two Reuters employees, among others, being shot dead by a US Apache helicopter in Iraq.
They were among a dozen or so people milling around near an area where
US troops had been exposed to small arms fire. The soldiers, believing
the camera to be a weapon, opened fire, leaving several dead and some
wounded.
"Look at those dead bastards," says one pilot. "Nice,"
says the other. When a van comes to pick up the wounded they shoot at
that too, wounding two children inside. "Well, it's their fault for
bringing their kids into a battle," one of the pilots says.
This administration has pulled out all the stops to preserve secrecy and stifle First Amendment rights, a poor path for a President who advocated greater transparency. Meanwhile Eric Holder faces
accusations of committing perjury when he testified that the free press was not being targeted criminally, but was discovered to have signed off on a warrant naming Fox News reporter James Rosen as a possible co-conspirator in a leak case.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments are moderated for relevance and civility. Spam is discarded.