What did Bradley Manning do to justify the conditions of his confinement?
He is in solitary, gets the one hour exercise room to walk around in every day, has to respond "yes" every 5 minutes to his guards from 5 a.m. to 8 p.m., is awakened if he turns towards the wall or covers his face, cannot converse with his guards or other prisoners, and was denied sheets and pillows. This despite not being on suicide watch.
He is an accused, not a convict. I cannot imagine what contact with other prisoners would do to jeopardize him or his security unless I am unaware of threats, which is possible.
Unless his safety is threatened he belongs in the general population. He was not suicidal when he went in, but the very conditions of his confinement have caused a deterioration in his mental condition.
And what he did was illegal. I don't like his Gen Y attitude towards all information being free. But I detest the way a journalist can get a story exactly right only to hear Obama's spokesman call it false, and then have to rely on a guy like Manning to show that the Obama administration is lying. I remember Nixon telling us there were no US military actions in Cambodia.
But I also detest the NYT trying to distinguish what they do from what Wikileaks does. The bright line is supposedly "troop movements", and yet the NYT pushes that line around pretty robustly. See this story from just last week:
"The proposal, described by American officials in Washington and Afghanistan, would escalate military activities inside Pakistan, where the movement of American forces has been largely prohibited because of fears of provoking a backlash."
Personally I approve of this type of reporting; it exposes a secret policy proposal that was being pursued without public debate even though most Americans are probably not in favor of opening a new front in an unpopular war that is supposed to be a on a timetable to end soon. It's like giving your landlord two weeks notice and then adding on a sunroom one night. But this type of reporting is crucial, it makes the public debate not only more informed but actually possible.
Manning released info of what happened in the past. While it has surely compromised intelligence sources it has not outed any specific future missions the way the NYT did. Now the mission outed by the Times has not even been approved yet, so no troops on the ground are in danger. But the distinction between past and future is the key one for judging damage. So far I have not seen evidence that Manning's acts caused specific casualties. Grousing about it, but no evidence of it.
Labels: manning, NYT, wikileaks
3 Comments:
1. "What did Bradley Manning do to justify the conditions of his confinement?" "He is an accused, not a convict."
Agree
2. "And what he did was illegal."
Agree. (Assuming you meant what he is alleged to have done.)
3. "But I also detest the NYT trying to distinguish what they do from what Wikileaks does."
Agree. Three for three. Damn, I hate it when that happens.
4. "Personally I approve of this type of reporting."
Not sure I agree. Not that I think it should be illegal. And not that I agree with everything the government does. I just think, in general, that it's sometimes necessary for the government, military, etc., to keep some things secret. And, most importantly, it gives me an opportunity to not agree with everything you said (split infinitive intended and approved by our progressive society.)
Quash, have you given up on me, or did you not get my comment from last week?
No doubt there is a need for secrecy in diplomacy and the military, less in domestic government. Tactical secrets (e.g. troop strength or movement)for sure; strategic secrets (bombing Cambodia, U.S. drones in Yemen, Iran/Contra) not so much. Where it's a question of U.S. policy then the public should know.
Diplomacy has always had "double secret probation" level. When China and the US were setting up diplomatic relations after Ping Pong diplomacy and Nixon each side designated one intelligence officer for the really secret stuff, things nobody wanted in an embassy cable. Apparently that was/is not uncommon, to have a CIA agent to deliver messages that neither diplomats nor us knew anything about.
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