Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts

Friday, August 31, 2012

Defense Motion Describes Bradley Manning’s “Unlawful Pretrial Punishment” in Solitary Confinement

August 11, 2012 Solitary Watch
 
David E. Coombs, attorney for accused Wikileaker Bradley Manning, has made public a motion “to dismiss all charges owing to the unlawful pretrial punishment to which PFC Manning was subjected while at Marine Corps Base, Quantico.” Manning spent close to nine months in solitary confinement in the Brig at Quantico, from July 2010 to April 2011, before being transferred into less restrictive conditions at Fort Leavenworth.

Manning was held in conditions that were denounced as “cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment” by UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan Mendez. His lawyer is now arguing that they were also in “flagrant violation” of military code. Keep in mind that Manning had not–and still has not–been convicted of any crime, nor had he been accused of any disciplinary violations while in custody.
According to the motion, as summarzied on Coombs’s website, “a decision had been made early on at Quantico to keep PFC Manning in MAX Custody and in Prevention of Injury (POI) status — in effect, the functional equivalent of solitary confinement.” The motion further argues that “Multiple psychiatrists at the Quantico Brig recommended for almost nine months that PFC Manning be downgraded from POI status.  The psychiatrists informed Quantico Brig officials that PFC Manning’s POI status was not warranted because he did not present a risk to himself and that the POI status was actually causing PFC Manning psychological harm.  The psychiatrists’ recommendations were outright ignored by Quantico officials.”

The defense claims it has documents that “reveal that the senior Brig officer who ordered PFC Manning to be held in MAX and in POI was receiving his marching orders from a three-star general. They also reveal that everyone at Quantico was complicit in the unlawful pretrial punishment, from senior officers to enlisted marines.”

Many aspects of Bradley Manning’s conditions of confinement at Quantico will sound familiar to the tens of thousands of American prisoners who have spent time in solitary confinement in supermax prisons and Special Housing Units. Additional restrictions were put in place supposedly because he was at risk of harming himself, though they in fact seem only to have added to his torture. According to the summary of the motion:

PFC Manning was placed in a 6×8 cell with no window or natural light. Owing to his classification as a MAX detainee, PFC Manning was subject to the following restrictions:
  • PFC Manning was placed in a cell directly in front of the guard post to facilitate his constant monitoring.
  • PFC Manning was awoken at 0500 hours and required to remain awake in his cell from 0500 to 2200 hours.
  • PFC Manning was not permitted to lie down on his rack during the duty day. Nor was PFC Manning permitted to lean his back against the cell wall; he had to sit upright on his rack without any back support.
  • Whenever PFC Manning was moved outside his cell, the entire facility was locked down.
  • Whenever PFC Manning was moved outside his cell, he was shackled with metal hand and leg restraints and accompanied by at least two guards.
  • From 29 July 2010 to 10 December 2010, PFC Manning was permitted only 20 minutes of “sunshine call.”  Aside from a 3-5 minute shower, this would be the only time PFC Manning would regularly spend outside his cell.  During this sunshine call, he would be brought to a small concrete yard, about half to a third of the size of a basketball court.  PFC Manning would be permitted to walk around the yard in hand and leg shackles, while being accompanied by a Brig guard…
  • From 10 December 2010 onward, PFC Manning was permitted a one hour recreation call.  At this point, the Brig authorized the removal of his hand and leg shackles and PFC Manning was no longer required to be accompanied by a Brig guard…
  • PFC Manning was only authorized non-contact visits.  The non-contact visits were permitted on Saturdays and Sundays between 1200 and 1500 hours by approved visitors.  During these visits, he would have to wear his hand and leg restraints.
  • PFC Manning was required to meet his visitors in a small 4 by 6 foot room that was separated with a glass partition.  His visits were monitored by the guards and they were audio recorded by the Brig…
  • PFC Manning was only permitted non-contact visits with his attorneys. During these visits, he was shackled at the hands and feet.
  • PFC Manning was not permitted any work duty.
Owing to PFC Manning being placed on continuous POI status, he was subject to the following further restrictions:
  • PFC Manningwas subject to constant monitoring; the Brig guards were required to check on him every five minutes by asking him some variation of, “are you okay?” PFC Manning was required to respond in some affirmative manner.   Guards were required to make notations every five minutes in a logbook.
  • At night, if the guards could not see him clearly, because he had a blanket over his head or he was curled up towards the wall, they would wake PFC Manning in order to ensure that he was okay.
  • At night, only some of the lights would be turned off.  Additionally, there was a florescent light in the hall outside PFC Manning’s cell that would stay on at night.
  • PFC Manning was required to receive each of his meals alone in his cell.  He was only permitted to eat with a spoon.
  • There were usually no detainees on either side of PFC Manning.  If PFC Manning attempted to speak to those detainees that were several cells away from him, the guards would order him to stop speaking.
  • PFC Manning originally was provided with a standard mattress and no pillow. PFC Manning tried to fold the mattress to make a pillow so that he could be more comfortable when sleeping.  Brig officials did not like this, so on 15 December 2010 they provided him with a suicide mattress with a built-in pillow…
  • PFC Manning was not permitted regular sheets or blankets.  Instead he was provided with a tear-proof security blanket.  This blanket was extremely coarse…The blanket did not keep PFC Manning warm because it did not retain heat and, due to its stiffness, did not contour to his body.
  • PFC Manningwas not allowed to have any personal items in his cell.
  • PFC Manningwas only allowed to have one book or one magazine at any given time to read.  If he was not actively reading, the book or magazine would be taken away from him.  Also, the book or magazine would be taken away from him at the end of the day before he went to sleep.
  • For the last month of his confinement at Quantico, PFC Manning was given a pen and five pieces of paper along with his book.  However, if he was not actively reading his book and taking notes, these items would be taken away from him.
  • PFC Manning was prevented from exercising in his cell.  If he attempted to do push-ups, sit-ups, or any other form of exercise he would be forced to stop.
  • When PFC Manning went to sleep, he was required to strip down to his underwear and surrender his clothing to the guards.
  • PFC Manning was only permitted hygiene items as needed. PFC Manning would have to request toilet paper every time he wanted to go to the bathroom; at times, he had to wait for guards to provide him with toilet paper.
  • There was no soap in his cell.  PFC Manning requested soap to wash his hands after using the bathroom; guards would sometimes get the soap, and sometimes not.
  • PFC Manning was not permitted to wear shoes in his cell.
  • PFC Manning was initially only permitted correspondence time for one hour a day; after 27 October 2010, this was changed to two hours per day.
According to the complaint, at one point, after he suffered an apparent anxiety attack and then protested his conditions, a Brig official “placed PFC Manning in Suicide Risk status, over the recommendation of a Brig psychiatrist.” For two days he was confined to his cell, permitted to wear only his underwear during the day, and forced to sleep naked at night; his eyeglasses were also taken away. After he complained about his conditions again, Manning was “required to wear a heavy and restrictive suicide smock which irritated his skin and, on one occasion, almost choked him.”
As Matt Williams writes at the Guardian:
The defence motion is brought under Article 13 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. It states that “no person, while being held for trial, may be subjected to punishment or penalty other than arrest or confinement upon the charges pending against him, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his presence.”Under Article 13, if a judge decides that a member of the armed forces has been illegally punished before trial, he can grant the prisoner credit on the amount of time they have already served in custody, or can even dismiss all charges outright.
For more detailed readings of the motion, see Kevin Gosztola’s blog at Firedoglake and Kim Zetter’s post on Wired.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

Solidarity Demo for Jeremy Hammond at His Next Court Date

June 27, 2012 Anarchist News

On the 23rd July 2012, the Jeremy Hammond Support Network will sponsor a
rally in NYC to show support for the accused hacktivist. Friends, family,
and supporters of Jeremy Hammond will gather at Foley Square for a brief
march to the Metropolitan Correctional Center where we will pack the
courtroom in solidarity with Jeremy

We wish to make it clear our intent to peacefully fill the courtroom. We
are there to support Jeremy, and the more people that actually make it
into the courtroom, the better. In this light, we have also been informed
that sadly, individuals with any items identifying them as Anonymous have,
in the past, been denied entry to the court. This is not something the
Support Network agrees with, however, if you intend to actually sit in the
court room, you will need to take this into consideration.

The event will be covered live on irc.anonyops.net #freeanons courtesy of
the the Freeanons Solidarity Network.

Jeremy is accused of taking part in compromising the computer systems of
Strategic Forecasting, Inc. (aka “Stratfor”) and providing information
gathered to the website Wikileaks. This information, released by Wikileaks
under the name “The Global Intelligence Files”
(http://wikileaks.org/gifiles/ ) revealed even further corruption within
the U.S. Intelligence community – including plans to target and infiltrate
domestic popular movements such as Occupy.

A social activist himself, Jeremy was deeply in support of some of the
very movements targeted. A longterm anti-war, anti-capitalist activist,
Jeremy was arrested for involvement in the Stratfor hack on the testimony
and actions of FBI Informant, Hector Xavier Monsegur. Monsegur himself was
facing 105 years in a Federal Penitentiary if he could not assist the FBI
in identifying and apprehending other alleged members of Anonymous and
Lulz Security (http://dc406.com/Monsegur-Hector-Xavier-Information.pdf ).

We feel there is ample evidence to show that the Stratfor hack was
organized, planned, and allowed to happen by the FBI, through the agency
of Mr. Monsegur, for the expressed purpose of entrapping alleged Anonymous
hacktivists. We understand that Jeremy's years of organizing for social
justice show him to clearly possess a more noble character than that of
his accuser, Mr. Monsegur, best known as little more than a Twitter troll
and internet blowhard.

We demand that charges be dropped pending an investigation into the
methods used by the FBI to entrap all alleged Anons and Lulzsec members.
We demand that Jeremy be taken off lock down and be granted visitation. At
the very least, we demand that Jeremy be moved to a cell providing a view
of more than another wall.

Free Jeremy Hammond! Free all accused Anons! Amnesty for all political
prisoners!

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

US rests case against Bradley Manning

Dec. 20, 2011 Associated Press

FORT MEADE, Maryland — The U.S. government ended its case Tuesday
against the Army intelligence analyst blamed for the biggest leak of
national secrets in American history.

The prosecution called its final six witnesses in the case against alleged
WikiLeaks source Pfc. Bradley Manning, which was being followed by the
defense calling witnesses and closing arguments. Then a military officer
will decide whether to recommend that the 24-year-old be court-martialed
on 22 charges, including aiding the enemy. If convicted, Manning could
face life in prison.

Manning is accused of illegally leaking a trove of secret information to
WikiLeaks, a breach that rattled U.S. foreign relations and, according to
the government, imperiled valuable military and diplomatic sources.

