Supporters in more
than 40 cities take action for Bradley Manning
July 26, demonstrators marched and
blocked the gates of Ft. McNair, in Washington D.C.,
at the office of Maj. Gen. Jeffrey S. Buchanan,
Convening Authority for WikiLeaks whistleblower
Bradley Manning’s trial. They carried a large
painted version of the van from the Collateral
Murder video released by Bradley Manning, a 30 foot
U.S. Constitution bearing a classified stamp, and
both balloons and a 20-foot banner inscribed with
the message, "Maj. Gen. Buchanan, Do the Right Thing.
Free Bradley Manning."
The event immediately followed
closing arguments for the guilt vs. innocence phase
of Manning’s legal proceedings, during which the
defense argued that Manning is a whistleblower who
rightly recognized the problem of unreasonable
government secrecy.
Today, July 27, activists in dozens
of cities across the world are rallying in
solidarity with the Ft. McNair protesters, as part
of an International Day of Action for Manning.
Campaign Organizer Emma Cape, with
the Bradley Manning Support Network, explained the
significance of the movement to support Manning: "It’s
time we reclaim the word ‘patriot.’ The kind of
patriot we need today is not someone who defends all
of our country’s history and actions, it’s someone
willing to stand up for our country’s future, taking
risks to ensure it’s a just one. Bradley Manning is
such a person." Also speaking at the event were
activists from Yemen and Iraq, veterans who served
in Iraq and Vietnam, and a representative from the
U.S. Peace Memorial Foundation, which awarded
Manning its 2013 Peace Prize.
Manning faces a potential life
sentence for releasing hundreds of thousands of
classified military and diplomatic documents to
WikiLeaks because he wanted to promote "debates,
discussions and reforms" of U.S. foreign policy. He
has pled guilty to mis-handling classified
information, which carries up to a 20-year sentence,
but he faces life in prison on charges of aiding the
enemy, espionage, computer fraud, and federal theft.
Maj. Gen. Buchanan is the new
commander for the Military District of Washington,
so he’s the Convening Authority in Manning’s court
martial. He will review the case as soon as the
trial concludes, and he has the power to reduce any
potential sentence Manning receives. Supporters of
Manning hope Maj. Gen. Buchanan will take into
consideration the numerous deprivations of the young
private’s due process rights, including the fact
that Manning was held in torturous solitary
confinement for nearly a year and detained for three
years before his trial began.
Military judge Col. Denise will
deliver a final verdict and the sentencing phase
will begin, with new witnesses, evidence, and
arguments. (Global Research)
Manning convicted on 19 of 21
charges - Acquitted of aiding the enemy
July 30, U.S. Army Pfc. Bradley
Manning was convicted of 19 charges, including
espionage and theft, but acquitted of aiding the
enemy - the most serious charge he faced.
The military judge hearing the case,
Army Col. Denise Lind, deliberated for about 16
hours over three days before reaching her decision
in a case that drew worldwide attention as
supporters hailed Manning for exposing the Army's
conduct.
"We won the battle, now we need to
go win the war," David Coombs, Manning’s attorney
said of the sentencing phase which will begin
shortly. "We're not celebrating," the attorney said.
"... His sentence is all that really matters."
Manning faces up to 136 years in
prison.
Wikileakes founder Julian Assange
condemned the ruling saying that the U.S. soldier,
who prosecutors claim supplied WikiLeaks with
hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. documents,
did not receive a fair trial and called for the
verdict to be overturned.
"The government kept Bradley Manning
in a cage, stripped him naked and isolated him in
order to break him, an act formally condemned by the
United Nations Special Rapporteur for torture. This
was never a fair trial," Assange said from inside
the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, his home for more
than a year. (DPA/EFE/RT)