The military has released a text file, purportedly discovered on a data
card owned by Manning, boldly stating the importance of data that would
make its way to the secrets-spilling website WikiLeaks.

"This is possibly one of the more significant documents of our time,
removing the fog of war and revealing the true nature of 21st century
asymmetric warfare. Have a good day," Manning wrote, according to
digital-crimes investigator David Shaver.

Almost 500,000 classified battlefield reports were also on the card,
Shaver said.

A half-dozen, buttoned-down young men and women favoring charcoal gray
suits have come and gone behind the prosecutor's table — apparently
representatives of the Justice Department, CIA or other governments
agencies.

Across the room were Manning's supporters, including a long-haired young
man representing Occupy Wall Street and a pony-tailed, military veteran
wearing a "Free Bradley Manning" T-shirt.

Attorneys for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange observed, as well as a
representative of Amnesty International. A half-dozen journalists were
present, alongside people in camouflage uniforms. They included the
presiding officer, all three prosecutors, two of the defense lawyers and
military police stationed along the back and side walls.

Until Monday, the defense largely focused on painting Manning as an
emotionally troubled gay man serving during the Army's "don't ask, don't
tell" era, and arguing that the classified material proved harmless in the
open. Manning's lawyers have yet to acknowledge or deny his responsibility
for leaking of hundreds of thousands of U.S. war and diplomatic cables and
a classified military video of an American helicopter attack in Iraq that
killed 11 men.

His lawyers argue the troubled young private should never have had access
to classified material and that workplace security was inexplicably lax.

The prosecution said evidence showed that Manning communicated directly
with Assange and bragged to someone else about leaking video of a 2007
helicopter attack to WikiLeaks.

Investigators pointed to one May 2010 exchange between Manning and a
mathematician named Eric Schmiedl.

"Are you familiar with WikiLeaks?" Manning allegedly asked.

"Yes, I am," Schmiedl wrote.

"I was the source of the July 12, 2007, video from the Apache Weapons Team
which killed the two journalists and injured two kids," Manning wrote,
according to the prosecution.

Manning seemed to take in Monday's proceedings calmly.

Paul Almanza, the presiding officer, twice removed spectators and
reporters from the hearing Monday for sessions dealing with classified
information. By ruling the leaked diplomatic and military information
should somehow remain secret, even though it has been published by media
around the world, Almanza undermined the defense argument that no harm was
done.

Manning supporters fumed. His defense also challenged thousands of cables
found on Manning's workplace computers, arguing that some didn't match
those published by WikiLeaks and that others couldn't be matched to the
young private's user profile.

The 24-year-old Army intelligence analyst is a computer whiz who worked as
a civilian software developer. He was the go-to guy for plotting data
points and creating Excel spreadsheets in Baghdad, an intelligence officer
testified.

But he may have met his match in the info-tech gumshoes who bored deep
into several computer hard drives in search of incriminating evidence.
Shaver and civilian contractor Mark Johnson are products of military or
intelligence agencies with extensive government-funded training in their
fields.

They said they found evidence Manning downloaded and e-mailed nearly half
a million sensitive battlefield reports from Iraq and Afghanistan,
hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables and video of the helicopter
attack that WikiLeaks shared with the world and dubbed "Collateral
Murder."

The digital forensic examiners littered their testimonies with the terms
of their trade. Text files. Zip files. Hash values. Allocated and
unallocated disk space. And much, much more.

They frequently mentioned Wget — pronounced "double-you-get" — a computer
program for finding and downloading large amounts of data. They talked
about Base64, a program that compresses digital documents for speedy
transmission by removing all the spaces and punctuation marks.

"It may look like gibberish," Shaver conceded.

One defense lawyer, Capt. Paul Bouchard, sometimes seemed baffled by the
technical terms. On Monday, Shaver politely corrected him after Bouchard
repeatedly referred to server files as logs during a cross-examination.
Lead defense attorney David Coombs looked displeased.

An exchange between Bouchard and Johnson drew chuckles from the gallery.
The defense lawyer, seeking indications that supervisors ignored signs of
emotional distress, asked Johnson if his forensic probe of files and
electronic data had turned up any evidence of Manning's odd behavior.

"Odd behavior?" Johnson replied matter-of-factly. "No sir, it's a computer
drive."

Thursday, June 16, 2011

David House’s Statement on the WikiLeaks Grand Jury

www.bradleymanning.org

David House is a founding member of the Bradley Manning Support Network. He was
subpoenaed to appear before a federal grand jury today in Alexandria, VA. House is
among several Boston area residents who have been ordered to testify before the
grand jury, which is investigating WikiLeaks.
House and his lawyer entered the courthouse this morning at approximately 10:00am
ET, amidst a gathering of supporters who held signs with messages of support for
House. The rally also called for government transparency and protection for
whistleblowers — and for freedom for accused WikiLeaks source PFC Bradley Manning.
The prosecution initially attempted to prevent David House from taking notes. This
was the reason for the recess and reconvening at 4:00pm ET. There was no legal basis
for this order, and House was ultimately permitted to take notes.

House was questioned for approximately one hour, beginning at 4:00pm ET. He invoked
his Fifth Amendment rights to remain silent. He read from the below statement at
5:00pm ET in the plaza outside of the United States District Court at 401 Courthouse
Square in Alexandria, VA.
The Department of Justice (DoJ) is attempting to codify a task it started over 40
years ago: the political regulation of journalism. The same climate of intimidation
that surrounded the Pentagon Papers trial persists to this day as the DoJ seeks to
limit the freedoms of the Fourth Estate, using the pretense of alleged violations of
the Espionage Act.
The show trial that is now underway in Alexandria VA has the potential to set a
dangerous precedent for regulating the media. Using Nixonian fear tactics that were
honed during the Pentagon Papers investigation, the DoJ is attempting to dismantle a
major media organization—WikiLeaks—and indict its editor, Julian Assange. The DoJ’s
ever-widening net has now come to encompass academics, students, and journalists in
the Cambridge area. The Administration’s goal is to force these individuals to
testify against this media organization in an attempt to cast its publications and
those of its media partners — the New York Times, the Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le
Monde, and El Pais — as acts of espionage. The government has also violated my
Fourth Amendment rights by executing a warrantless seizure on my laptop in an
attempt to identify, target and ensnare Cambridge-based supporters of WikiLeaks.
It is my conviction that the American people must call for a cessation of the
Department of Justice’s politically motivated harassment.

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Guantanamo files': Dozens held were innocent

Leaked files reveal details of interrogations of "high-risk" detainees, but suggest many innocents were also rounded up.

25 Apr 2011 Al Jazeera

US officials were said to have found no reason recorded for some detainees' transfer to Guantanamo [Al Jazeera]

The United States released dozens of so-called "high-risk" detainees from the Guantanamo Bay prison facility and held more than 150 innocent men for years, according to new reports about a trove of leaked military documents.

The more than 700 classified military files, part of a massive cache of secret documents leaked to the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks, were made available to select US and European media outlets and made public on Sunday.

It was not clear if the media outlets published the documents with the consent of WikiLeaks - and it was not immediately possible to independently verify all of the leaked documents.

The files are reported to reveal new information about some of the men held at the US prison facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, including details of the more than 700 detainee interrogations and evidence the US had collected against the "terror" suspects.

The files - called Detainee Assessment Briefs or DABs - describe the security intelligence value of the detainees and whether they would be a threat to the US and its allies if released.

'High-risk' threat

To date, 604 inmates have been transferred out of Guantanamo while 172 remain detained.

Thousands of pages of the files are reported to reveal that most of the prisoners who remain at Guantanamo - 130 of them - have been rated as posing a "high-risk'" threat to the US if they are freed without rehabilitation or supervision.

Even more of the George W Bush-era "war on terror" suspects were branded "high-risk" before being released or handed to other governments, The New York Times, one of the newspapers that received the documents, reported.

The documents show some inmates were described as more dangerous than previously known to the public and could complicate efforts by the US to transfer detainees out of the prison.

However, the documents also show that dozens of detainees were found to be innocent, after being held for lengthy periods.

At least 150 people were innocent Afghans or Pakistanis, including drivers, farmers and chefs, who were rounded up as part of frantic intelligence gathering, and then detained for years.

In several cases, senior US commanders were said to have concluded that there is "no reason recorded for transfer".

Al Jazeera file

The documents also show instances in which authorities were concerned less with containing dangerous suspects than on extracting intelligence.


Sami al-Hajj was working as an Al Jazeera cameraman when he was arrested in 2001 and sent to Guantanamo

One file shows that Sami al-Hajj, an Al Jazeera journalist held at Guantanamo for six years, was detained partly in order to be interrogated about the news network.

His file states that one of the reasons he was detained was "to provide information on … the Al Jazeera news network's training programme, telecommunications equipment, and newsgathering operations in Chechnya, Kosovo and Afghanistan, including the network's acquisition of a video of UBL [Osama bin Laden] and a subsequent interview with UBL".

Al-Hajj was released in 2008 and has since returned to work for Al Jazeera.

Hundreds of other detainees reportedly underwent aggressive interrogation techniques before it was determined that they were low-level fighters.

Legal limbo

The administration of US president Barack Obama criticised the publication of the files as "unfortunate", calling them "sensitive information".

"It is unfortunate that several news organisations have made the decision to publish numerous documents obtained illegally by WikiLeaks concerning the Guantanamo detention facility,'' ambassador Daniel Fried, the Obama administration's special envoy on detainee issues, and Pentagon press secretary Geoff Morrell, said in a joint statement.

But they added that the documents were out of date, and that the administration's Guantanamo review panel, established in January 2009, had made its own assessments.

"The assessments of the Guantanamo Review Task Force have not been compromised to WikiLeaks. Thus, any given DAB (Detainee Assessment Briefs) illegally obtained and released by WikiLeaks may or may not represent the current view of a given detainee."

Obama pledged two years ago to close the prison, but it remains in legal limbo.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

US Intelligence Veteran Defends Bradley Manning and WikiLeaks

April 18, 2011 andyworthington.co.uk


The story of Pfc Bradley Manning, the young US Army intelligence analyst allegedly responsible for leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks, continues to act as a magnet for supporters worldwide, who are appalled by the accounts of his solitary confinement, and the humiliation to which he has recently been subjected, which has involved him sleeping naked at night, and having to stand naked outside his call during cell inspections in the morning, even though the alleged basis for this humiliation — that he is at risk of committing suicide — has been disproved by the miltary’s own records, in which his alleged propensity to commit suicide has been repeatedly challenged.

While sympathizing fully with Pfc Manning’s plight, I do hope that those supporting him will also realize that the humiliation to which he is being subjected, and its probable intent — to make him produce false confessions about his relationship with Julian Assange of WikiLeaks — is not unique, as it echoes the conditions in which prisoners in the “War on Terror” — at Guantánamo and elsewhere, including, in three instances, on the US mainland — were held by the Bush administration, whose detention also involved torture and abuse, and the creation of circumstances in which confessions would be produced, whether they were true or not.

This was part of a disgraceful policy that has not come to an end under President Obama, as Guantánamo is still open, and 172 men are held there, with the administration, Congress and the courts having all conspired to prevent the release of any of them (even though 89 of them have been cleared for release). In addition, at Bagram in Afghanistan, there are still men held who were seized up to nine years ago in other countries, and were rendered to Bagram (after a tour of a variety of secret CIA prisons), where they remain in a legal black hole.

While I encourage readers to spare a thought for those still held in Guantánamo and Bagram, I reiterate that I understand the significance of Bradley Manning’s plight, as it is unaccepable that the ill-treatment of such a prominent prisoner is continuing, despite international outrage, just as it is unacceptable that he has not yet been put forward for trial, as he has now been held for nearly a year, since his initial arrest in Kuwait last May.

In an important update to Manning’s story, the website The Western Front recently interviewed Evan Knappenberger, an Iraq War veteran and former Army intelligence specialist, who graduated from the same intelligence school as Manning, and who has some important insights: firstly, about how dehumanizing it was working as an intel analyst in Iraq, and how, at the same time, when it came to having access to classified documents on the Defense Department’s online network, “Army security is [or was] like a Band-Aid on a sunken chest wound.”

Knappenberger also explains how the leaking of information by Manning (if indeed it was him) “has raised consciousness quite a bit of the true nature of what’s going on,” adding that he is appalled by the military’s obsession with classifying as secret everything that takes place in its wars, and how he is also appalled that Manning, as a whistleblower, should have rights and protections that are denied to him, and also regards his treatment as a disgrace.

This is a powerful interview, and I do hope that you have the time to read it, and also to circulate it to others.

Manning Peer Sheds Light on WikiLeaks: Former military intel analyst shares his thoughts on the motive of alleged leaks
By Will Graff, The Western Front, April 15, 2011

Former military intel analyst shares his thoughts on the motive of alleged leaks.

The alleged leaker, intelligence specialist Private First Class Bradley Manning, is now in Quantico military prison in Virginia, where he has been held in solitary confinement since his arrest in July 2010. On April 10, nearly 300 top legal scholars, authors and experts signed a letter condemning his treatment as torture.

Evan Knappenberger, an Iraq War veteran and former intelligence specialist in the Army, graduated from the same intelligence school as Bradley Manning in May 2004 and was given secret clearance.

Knappenberger is now a junior at Western majoring in mathematics. He was interviewed last week for a PBS Frontline documentary about WikiLeaks, Manning and military information security. The Western Front interviewed Knappenberger about his experience in the military and his connection to WikiLeaks.

The Western Front: What is your connection to Bradley Manning?

Evan Knappenberger: Well, I have a couple connections to Bradley. The first is that we both went to the same intelligence school. We went to the same basic training company, pretty much an identical track all the way through.

They have [Manning’s] chat logs with the guy who turned him in. He talks about why he [leaked the documents]. He says on those chat logs that it’s out of principle. He didn’t like what he saw in Iraq. He talks about the collateral murder video, watching civilians get killed by American soldiers pretty much unprovoked. He had a change of heart, I think, that’s why he says he decided to release all these documents — if in fact, it was him that did it.

I was involved in torture in Iraq. Part of an intel analyst’s job is “targeting.” You take a human being and put him on a piece of paper, distill his life into one piece of paper. You’ve got a grid coordinate of where he lives and a little box that says what to do with him: kill, capture, detain, exploit, source — you know, there’s different things you can do with him. When I worked in “targeting,” it was having people killed.

The thing that gets me about that is I don’t think anybody who’s aware of what’s going on can do that work for very long without having a major problem come up. Most of the guys I went through intel school with, who went to Iraq with me, are either dead, killed themselves, are in a long-term care institution or completely disabled. I’m actually 50 percent disabled via PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder), mostly because of the stuff that happened.

The Western Front: What kind of access did you have here and in Iraq?

Evan Knappenberger: Army security is like a Band-Aid on a sunken chest wound. I remember when I was training, before I had my clearance even, they were talking about diplomatic cables. It was a big scandal at Fort Huachuca [in Arizona], with all these kids from analyst school. Somebody said [in the cables] Sadaam wanted to negotiate and was willing to agree to peace terms before we invaded, and Bush said no. And this wasn’t very widely known. Somehow it came across on a cable at Fort Huachuca, and everybody at the fort knew about it.

It’s interesting the access we had. I did the briefing for a two-star general every morning for a year. So I had secret and top-secret information readily available. The funny thing is, Western’s password system they have here on all these computers is better security than the Army had on their secret computers.

There are 2 million people, many of them not U.S. citizens, with access to SIPRNet [Secret Internet Protocol Router Network, the Department of Defense’s largest network for the exchange of classified information and messages]. There are 1,400 government agencies with SIPR websites. It’s not that secret.

The Western Front: Do you think private military contractors play a role in this?

Evan Knappenberger: Oh yeah. I worked in a place called a SCIF [Secret Compartmentalized Information Facility] and almost anybody, if they spoke English, could get in there. It wasn’t hard at all.

Every military base has [a SCIF]. There’s one in Bellingham, too. It’s by the airport. The only security they have at the SCIFs I worked at was one guy on duty at a desk. They had barbed wire you could literally step right over.

We basically gave [the Iraqi army] SIPRNet. It’s not official, but if you’ve got a secret Internet computer sitting there with a wire running across from the American side of the base, with no guard, you’re basically giving them access.

Then in every Iraqi division command post, you have a SIPRNet computer, with all the stuff Bradley Manning leaked and massive amounts more.

I could look up FBI files on the SIPRNet. In fact, I was reading Hunter Thompson’s Hell’s Angels book, and I was like “this sounds cool,” and I looked up all the Hell’s Angels.

We looked up the JFK assassination, I couldn’t find anything on that. It was kind of a game, but, yeah, that’s the SIPRNet. You’ve got access to every so-called sensitive piece of information.

You’ve basically got us sitting there in an Iraqi division command post, and to make it all better, the U.S. Army put one guard guy there to guard it. They would switch us off every 12 hours with another guy. If he gets up to go to the bathroom, the SIPRNet is just sitting there. All you need is knowledge of the English language and knowledge of how to use Internet Explorer.

The Western Front: Is all the information Bradley Manning leaked on those computers under the same security?

Evan Knappenberger: He has top-secret clearance, and it’s a little better. It’s like there’s one more door you have to go through to get to the top-secret computers, maybe. Sometimes there is and sometimes there isn’t.

The Western Front: What do you think the release of these documents and WikiLeaks have accomplished?

Evan Knappenberger: I think it has raised consciousness quite a bit of the true nature of what’s going on. Anybody now can go see the daily incident log of what happened in Iraq. What WikiLeaks did, what all of this did, is give real credibility to people who want to tell the truth. You can corroborate stories.

The Western Front: What do you think the attacks on WikiLeaks and Manning’s imprisonment say about freedom in the United States?

Evan Knappenberger: The fact we think we can classify everything that goes on in a war is ridiculous. And the fact that the press really doesn’t have the freedom to report on the military is ridiculous.

The second part of it is Bradley Manning and his treatment. If he was in any other government agency or private agency, he’d be considered a whistleblower. He’d have protections, but he’s not. It shows the gap of human rights in our military.

If he was anybody else, he’d be covered under the whistleblower protections or the freedom of speech. If a reporter gets classified information and publishes it, it’s not a crime. WikiLeaks is a reporting agency, so they should be covered under that. And anybody that works for them, i.e. Bradley Manning, should be covered under that, too.

The Western Front: What should people know about Bradley Manning and why should they care about this issue?

Evan Knappenberger: This is an American citizen. He’s an all-American kid. Born and raised in Oklahoma. If the constitutional rights don’t apply to him, it should scare everybody. Even if you don’t agree with what he allegedly did, you still have the obligation to care about the fact that he hasn’t been afforded his trial and he’s been treated with cruel and unusual punishment. Even if you’re against freedom of the press in this case, you still have the obligation to care about the kid. He’s being tortured.

It has been almost a year. They wake him up every five minutes. He’s stripped naked every day. The lights have been on in his cell 24/7 for a year. He gets one visitor a week. He can’t exercise in his cell, gets an hour a day to walk around a larger cell with no bed in it for exercise. Every human rights organization in the world has condemned his treatment as torture. That should scare the shit out of us because he’s not some Islamic fundamentalist who talks about Jihad, he’s an American kid, modern guy, who listens to pop music and happens to be gay.

Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press, distributed by Macmillan in the US, and available from Amazon — click on the following for the US and the UK) and of two other books: Stonehenge: Celebration and Subversion and The Battle of the Beanfield. To receive new articles in your inbox, please subscribe to my RSS feed (and I can also be found on Facebook, Twitter, Digg and YouTube). Also see my definitive Guantánamo prisoner list, updated in July 2010, details about the new documentary film, “Outside the Law: Stories from Guantánamo” (co-directed by Polly Nash and Andy Worthington, on tour in the UK throughout 2011, and available on DVD here — or here for the US), my definitive Guantánamo habeas list and the chronological list of all my articles, and, if you appreciate my work, feel free to make a donation.

Thursday, February 10, 2011

The Trials of Bradley Manning, A Defense

by Chase Madar February 10, 2011 Tom Dispatch

The Obama administration came into office proclaiming "sunshine" policies. When some of the U.S. government's dirty laundry was laid out in the bright light of day by WikiLeaks, however, its officials responded in a knee-jerk, punitive manner in the case of Bradley Manning, now in extreme isolation in a Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia. The urge of the Obama administration and the U.S. military to break his will, to crush him, is unsettling, to say the least. Whatever happens to Julian Assange or WikiLeaks, Washington is clearly intent on destroying this young Army private and then putting him away until hell freezes over.

It should not be this way.

Today, thanks to lawyer and essayist Chase Madar, TomDispatch is making a long-planned gesture towards Manning, whose acts, aimed at revealing the worst this country had to offer in recent years, will someday make him a genuine American hero -- but that’s undoubtedly little consolation to him now. When it comes to America’s recent wars, its torture regimes, black sites, and extraordinary renditions, as well as the death and destruction visited on distant lands, blood is on many official American hands, but not on Manning’s. Those officials should be held accountable, not him.

With that in mind, TomDispatch offers its version of the defense of Bradley Manning. (To catch Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast video interview in which Chase Madar explores Manning’s case and his defense, click here, or download it to your iPod here.) Tom

Why Bradley Manning Is a Patriot, Not a Criminal
An Opening Statement for the Defense of Private Manning

By Chase Madar

Bradley Manning, a 23-year-old from Crescent, Oklahoma, enlisted in the U.S. military in 2007 to give something back to his country and, he hoped, the world.

For the past seven months, Army Private First Class Manning has been held in solitary confinement in the Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Virginia. Twenty-five thousand other Americans are also in prolonged solitary confinement, but the conditions of Manning’s pre-trial detention have been sufficiently brutal for the United Nation’s Special Rapporteur on Torture to announce an investigation.

Pfc. Manning is alleged to have obtained documents, both classified and unclassified, from the Department of Defense and the State Department via the Internet and provided them to WikiLeaks. (That “alleged” is important because the federal informant who fingered Manning, Adrian Lamo, is a felon convincted of computer-hacking crimes. He was also involuntarily committed to a psychiatric institution in the month before he levelled his accusation. All of this makes him a less than reliable witness.) At any rate, the records allegedly downloaded by Manning revealed clear instances of war crimes committed by U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, widespread torture committed by the Iraqi authorities with the full knowledge of the U.S. military, previously unknown estimates of the number of Iraqi civilians killed at U.S. military checkpoints, and the massive Iraqi civilian death toll caused by the American invasion.

For bringing to light this critical but long-suppressed information, Pfc. Manning has been treated not as a whistleblower, but as a criminal and a spy. He is charged with violating not only Army regulations but also the Espionage Act of 1917, making him the fifth American to be charged under the act for leaking classified documents to the media. A court-martial will likely be convened in the spring or summer.

Politicians have called for Manning’s head, sometimes literally. And yet a strong legal defense for Pfc. Manning is not difficult to envision. Despite many remaining questions of fact, a legal defense can already be sketched out. What follows is an “opening statement” for the defense. It does not attempt to argue individual points of law in any exhaustive way. Rather, like any opening statement, it is an overview of the vital legal (and political) issues at stake, intended for an audience of ordinary citizens, not Judge Advocate General lawyers.

After all, it is the court of public opinion that ultimately decides what a government can and cannot get away with, legally or otherwise.

Opening Statement for the Defense of Bradley Manning, Soldier and Patriot

U.S. Army Private First Class Bradley Manning has done his duty. He has witnessed serious violations of the American military’s Uniform Code of Military Justice, violations of the rules in U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10, and violations of international law. He has brought these wrongdoings to light out of a profound sense of duty to his country, as a citizen and a soldier, and his patriotism has cost him dearly.

In 2005, General Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told reporters: “It is absolutely the responsibility of every U.S. service member [in Iraq], if they see inhumane treatment being conducted, to try to stop it.” This, in other words, was the obligation of every U.S. service member in Operation Iraqi Freedom; this remains the obligation of every U.S. service member in Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan. It is a duty that Pfc. Manning has fulfilled.

Who is Pfc. Bradley Manning? He is a 23-year-old Private First Class in the U.S. Army. He was raised in Crescent, Oklahoma (population 1,281, according to the last census count). He enlisted in 2007. “He was basically really into America,” says a hometown friend. “He was proud of our successes as a country. He valued our freedom, but probably our economic freedom the most. I think he saw the U.S. as a force for good in the world.”

When Bradley Manning deployed to Iraq in October 2009, he thought that he’d be helping the Iraqi people build a free society after the long nightmare of Saddam Hussein. What he witnessed firsthand was quite another matter.

He soon found himself helping the Iraqi authorities detain civilians for distributing “anti-Iraqi literature” -- which turned out to be an investigative report into financial corruption in their own government entitled “Where does the money go?” The penalty for this “crime” in Iraq was not a slap on the wrist. Imprisonment and torture, as well as systematic abuse of prisoners, are widespread in the new Iraq. From the military’s own Sigacts (Significant Actions) reports, we have a multitude of credible accounts of Iraqi police and soldiers shooting prisoners, beating them to death, pulling out fingernails or teeth, cutting off fingers, burning with acid, torturing with electric shocks or the use of suffocation, and various kinds of sexual abuse including sodomization with gun barrels and forcing prisoners to perform sexual acts on guards and each other.

Manning had more than adequate reason to be concerned about handing over Iraqi citizens for likely torture simply for producing pamphlets about corruption in a government notorious for its corruptness.

Like any good soldier, Manning immediately took these concerns up the chain of command. And how did his superiors respond? His commanding officer told him to “shut up” and get back to rounding up more prisoners for the Iraqi Federal Police to treat however they cared to.

Now, you have already heard what the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff had to say about an American soldier’s duties when confronted with the torture and abuse of prisoners. Ever since our country signed and ratified the Geneva Conventions and the Convention against Torture, it has been the law of our land that handing over prisoners to a body that will torture them is a war crime. Nevertheless, between early 2009 and August of last year, our military handed over thousands of prisoners to the Iraqi authorities, knowing full well what would happen to many of them.

The next time Pfc. Manning encountered evidence of war crimes, he took a different course of action.

On the Secret Internet Protocol Router Network (SIPRNet) shared by the Departments of Defense and State Manning soon found irrefutable evidence of possible war crimes, including a now-infamous “Collateral Murder” video in which a U.S. Apache helicopter mowed down some 18 civilians, including two Reuters journalists, on a street in Baghdad on July 12, 2007. The world has now seen and been shocked by this video which Reuters is alleged to have had in its possession but had not yet made public. Manning is alleged to have leaked it to the whistleblower site WikiLeaks in April 2010.

Manning also found a video and an official report on American air strikes on the village of Granai in Afghanistan’s Farah Province (also known as “the Granai massacre”). According to the Afghan government, 140 civilians, including women and a large number of children, died in those strikes. He is alleged to have released that video as part of a tranche of some 92,000 military documents relating to our escalating war in Afghanistan -- already the longest war our nation has ever fought -- and Pakistan, where the war is steadily spreading. Manning is also alleged to have released to WikiLeaks some 392,000 documents regarding the Iraq War, many of which relate to the torture of prisoners, as well as some 251,000 State Department cables.

Now, in your judgment of Bradley Manning, please know that the stakes are indeed high, but not in the feverish way our political and media elites have been telling you from nearly every newspaper, channel, and website in the land. We will want you, a true jury of Manning’s military peers, to ask a few questions about what’s really been going on in this trial -- and in this country. After all, when we reward lawyers in the Justice Department who created memos that made torture legal with federal judgeships and regular newspaper columns, while locking lock up a whistle-blowing private, you have to ask: What country are we now living in?

This trial couldn’t be more important or your judgment more crucial. The honor of our country is very much at stake in how you decide. When we let the aerial slaughter of civilian noncombatants pass without comment or review, when a reported 92 children die from an American air strike on an Afghan village and 18 civilians are shot dead on a Baghdad street without the slightest accountability, except when it comes to locking up the private who ensured that we would know about these acts -- let me repeat -- the honor of your country and mine is at stake and at risk. Not the security of your country, though the prosecution will claim otherwise, but the honor of our country, and especially the honor of our military.

Pfc. Bradley Manning is one soldier who has done his duty. He has complied with it to the letter. Now you must do your duty as members of this jury and as soldiers.

Our Whistleblower Laws Protect Pfc. Manning

The prosecution will surely tell you that none of our existing whistleblower protection laws, interpreted narrowly, apply to Bradley Manning.

I say otherwise, and so will the experts we will call to the stand. You will hear from legal expert Jesselyn Radack, an attorney and former whistleblower who was purged, punished, and then vindicated for her courageous acts of disclosing illegal wrongdoing inside the Bush administration’s Department of Justice. Ms. Radack will explain to you why and how Bradley Manning is well protected by our current laws. After all, the Whistleblower Protection Act is designed to protect a government employee who exposes fraud, waste, abuse, or illegality to anyone inside or outside a government agency, including a member of the news media. This is well supported by case law. (See Horton v. Dep’t of Navy, 66. F3d 279, 282 (Fed. Cir. 1995)]. Isn’t that exactly what Pfc. Bradley Manning has done?

As a fallback argument, the prosecution is sure to suggest that WikiLeaks is not a real media entity in the way that the New York Times is. Any one of you who has ever gotten the news and information from the Internet knows otherwise.

The prosecution will also be eager to inform you that the Military Whistleblower Protection Act (MWPA) does not apply here. We, however, will prove to you that the act applies with great and particular force to Pfc. Manning. For one thing, the MWPA not only allows an even wider array of government officials to make disclosures of classified information, it also broadens the scope of what kinds of disclosure a soldier can make. It expressly allows disclosures of classified information by members of the armed forces if they have a “reasonable belief” that what is being disclosed offers evidence of a “violation of the law,” “an abuse of authority,” or “a substantial danger to public safety.” In other words, the purpose of the Military Whistleblower Protection Act is to protect soldiers just like Pfc. Manning who report on improper -- or in this case, patently illegal -- activities by other military personnel.

Now, there is no strict precedent, the prosecution will claim, for any of our whistleblower protection laws to apply to Pfc. Manning. But as we will make clear, there is no contrary precedent either. That’s because we’ve never seen a whistleblower disclosure as massive, vivid, and horrific as this one. We are in uncharted territory. If the plain language of these whistleblower protection laws is unclear, legal convention dictates that we look at the laws’ intent. Clearly Congress meant, and legislative history supports this, for the whistleblower protection laws to protect whistleblowers, not -- as this administration seems to think -- to prosecute them.

The progress of our common law is prudent, it is incremental, it is slow. But our common law is not dead. It does progress. Whether the common law will take that small step forward in the case of Pfc. Manning is your duty to decide. And your decision will have repercussions.

For if you convict Bradley Manning, then you are also clearing the way to try and possibly convict Army Specialist Joseph Darby, the whistleblower who leaked the Abu Ghraib photos and thereby ended acts of torture and abuse that were shaming our military and our nation. Now, Specialist Darby did not leak the photos of this disgrace up the chain of command or to the Army Inspector General as our whistleblower law envisions. Instead, he leaked it straight to the Army Criminal Investigative Division, and this path is not strictly what our whistleblower laws allow. Was Spc. Joseph Darby doing his duty as an honorable soldier when he exposed the torture and abuse at Abu Ghraib? Or was he just trying to damage the United States? Your verdict on Bradley Manning could reopen that question, and answer it anew.

If you convict Bradley Manning, you will also potentially be convicting the father of Army Specialist Adam Winfield. In February 2010, Winfield informed his father, Christopher Winfield, a marine veteran, via Facebook, of a homicidal “Kill Team” at Forward Operating Base Ramrod in Kandahar Province, Afghanistan, that was murdering civilians. Winfield’s father tried to sound the alarm via phone calls to the Army Inspector General’s 24-hour hotline, to Senator Bill Nelson, and even to members of his son’s command unit in Fort Lewis.

Both father and son went beyond the “proper” channels to stop the murder of innocent Afghan civilians. Spc. Winfield is now on trial for possible complicity in the “kill team” murders, but no charges have been filed against his father. Tell me, then: Is Winfield’s father guilty of damaging his country because he tried to warn the Army about a homicidal “kill team” in the ranks? Whether you like it or not, whether you care to or not, this is something you will decide when you render your judgment on Bradley Manning’s actions.

The Espionage Charges

The most outlandish entries on the overachieving charge sheet are those stemming from the Espionage Act of 1917. After all, Pfc. Manning is just the fifth American in 94 years to be charged under this archaic law with leaking government documents. (Of the five, only one has been convicted.)

The Espionage Act was never intended to be used in this way, as an extra punishment for citizens who disclose classified material, and that is why the government only carts it out when its case is exceptionally desperate.

In order for Espionage Act charges to stick, it is required that Pfc. Manning had the conscious intent -- take note of that crucial phrase -- to damage the United States or aid a foreign nation with his disclosures. Not surprisingly, given this, you are going to hear the prosecution spare no effort to portray the release of these cables as the gravest blow to America’s place in the world since Pearl Harbor.

I hope you’ll take this with more than a grain of salt. For where is the staggering fallout from all the supposed bombshells in these leaked documents? Months after the release of the State Department cables, not a single American ambassador has been recalled. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, who commands far more budget and power than the Secretary of State, publicly insists that these leaks -- the Iraq War logs, the Afghan War Logs, and the diplomatic cables -- have not done any major harm. “Now I've heard the impact of these releases on our foreign policy described as a meltdown, as a game-changer and so on,” said Gates. “I think those descriptions are fairly significantly overwrought.” Significantly overwrought? "Every other government in the world knows the United States government leaks like a sieve,” he added, “and it has for a long time."

So what happened to the biggest blow to American prestige since the 1968 Tet Offensive in Vietnam? And keep in mind that the Secretary of Defense is by no means the only official pooh-poohing the hype about the WikiLeaks apocalypse. One former head of policy planning at the State Department looked at the cables, shrugged, and said that the documents hold “little news,” and that they are “unlikely to do long-term damage.” A senior Pentagon spokesperson, Colonel David Lapan, confessed to reporters last September that there is zero evidence any of the Afghan informers named in the leaked documents have been injured by Taliban reprisals. Tell me, where is the Armageddon that this 23-year-old private has supposedly loosed on our American world?

Of course, there’s no denying that some members of our foreign policy elite have been mightily embarrassed by the State Department cables. Good. They deserve it.

Their fleeting embarrassment is nothing compared to the shame they have brought down on our country with their foolish deeds over the past decade, actions that range from the reckless and incompetent to the downright criminal. It’s no secret that America’s standing in the world has been severely damaged in these years, but ask yourself: Is this because of recent disclosures of civilian deaths and war crimes --most of which are surprising only to Americans -- along with diplomatic tittle-tattle?

I suggest to you that the damage to our nation, which couldn’t be more real, has come not from the disclosures of a young private, but from our foreign policy elite’s long pattern of foolish and destructive actions. After all, the invasion and occupation of Iraq have cost rivers of blood. The price tag for our current foreign wars has now officially soared above the trillion-dollar mark (and few doubt that, in the end, the real cost will run into the trillions of dollars). And don’t forget, the invasion of Iraq has inspired new waves of hatred and distrust of our country overseas, and has provided an adrenaline boost for Islamic terrorists.

Needless to say, our political, military, and media elites have not lined up to take responsibility for this series of self-inflicted wounds. Before they try to pin a nonexistent catastrophe on Pfc. Manning, they ought to take a long, hard look in the mirror and think about the real damage they’ve done to our nation, the world, and not least the overstretched, overstrained U.S. military.

Just imagine: if only someone like Bradley Manning had leaked conclusive documentation about Saddam Hussein’s supposedly deadly but nonexistent arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, the excuse for our invasion of Iraq. Such a disclosure would have profoundly embarrassed Washington’s foreign policy elite and in the atmosphere of early 2003, the media would undoubtedly have called for that whistleblower’s head, just as they’re doing now.

Such a leak, however, would have done a powerful load of good for our nation. Four thousand four hundred and thirty-six American soldiers would not be dead and thousands more would not be maimed, wounded, or suffering from PTSD. At the very least, more than 100,000, and probably hundreds of thousands, of Iraqi civilians would still be living. These are the consequences of policy-making by a secretive government that wants the American people to know nothing, and a media that is either unable or unwilling to do its job and report on facts, not government spin.

You all are old enough to have noticed that the health of our republic and the reputations of our ruling elites are not one and the same. In the best of times, they overlap. The past 10 years have not been the best of times. Those elites have led us into disaster after disaster, imperiling our already breached national security, straining our ruinous finances, and tearing to shreds our moral standing in the world. Don’t try to blame this state of affairs on Private Bradley Manning.

The Nuremberg Principles Mean Something in Our Courts

Our soldiers have a solemn duty not to obey illegal orders, and Pfc. Manning upheld this duty. General Peter Pace’s statement on a soldier’s overriding duty to stop the torture and abuse of prisoners, whatever his or her orders, is not just high-minded public relations; it’s the law of the land. More than 50 years ago, U.S. Army Field Manual 27-10 incorporated the Nuremberg Principles, among them Principle IV: “The fact that a person acted pursuant to an order of his government or of a superior does not relieve him from responsibility under international law, provided a moral choice was in fact possible to him.” This remains the law of our land and of our armed forces, too.

I suspect the prosecution will have other ideas. They will tell you that the Nuremberg Principles are great stuff for commencement addresses, but don’t actually mean anything in practical terms. They will tell you that the Nuremberg Principles are of use only to the Lisa Simpsons of the human-rights industry.

But know this: some 400,000 of your fellow soldiers died in the Second World War for the establishment of those principles. For that reason alone, they are something that you in the military ought to treat with the utmost seriousness.

And if the judge or prosecutor should tell you that the Nuremberg Principles don’t mean a thing in our courts, they would be flat wrong. Courts have taken the Nuremberg Principles to heart before, and more and more have done so in the past few years. In 2005, for example, Judge Lieutenant Commander Robert Klant took note of the Nuremberg principles in a sentencing hearing for Pablo Paredes, a Navy Petty Officer Third Class who refused redeployment to Iraq, and whose punishment was subsequently minimized.

Similarly, at his court martial in 2009, Sergeant Matthis Chiroux justified his refusal to redeploy to a war that he believed violated both national and international law, and was backed up by expert testimony on the Nuremberg Principles. The court martial granted Sgt. Chiroux a general discharge.

A long line of Supreme Court cases, from Mitchell v. Harmony in 1851 all the way back to Little v. Barreme in 1804, established that soldiers have a duty not to follow illegal orders. In short, it is a matter of record and established precedent that these Nuremberg Principles have meant something in our courts. Yours will not be the first court martial to apply these principles, fought for and won with American blood, nor will it be the last.

Whistleblowers Are Patriots Who Sacrifice for Their Country

Whistleblowers who attempt to rectify the disastrous policies of their nation are not criminals. They are patriots, and eventually are recognized as such. Bradley Manning is by no means the first American to serve his country in such a way.

Today, Daniel Ellsberg is famous as the leaker of the Pentagon Papers, a secret internal history ordered up by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara himself that candidly recounted how a series of administrations systematically lied to the nation about the planning and prosecution of the Vietnam War. Ellsberg’s massive leak of these documents helped end that war and bring down a criminal administration. How criminal? Midway through Ellsberg’s trial in 1973, the Nixon administration offered the judge overseeing his treason trial the directorship of the FBI in an implicit quid pro quo, a maneuver of such brazen corruption as to shame any banana republic. The judge dismissed all the government’s charges with prejudice and now Daniel Ellsberg is a national hero.

Those born after a certain date may be forgiven for assuming that Ellsberg was some long-haired subversive of an “anti-American” stripe. In fact, he had been, like Bradley Manning, a model soldier.

At the Marine Corps Basic School in Quantico, Virginia, Ellsberg graduated first in a class of some 1,100 lieutenants. He served as a platoon leader and rifle company commander in the Marine 2nd Infantry Division for three years, and deferred his graduate studies so he could remain on active duty with his battalion during the Suez Crisis of 1956. (You will note that deferring graduate school in order to stay on active military duty is the exact opposite of what so many of our recent, and current, national leaders did in those decades.) After satisfying his Reserve Officer commitment, Ellsberg was discharged from the Corps as a first lieutenant, and leaving the military went on to a distinguished career in government.

Daniel Ellsberg was a model Marine, and later a model citizen. His courageous act of leaking classified information was only one more episode in a consistent record of patriotic service. When Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers he did so out of the profoundest sense of duty, knowing full well, just like Bradley Manning today, that he might spend the rest of his life in jail.

Ellsberg calls Pfc. Manning his hero and he is a tireless defender of the brave Army private our government has locked away in solitary.

Vandals trash things without a care in their hearts, but real patriots like former Lt. Ellsberg and Pfc. Manning do their duty knowing that the privilege of living in a free society does not always come cheap.

“Frankly and in the Public View”: The American Tradition of Diplomacy

Today, Ellsberg himself is lionized, even by the U.S. government, as a national hero. The State Department recently put together a traveling roadshow of American documentary films to screen abroad, and front and center among them is an admiring movie about Ellsberg and the Pentagon Papers. But then it is only appropriate that the government recognize Ellsberg and his once-controversial disclosures as part and parcel of the American tradition.

After all, demands for more open and transparent diplomacy are as American as baseball and Hank Williams. World War I-era President Woodrow Wilson himself insisted on the abolition of secret treaties as part of his 14 points for the League of Nations; in fact, it’s the very first point: “Open covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after which there shall be no private international understandings of any kind but diplomacy shall proceed always frankly and in the public view.”

How can foreign policy be democratic if the most serious decisions and facts -- alliances, death tolls, assessments of the leaders and governments we are bankrolling with our tax dollars -- are all kept as official secrets? The “Bricker Amendment” was an attempt by congressional Republicans in the 1950s to require Senate approval of U.S. treaties, in large part to open up public debate about foreign affairs. The late Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a Democrat who served as representative to the U.N. for Republican President Richard Nixon, was also a severe critic of government secrecy and the habitual over-classification of state documents. These American statesmen knew that if foreign policy is crafted in secret, without the oxygen and sunlight of vigorous public debate, disaster and dysfunction would result.

For the past 10 years, we have had exactly such disaster and dysfunction as our foreign policy. Our leaders have plunged us into a dark world of secrecy and lies. Tell me: Is this Private Bradley Manning’s fault?

Let me be clear as I bring this opening statement to a close: for all the complexities this case holds, your job will in the end prove a simple and basic one. It’s your task not to let our leaders, or the prosecution, pin the horrendous state of affairs into which this country has been thrown on Pfc. Manning. I am confident that you will see him for the patriot he is, a young man with a moral backbone whose goal was not self-aggrandizement or profit or even attention and glory. His urge was to shine a bright light on his own country’s wrongdoing and, in that way, bring it, bring us, back to our nobler national traditions.

It is Pfc. Manning, not our fearless national leaders, who has sacrificed much to restore the rule of law and a minimal level of public oversight to American foreign and military policy. “Frankly and in the public view”: this once would have been called a reasonable description of the American character, something that set us apart from the Austro-Hungarian Empire, Otto von Bismarck’s Prussia, or Imperial Japan. Whether our government has any responsibility to conduct its affairs frankly and in the public view in 2011 and beyond -- this is something else you will decide in your judgment on Pfc. Manning.

As soldiers, you know well that most Americans have insulated themselves from the last decade’s foreign-policy disasters. Even as we spend a trillion dollars on foreign wars, our taxes are cut. If you’re making decent money, the odds are it’s not your kids, grandchildren, brothers, or sisters who are off fighting, killing, and dying in our foreign wars. Most Americans, thanks in part to the media, have little idea of what you and your peers have lived through, the weight you have shouldered.

This is not true of Pfc. Bradley Manning. He came face to face with this disaster. He saw, and participated in, the roundup of Iraqi civilians to be tortured by their own national police force. Tell me honestly: Was this what Operation Iraqi Freedom was supposed to accomplish? Is this why you, his jury of peers, enlisted in the military?

Pfc. Manning saw this misery and rampant illegality with his own two eyes, and then, online, he discovered more of the same -- much, much more -- and he did something about it, knowing full well the penalty. “I wouldn’t mind going to prison for the rest of my life, or being executed so much, if it wasn’t for the possibility of having pictures of me […] plastered all over the world press,” he confided to the informant who betrayed him. Manning knew the stakes and the risks when he leaked these documents, but still he loyally performed his duty, both to the United States Army and to his country.

As one of Manning’s childhood friends from Crescent, Oklahoma, has testified, “He wanted to serve his country.” It’s up to you to decide whether he did.

You have a duty as a fully informed jury of free citizens. You are not an assortment of rubber stamps pulled out of a judge’s desk drawer. You are as important a part of this court as the judge, prosecutor, and the accused himself.

Whichever way you decide in your verdict, you will not face the consequences Bradley Manning already endures, but your judgment will have great consequences, not just for him, but for the honor and future of the country you have taken an oath to serve.

Now, go and do your duty.

Chase Madar is an attorney in New York and a member of the National Lawyers Guild. He writes for TomDispatch, the American Conservative magazine, Le Monde Diplomatique, and the London Review of Books. (To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast video interview in which Chase Madar explores Manning’s case and his defense, click here, or download it to your iPod here.)

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Amnesty urges UK to intervene in Manning case

By RAPHAEL G. SATTER, Associated Press Feb 1, 2011

LONDON – Amnesty International called on British authorities to intervene
Tuesday in the case of the Army private accused of leaking material to the
secret-spilling website WikiLeaks amid claims that he is an
American-British dual national.

Pfc. Bradley Manning has been held at the Marine Corps brig in Quantico,
Virginia since last summer under conditions which his supporters describe
as punitive. Manning's case has attracted sustained attention in Britain
in part because his mother is Welsh, but some supporters now claim that
the 23-year-old holds British citizenship.

In a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press, Amnesty International's
U.K. Director Kate Allen said Manning's background meant that British
officials "should be demanding that the conditions of his detention are in
line with international standards."

Amnesty spokesman Neil Durkin cautioned that that did not mean the rights
group necessarily accepted that Manning was a U.K. citizen — merely that
it believed the U.K. government had a duty to get involved "should it be
established that he is British."

Manning was born in Oklahoma but he moved to Wales when his parents
separated.

His mother was born in the Welsh town of Haverfordwest in 1953, according
to government records cited by the Guardian newspaper Tuesday. The paper
quoted Alison Harvey, the head of the Immigration Law Practitioners'
Association in London, as saying that "that makes Bradley Manning
British."

Britain's Foreign Office declined comment, saying it couldn't release
information on an individual's nationality without their consent. An
e-mail and a phone call seeking comment from Manning's lawyer David E.
Coombs were not immediately returned.

On his website, Coombs says Manning is being kept in solitary confinement
23 hours a day, barred from having sheets or using a pillow, prohibited
from keeping personal items in his cell, and forced to respond to a
guard's queries every five minutes. Manning cannot exercise while in his
cell, and he must strip down to his underwear before going to bed. If
guards can't see him clearly when he's sleeping, he is woken.

Manning's case — and the restrictive conditions under which he is being
kept — have become the focus of international attention following
WikiLeaks' controversial publication of hundreds of thousands of secret
U.S. intelligence and diplomatic documents. Manning is suspected of being
the source of the leaked documents, although the charges against him are
narrower.

Brig officials claim Manning hasn't been treated differently from any
other inmate. But Coombs disputes that, noting that, unlike other
prisoners, Manning is being held as a maximum security prisoner and
subjected to "prevention of injury watch" against the advice of
psychiatrists.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

FBI serves 40 warrants in search of WikiLeaks 'hacktivists'

By Mark Seibel | McClatchy Newspapers Jan. 27, 2011

WASHINGTON — The FBI said Thursday that it had served more than 40 search
warrants throughout the United States as part of an investigation into
computer attacks on websites of businesses that stopped providing services
in December to WikiLeaks.

The FBI statement announcing the search warrants was the first indication
that the U.S. intends to prosecute the so-called "hacktivists" for their
actions in support of WikiLeaks.

The search warrants were executed on the same day authorities in Great
Britain announced that they had arrested five people in connection with
the attacks, which temporarily crippled the websites of Amazon.com,
PaylPal, MasterCard, Visa, the Swiss bank PostFinance and others.

FBI officials were unavailable for comment, and the statement did not say
who was served or where the searches were conducted. The statement noted
that attacks, known as distributed denial of service attacks and which use
easily available software to shutdown a computer network by flooding it
with millions of requests for information, violate federal law and are
punishable by a prison sentence of 10 years.

The statement noted that a group known as "Anonymous" had claimed credit
for the attacks. Anonymous is also believed responsible in recent days for
attacks on government websites in Tunisia and Egypt.

British news reports said three of the five arrested were teenagers, aged
15, 16 and 19, and that the others were 20 and 26 years old. Dutch police
last month arrested two teenagers suspected of involvement in the online
campaign.

The attacks were organized through social networking sites such as Twitter
in the days after WikiLeaks began publishing U.S. State Department cables
that apparently had been downloaded by an American Army private serving in
Iraq. Their first target was Amazon.com, which, at the behest of U.S. Sen.
Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., had stopped hosting the WikiLeaks website.

They spread to PayPal, MasterCard and Visa after those businesses declined
to process credit card payments destined to WikiLeaks.

PostFinance, a bank operated by Switzerland's postal service, also closed
an account that was registered to Julian Assange, WikiLeaks' founder. The
account number had been published on the WikiLeaks website with a
solicitation for donations. PostFinance said it closed the account because
Assange was not a resident of Switzerland, as Swiss law required.

The attacks did no long-term damage and in most cases only lasted a few
hours. But legitimate would-be users were unable to contact the sites
while the attacks were underway.

The FBI said it is working with several European governments and the
National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance (NCFTA) to identify the
source the attacks, which the FBI attributed to a type of software it
identified as "Low Orbit Ion Canon" tools. It said major anti-virus
programs had been updated to block such software.

Previously, the only known criminal investigation stemming from WikiLeaks'
publication of thousands of U.S. State Department cables was one that
seeks to tie WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange to Army Pfc. Bradley
Manning, who is suspected of providing the cables to the website. In
December, a federal magistrate in Alexandria, Va., issued a search warrant
to Twitter demanding the records of five of its users, including Assange
and Manning.

It was not known late Thursday whether those records had been surrendered.

Monday, January 10, 2011

WikiLeaks - The month that changed the war on information

by Wally Cuddeford Works in Progress Jan. 2011

On a cold night in 1971, a group known only as the "Citizens' Commission
to Investigate the FBI" drove up to the FBI field office in Media,
Pennsylvania, broke in, wheeled every last file cabinet into their trucks,
and drove off into the night. Over the next several months, the documents
(over 1000 of them) were anonymously mailed out to major press
organizations, and eventually they were printed en masse by the War
Resisters League. It was one of the most significant classified documents
leaks in U.S. history.

Many of the documents were labeled "COINTELPRO." At the time, all people
could tell was this was some sort of mysterious acronym for something, but
not what it stood for, or what its relevance was. Only through public
revelation of the documents, and ensuing revelations from other sources of
information, did it finally come out that "COINTELPRO" was short for
"Counter-Intelligence Program," and that it was the codename for the FBI's
dirty little secret.

While the Pentagon Papers get much of the credit for exposing government
malfeasance in Southeast Asia, the "COINTELPRO Papers" exposed the
extensive and highly illegal activity the FBI was engaged in domestically,
going back decades, to undermine the civil rights, labor and anti-war
movements. Not limiting themselves to mere spying on law-abiding activists
(illegal as that was), disinformation campaigns were used to actively pit
Black nationalist groups against each other, and to alienate them from
their support base. Paid infiltrators were sent to disrupt organizing
efforts, and false evidence was planted to secure convictions. Field
agents were even scolded for not misreporting their observations in such a
way as to justify more government repression of free assembly.

In the wake of these revelations, Congress formed the Church Committee to
investigate abuses of power by the FBI. Fundamental changes were proposed,
and some were implemented. COINTELPRO, by name, was discontinued (although
much of the same activities continued without the name). Most importantly,
the Freedom of Information Act was significantly expanded in the following
years (thanks in part to the COINTELPRO leak, as well as the Pentagon
Papers and the Watergate cover-up), to better enable open discovery of
government activity.

However, while the FoIA reaffirmed in written law the right of the public
to know what its government is up to (a position supported by the spirit
of the Constitution, if not the letter of it), like all
government-supervised sources of transparency, it was fundamentally
flawed. Government agencies themselves were at liberty to redact whatever
portions of whatever documents they deemed "sensitive." Often, applicants
would receive whole pages of endless black bars. And as it has since been
discovered, this privilege of secrecy has been abused to withhold
information not sensitive to "national security" (as it is commonly
defined), but information unflattering to individuals in power. Another
ironic flaw is that, while FoIA was expanded to address COINTELPRO, nobody
could have requested documents on COINTELPRO because nobody knew
"COINTELPRO" by that name even existed.

The actions of the Citizens' Commission were perfectly tailored to their
era. However, the rise of the surveillance state ensured that the days of
heisting your local FBI office had long since passed, or so it was
thought. But now, the growth of information technologies - many of which
are still largely undefined in their potential applications (as well as
their vulnerabilities) - has brought this era back, bigger than ever. And
while Daniel Ellsberg had to Xerox each and every one of the Pentagon
Papers by hand, now whistleblowers can download reams upon reams of
"sensitive" documents onto a small thumb drive in seconds (or, as in the
case of Bradley Manning, burn them onto a mock-up of a Lady Gaga CD).

As creative individuals and collectives continue to explore the potential
uses of the Internet and related technologies, thus shaping the face of
the still-budding Information Age, so too do they shape the landscape on
which wars of information are waged, and the tools and tactics with which
the battles are fought. And the last 30 days have been, perhaps, the most
pivotal 30 days ever in setting the tone for what's to come.

Proving ground

While WikiLeaks was not the first website to publish government documents,
it has come to define the genre. In April 2010, the site rose to
prominence through the release of the "Collateral Murder" video from 2007,
showing U.S. helicopter pilots in Iraq killing targets, civilians, and
even Reuters journalists indiscriminately. (Reuters had requested that
video through the FoIA, but was unsuccessful.)

In July, WikiLeaks published the "Afghan War Diary" - 75,000 documents
(with more pending) - which at the time was the largest ever leak of
classified government documents in U.S. history. In October, the release
of the 391,832-paper "Iraq War Logs" broke that record. And in November,
WikiLeaks broadened the scope, by releasing the first set of a
251,287-document cache of U.S. State Department communication cables. At
the current rate of about 80 documents a day, the "Diplomatic Cables"
releases will provide new revelations on geopolitics every week from now
through July 4, 2019. (Let's hope they find more vetting volunteers and
pick up that pace a little.)

More than the other releases, the Diplomatic Cables compelled our first
significant discussion on unauthorized publication of classified material
in the public sphere in decades. Having crossed that bridge, the future of
whistleblowing in the Information Age would depend on this one battle.
Would it be seen as dangerous and fruitless? Or would democracy and the
freedom of information prevail?

Public discourse

WikiLeaks quickly garnered a broad range of support, from people as
diverse as Daniel Ellsberg, Republican Congresspeople Ron Paul and Connie
Mack, and President of Venezuela Hugo Chavez. A staff editorial in the
Atlantic wrote, in part, "Wikileaks is a powerful new way for reporters
and human rights advocates to leverage global information technology
systems to break the heavy veil of government and corporate secrecy that
is slowly suffocating the American press." On the other hand, condemnation
of WikiLeaks by some has been sharp. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
said the release was "an attack on America's foreign policy" and "the
international community," while Congressperson Peter King said WikiLeaks
should be labeled a terrorist organization. Newt Gingrich called
WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange an "enemy combatant," and former Nixon
aide G. Gordon Liddy said Assange should be put on a "kill list."

As in many conflicts, when the first salvo was fired depends on your
perspective. Those who defend tyranny and government secrecy surely see
WikiLeaks' publication of these files as the opening volley against
authority, and the ensuing repression as an inevitable response. However,
for those of us who value accountability and courageous journalism, the
first shot was fired on December 1, when Amazon suspended service for
WikiLeaks hosting on its servers.

WikiLeaks had already been forced to relocate to Amazon from its original
hosting due to ongoing "denial-of-service" attacks, a phenomenon common to
politically-charged websites. But in dropping WikiLeaks, Amazon made it
clear the decision was not based on technical concerns. Instead, Amazon
cited a number of highly specious political arguments, including the
implication that human rights groups have condemned WikiLeaks' actions.
(In fact, only one human rights-related criticism has been levied - that
civilians' names may not be adequately redacted; otherwise, WikiLeaks
enjoys universal support from human rights groups, including awards.) The
world learned about Amazon's maneuver when Senator Joe Lieberman first
bragged that the company had dropped WikiLeaks, which it turns out
happened not long after one of his aides had contacted the company.

Amazon was the first domino in a chain of corporate isolation of
WikiLeaks. PayPal suspended WikiLeaks' account, claiming that they were
engaged in "illegal activity." The Swiss bank PostFinance followed suit,
and later on, Bank of America, MasterCard and Visa all announced they
would not process any transactions believed to be intended for WikiLeaks.
Apple removed a WikiLeaks application from its App Store. Even Tableau
Software withdrew WikiLeaks' license to use its graphing software. It was
also no secret that various world governments - including the United
States, China, France and Australia - were directly involved in efforts to
isolate WikiLeaks from online services.

The result was, successive channels of funding were all frozen, and
WikiLeaks had lost use of its trademark domain name "www.wikileaks.org."
These are the traditional tools of people in power in their war on
information: intimidate the source, divide them from their support base,
sever them from their resources, and lastly, suppress the service they
provide.

Although this was all very disappointing for WikiLeaks supporters
worldwide, it should come as no surprise. Corporations may be as
ubiquitous as the government, and often more powerful, but they've never
claimed to champion free speech - except for their own right to lie to the
public. Still, the justifications provided, that WikiLeaks' activity was
"illegal" or "subversive," and agents of the government pursuing this
isolation on those terms, is especially chilling. WikiLeaks is innocent,
if for no other reason, because they have not yet been proven guilty in
court. And unlike the Citizens' Commission, nobody is contending WikiLeaks
broke into any secured area to steal these files; the files were provided
to them, and having analyzed them, they've now begun providing them to the
public in accordance with the public's need to know, as respectable
journalists.

In the traditional venue, there was little ordinary people of good
conscience could do about these maneuverings. A lawsuit would take years,
and the burden of proof would be on the plaintiff. The law in a capitalist
society protects the right of corporations to provide their services
discriminately, even when an effective cartel prohibits access to those
services for someone across the board. The public good doesn't come into
that equation, especially when that public good is in stark contrast to
both government and private enterprise. Traditionally, the status quo is
mutually reinforcing.

However, this battle of information was far from "traditional."

Guerilla tactics

Concurrent to the fight for logistics, an innovative form of Internet
conflict was being waged. The primary weapon in this conflict was
"distributed denial of service," or DDoS. DDoS is an updated version of a
"black fax" campaign, in which the fax machine of an offending agency is
flooded with as many all-black faxes as possible. (Maybe some of those
fully-redacted FoIA documents were put to good use). With DDoS, several
hundred computers can simultaneously annoy a chosen website with as much
garbage data as possible, overloading their system. When enough computers
are involved, any website, no matter how high-profile or sophisticated,
can be made inaccessible.

For years, DDoS shutdowns have been used for commercial purposes - to shut
down competitors' websites, or in extortion schemes. But more recently,
DDoS has become a routine occurrence in the grassroots fight over Internet
piracy. The collectivist hacker group "Anonymous" has conducted several
DDoS attacks against the websites of the Motion Picture Association of
America, the Recording Industry Association of America, and the websites
of their lawyers, all in response to anti-piracy crackdowns. Anonymous has
also employed DDoS against white supremacist groups, the Church of
Scientology, Hustler, the U.S. Copyright Office, and various world
governments involved in Internet censorship.

As one member of Anonymous stated, "While we don't have much of an
affiliation with WikiLeaks, we fight for the same reasons. We want
transparency and we counter censorship. The attempts to silence WikiLeaks
are long strides closer to a world where we can not say what we think and
are unable to express our opinions and ideas."

Anonymous' established base of support was quickly mobilized to conduct
DDoS attacks against several websites suppressing WikiLeaks. Amazon was
shut down throughout Europe for close to an hour. (Amazon blamed this on
"hardware failure.") Visa was also shut down for close to 2 hours,
MasterCard for 7 hours, PayPal for 8 hours, and PostFinance for 11 hours.
The websites for the Swedish government and the Swedish prosecutor's
office were also shut down for several hours.

Unlike some other targets of Anonymous, none of these sites were actually
hacked into and altered, and none of their secure data was accessed, so
the attacks likely did not result in any significant financial
consequences in the long-term. Nonetheless, the message was much louder
than the cost, and that message was that the people do have power after
all.

While DDoS can be conducted through a coordinated popular campaign, as in
the case with Anonymous, it can also be done through exploitation of
others' resources. A malware program can be installed on someone's
computer, designed to silently conduct a function like DDoS without the
user's knowledge. This program could even be made to be self-replicating.
Thus, relatively few people could conduct DDoS operations using the
computer power of many, against their will. It's believed this method was
used for several DDoS strikes against WikiLeaks, both just prior to the
release of the diplomatic cables and just after.

Nothing is stopping Anonymous from engaging in this exploitive form of
DDoS as well. However, the targets they predominantly choose, and the fact
that they openly solicit volunteers to run the DDoS software consensually,
signify an ethos contrary to exploitation. On the other hand, nothing is
also stopping the U.S. military or other government agency from conducting
exploitive DDoS against WikiLeaks, though no evidence has yet surfaced to
prove they have.

While DDoS is effective in shutting down a centralized establishment, it's
ineffective against decentralized operations. An increased number of
targets requires exponentially more resources to effectively shut them all
down.

It was in this limitation that WikiLeaks found its solution. Just as
momentum was highest, both in the grassroots fight to save WikiLeaks and
the government campaign to shut them down, WikiLeaks organizers called on
its supporters worldwide to mass-mirror the site. Anyone could add a copy
of WikiLeaks to their own website, or set up a franchise (so to speak)
with a new URL. In two weeks time, over 2000 mirrors of WikiLeaks sprang
up across the Internet, and across the globe. These mirror-sites are
routinely updated by the central organizing core of WikiLeaks, independent
of its founder Julian Assange (who had been in jail during most of these
updates).

While this is old news to many, it bears consideration how this
complicates governments' war on free information. Everything about
WikiLeaks, outside of its trusted core of organizers, has now been
decentralized. And much the way wide distribution of their services over
thousands of locations has made WikiLeaks invulnerable to any future DDoS
shutdowns, their distribution over several hundred legal jurisdictions,
and several hundred webhosting services, has made them nearly invulnerable
to any concentrated government campaign - at least any campaign that won't
be immediately rebuked by the courts. Plus, while the services of
WikiLeaks have been decentralized, so too has their information cache,
protecting it from deletion as well.

It should be noted that this solution, while perfectly tailored to
WikiLeaks and other sources of free speech, would do little good to
businesses like PayPal or Amazon - not unless they want customers' credit
card numbers and personal information strewn across the web.
Mass-mirroring would also do little good for, say, the website of the
Swedish Prosecutor's Office, who is unlikely to garner the same upswell of
grassroots support. It's a tactic befitting popular resistance and freedom
of information, and one to which a high-tech response has yet to be
developed.

Meanwhile, the private sector has developed a response of its own.
E-retailers have begun taking out new insurance policies for
politically-motivated Internet attacks, thus insulating their profit
margins from what nominal financial consequences DDoS does inflict.

Hearts and minds

Where attacks on logistics aren't enough, and where technological
dominance fails to produce results, power turns its attention to the fight
for legitimacy. And with the mainstream media relying on government
spokespeople for the foundation of its coverage, WikiLeaks' opponents have
unmatched capacity to craft the dominant narrative.

A common method of discrediting someone is to define them solely by one
aspect of their operation, and then to characterize them as lacking depth.
WikiLeaks is a multi-purpose whistleblower site, and has published leaks
from various world banks and other private institutions, and is expected
to publish leaks from BP and Bank of America in 2011. All leaks have been
vetted prior to release. (In fact, WikiLeaks asked the State Department to
aid the vetting of the diplomatic cables, to ensure individuals were not
put at risk; the State Department declined their offer.) Yet, government
critics have labeled them as "anarchist" and "treasonous," and as having a
personal vendetta against government in particular.

Dismissal of the organization is supplemented with character assassination
of the individual. Open speculation by law enforcement as to whether
Assange can in fact be charged with anything at all has been spun into the
message that he's a "fugitive" and a "wanted criminal." This narrative has
been further fueled by the Swedish government's pursuit of Assange over a
rape allegation - a case which was considered closed right up until
Assange's political actions embarrassed government leaders, and they
needed something to charge him with. (If all these government officials
cared half as much about women's sovereignty as they opportunistically
claim to, we might see some real change as opposed to this circus.) At the
same time, while exerting pressure on companies to drop WikiLeaks aids the
fight over logistics, it also feeds into this narrative; if all these
companies say WikiLeaks is involved in "illegal activity," it must be
true.

There should be no mistake that the mischaracterizations, the repeated
references to "illegal activity," and the selective pursuit of rape
charges by law enforcement are all part and parcel of the information war,
every bit as much as political pressure and DDoS attacks. In many ways,
COINTELPRO was a concentrated campaign to isolate political threats by
delegitimizing them in the eyes of the very people who should be
supporting them. Many of the same tactics still work today, 40 years
later.

What wasn't around 40 years ago however, is the ubiquitous spin media
establishment. Instead of putting these events into the rich historical
context of whistleblowing and government secrecy, mainstream outlets
severed Wikileaks from that history altogether by portraying the
organization as a groundbreaking curiosity. Viewers were also riddled with
such vague philosophical questions as "Does this really count as
journalism?" That WikiLeaks cannot be significantly differentiated from
other recognized journalistic outfits (outside of a stated focus) doesn't
matter; just by asking the question repeatedly, the media calls WikiLeaks'
creditability unduly into question.

Fearmongering

Perhaps the most reliable tool of power and hierarchy is good old
fashioned fear. While the government cannot force the people to stop doing
as they will, a culture of fear ensures the people will police themselves.

In an effort to suppress the leaks, the Library of Congress has banned
access to WikiLeaks, and the Commerce Department has reminded its staff
that, as government employees, accessing the files is unauthorized.
Military personnel have been ordered not to visit the WikiLeaks website,
and the Education Department instructed students hoping for a career in
diplomacy not to read or discuss the WikiLeaks cables.

This position has puzzled even pundits on the side of government. As some
have argued, the information is already out there; if "our enemies" can
learn from it, why is the U.S. not allowing their own personnel to learn
from it the same? The answer is twofold. First, the so-called "strategic
value" of the documents is overblown; they don't reveal American
vulnerabilities as much as they reveal the criminal acts of these
employees' bosses, thus there's nothing the government would want their
employees to "learn from." Second, it's part of a broader attempt at
establishing the study, discussion, or dissemination of WikiLeaks as
"thoughtcrime." Since many working people rely on the government for their
living, that's a large swath of the population that can be forced to
self-police, and that sentiment will permeate further.

As for the rest of us, government is looking to go after the source, as
punishment, and to make an example. The CIA has formed the WikiLeaks Task
Force (or "WTF"), and a secret grand jury has reportedly been convened to
look into ways Assange can be convicted. Sen. Joe Lieberman and Rep. Peter
King also introduced the SHIELD Act in Congress, which would modify the
WWI-era Espionage Act to make it illegal for anyone to report "classified
information related to certain intelligence activities of the United
States." (The Act is currently in committee in both the House and Senate.)
It remains to be seen if such codified thoughtcrime would survive in the
courts on the basis of so-called "national security."

Meanwhile, on the electronic front, the government did to DDoS what it
does to all effective and irrepressible tactics of democratic
accountability - they made it arbitrarily illegal. In the United Kingdom,
the Police and Justice Act of 2006 specifically outlawed DDoS, with
violators potentially facing an excessive 10 years in prison for
participating in a DDoS attack. The U.S. is likely to pass similar
legislation in the near future.

The trump card

Usually, the combination of media spin, fearmongering, bullying and
collusion is enough for those in power to get what they want. But never
has an enemy of the state had a trump card quite like the one WikiLeaks
has. The entirety of the diplomatic cables, as well as unspecified future
releases, have all been compressed into one file, locked with a 256-key
encryption to prevent access. When the pressure first ramped up against
WikiLeaks, this file was distributed directly to supporters around the
world, then to anyone in the file-sharing world through bittorrent, and
later through the mass-mirror project. So it was declared, if anything
malicious happened to the WikiLeaks organization or to Julian Assange, as
a last resort the key to this file would be revealed, and the whole dump
of diplomatic cables would be released to the world, unredacted - as a
last resort.

It bears consideration just how the "insurance strategy" will change the
face of information war going forward. Information clearinghouses now have
the power to globally disseminate information in short order, perhaps even
surreptitiously, and yet withhold its announcement until that
dissemination is complete, thus eliminating the most vulnerable point in
the process. And unlike past leaks, which relied on major news
organizations to simultaneously print the news, and hence filter it (or
withhold it altogether), that information can be supplied directly to the
people. This is one example of new technologies (as well as new
applications for old techniques) democratizing the flow of information,
right before our eyes.

It's impossible to know how things would have played out differently if
WikiLeaks had not had this ace in the hole. Would the enemies of Julian
Assange have made good on their threats against him? Would governmental
abuse of power have crushed WikiLeaks in its infancy? All that can be said
for certain is, it would not be the first time U.S. law enforcement agents
broke all their own rules to meet their objective, allowing the courts
rebuke them years later, after the damage to free information had been
done. Finally, however, we the people have a freedom-of-information tactic
that even flippant dismissal of jurisprudence cannot address.

How the government responds in the future to this "insurance" tactic has
yet to be seen, as pro-establishment think tanks are, no doubt, trying to
think of ways to put genies back into bottles.

The delusions of the powerful

Recently, in Olympia, WA, the Army concluded their investigation into John
Towery, an employee of military intelligence who for years had infiltrated
anti-war groups under the name "John Jacob." However, the Army has decided
to withhold the results of their investigation, for now. The reason given
is because there's an ongoing lawsuit against the military for their
illegal spying. Translated, this literally means, "We're not letting you
have this information because it might make us - the military or
individuals in it - look bad, and it might get us in trouble." Never mind
that if this information helps the lawsuit succeed, then it should
succeed. Never mind that many of us not affiliated with the lawsuit have a
right to know. This, after the Army assured the public in this specific
case that "our goal is transparency."

This is just one example of how unchecked entitlement has made those in
power lose touch with reality. Over the last several years, with the
government's monopoly on information becoming more and more absolute,
abuses of power have become more extreme, while justifications have become
more transparent. Some of the released cables, including the one that
falsely claimed Cuba was suppressing Michael Moore's film Sicko, show how
the State Department has even taken to fooling itself - a very dangerous
thing to do. And yet, those in power always think they can get away with
more.

Until now, losing touch with reality hasn't caused their power to ebb,
because the old dirty tricks for suppressing dissent have worked just
fine. Successful strategies of suppression and bullying are
self-reinforcing. However, when such strategies fail, as we're now seeing,
the consequences for the bully are disastrous.

Panicked politicians are now flailing for an answer to WikiLeaks. Joe
Lieberman has suggested investigating the New York Times for violating the
Espionage Act, a course of action which is both unflattering and,
considering the Times' minimal involvement in reporting the leak,
ineffectual. Some lawmakers have even expressed what amounts to a
willingness to rip the Constitution to shreds, just to make this
defacement go away. All the while, day after day, breaking news on further
government attempts at suppression of free speech run concurrently with
breaking news of yet another scandal being revealed.

Assessing the aftermath

In the end, government was responsible for its own undoing. Their repeated
cover-ups of their own wrongdoings have convinced countless to side with
the exposer rather than the exposed. Their obsession with keeping secrets,
even unnecessary ones, resulted in the over-classification of documents,
meaning more people had to be given higher clearances, increasing the
chances that someone out there who doesn't see things in the same way is
given the key to the candy store. And as we have seen, the government's
attempts at suppressing the information - traditional and high-tech - have
only made the situation worse for them.

WikiLeaks has become stronger than ever. The original wikileaks.org domain
is back, and the money-transfer service XIPWIRE has since opened a
donation account for WikiLeaks and waived the service fee, replacing the
services cut off by PayPal and such. What once was one website has evolved
into a phenomenon, inspiring a number of spinoff sites including
OpenLeaks, TradeLeaks and EnviroLeaks. There can be no doubt that
WikiLeaks won this battle. And while there's a push to criminalize the
concept of WikiLeaks, there's enough support for WikiLeaks within the
halls of government, legal protection for whistleblower journalism, and
court precedent protecting the rights of journalists to keep that from
happening. Eventually the push for criminalization will fade as
unstoppable mega-leaks become more and more commonplace.

New events and new innovations will continue to shape the landscape of
information war in ways we cannot foresee. The most likely result, for us,
is that the pendulum of governmental power will begin to swing the other
way. These latest revelations, as damning as they are, are just the tip of
the iceberg. Much as it did in the wake of the Watergate cover-up, the
COINTELPRO revelations, and the Pentagon Papers, so-called "liberal
democracy" will have to make a number of concessions soon if it wants to
maintain the myth that we live in freedom, that the government is
answerable to the people, and that it has our best interests at heart.

Wally Cuddeford is an independent journalist, anti-war and social justice
activist, and a US Navy veteran. He's a lifelong resident of Olympia, WA.