Bradley Manning Hearing Shows Military Bosses More Concerned About Media Attention Than Manning's Conditions

from the but-of-course dept

Kevin Gosztola has been providing detailed updates on the latest Bradley Manning hearings, focused mainly on the conditions associated with the treatment of Manning after his arrest, and whether or not it amounted to “unlawful pretrial punishment” or involved reasonable precautions by the military. Specifically, as we had discussed, Manning was held in conditions that amounted to torture under key definitions of torture — held in “intensive solitary confinement” in total isolation, not allowed to have a pillow or sheets for his bed. Over 250 legal experts condemned his treatment and the State Department’s spokesperson even lost his job for saying publicly that Manning was being mistreated, and that it wasn’t productive.

The legal issue is that if this treatment was seen as punitive then that’s a problem. People can be held pre-trial, but they’re not supposed to be “punished” as part of the process. The Defense Department has been trying to claim that the treatment of Manning had to do with fears that he would harm himself, and the latest hearings were to figure out which version of the story is really accurate. The details look pretty damning for the Defense Department. For example, it appears that officials were more concerned about the media, not about Manning’s condition:

Going through emails, it came out that Lt. Gen. George Flynn, superior officer, was concerned with media and not Bradley Manning’s conditions. For example, when David House and Firedoglake editor-in-chief Jane Hamsher were harassed at the gate of Quantico, Flynn was in on this incident. He was up on what the public affairs planned to say to any questions from media on the incident. But, he was not up on weekly updates coming from officers in the brig.

Later, the same Lt. Gen. Flynn apparently got upset that the NYTimes had information on Manning’s mistreatment and he hadn’t been forewarned about the media situation:

Lt. Gen. Flynn was upset that he read about Manning standing outside his cell naked in the New York Times. “It would be good to have leadership have heads up on these things before they’re read in the early bird!” Lt. Col Flynn wrote in an email. The “early bird” is a military synopsis of various news stories/press releases.

And then there’s the fact that the “psychologist” relied on to assess Manning’s mental state… wasn’t actually a psychologist but a dentist. Huh?!?

Also, a “forensic psychiatrist” that the Brig was consulting was a Dentist. She didn’t really have qualifications as a psychologist. She was a doctor on staff there and they went to her for assessments on Manning’s condition.

On top of that, evidence was presented of guards joking about taking away Manning’s underwear in response to comments Manning had made. It certainly raises significant questions about why they were treating Manning this way and if it actually had anything to do with his own safety… or if they just liked taunting him.

One Quantico Brig officer (female) sent email where he joked about the removal of Manning’s underwear after comments he made on March 2, 2011. Here’s a version the press pool currently believes we heard read in court:

“As Dr. Seuss would say I can wear them in a box, I can wear them with a fox, I can wear them with socks. I can wear them in the day so I say. I can’t wear them at night. My comments gave the staff a fright.”

It is Green Eggs & Ham.

Coombs asked Choike if he believed joking about the underwear was something that an officer should have done. Choike then said something to the effect that he realized this could be brought up by Manning with his attorney and it might become “another media issue.”

Even if you think Manning violated the law, it seems pretty damning to see him treated this way pre-trial.

Separately, prior to the discussion about Manning’s conditions, the government officially opposed Manning’s attempt to plead guilty to certain lesser charges (as discussed earlier) in the hopes of speeding up the trial and getting potential leniency on some of the more serious charges. This issue more or less got tabled for procedural reasons, as Manning is still arguing that the government failed to provide a speedy trial and the court notes that if it excepts the plea, that would also waive the speedy trial issue. So, the court will handle the issue of whether or not the government failed to offer a speedy trial before taking on the plea issue.

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Comments on “Bradley Manning Hearing Shows Military Bosses More Concerned About Media Attention Than Manning's Conditions”

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108 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Manning was held in conditions that amounted to torture under key definitions of torture — held in “intensive solitary confinement” in total isolation, not allowed to have a pillow or sheets for his bed

I wonder how many people living in poverty in Third World countries do without pillows, sheets and even a bed? Sorry, I reject the notion that not having a pillow and sheets somehow equates to torture. That is simply absurd.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

“I wonder how many people living in poverty in Third World countries do without pillows, sheets and even a bed?”

So you admit that he is being subjected to unacceptable living conditions?

You know what’s funny? Even death row convicts get better living conditions. And they are “dead”!

What a screwed up country…

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Actually they can. And that is a reason that there are various groups ensuring that there are no substandard living conditions happening in America. Comparing substandard living conditions to every day living conditions in third world countries and then basically saying, “If those AIDS infected Africans can do without pillows then so can Bradley Manning” DOES NOT excuse his treatment or make it any less torture.

You also, sorry to say, have to take it into context with EVERY OTHER THING they are doing or have done to him while he has been in confinement. Solitary confinement with absolutely no human contact for extensive periods of time IS considered torture.

The problem with “torture” is that a lot of people think if you aren’t being physically brutalized day in and day out then you aren’t being tortured. I’d say you seem to fall into this category of people, those who think if Manning isn’t be physically brutalized then anything that happens is acceptable and not torture. Which is a shame.

btr1701 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

> Comparing substandard living conditions
> to every day living conditions in third
> world countries and then basically saying,
> “If those AIDS infected Africans can do
> without pillows then so can Bradley
> Manning” DOES NOT excuse his treatment
> or make it any less torture.

Leave the Africans out if it, then. Not having sheets or pillows is something our soldiers have to deal with on deployment in the field all the time. Are they being tortured?

If the troops in theatre can manage, it’s hardly torture for this guy to go without a pillow, for god’s sake.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

At some point he was classified as a suicide risk, which is likely why his bedding was removed. You also need to realize that the UCMJ is different than civilian law. And military detention is different than the county lockup. When you’re sentenced in the military, it’s not simply to incarceration. It’s to “hard labor”. Meaning that you literally may be making small rocks out of large ones, day in and day out for your entire sentence. Just as the military life is harsher and more demanding than civilian life, so is the prison experience.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

Don’t be so ingenuous. When the authorities in control of the situation taunt, torment, and torture someone into a sarcastic (or possibly even real) suicide-related verbalization and then use it as a patently “concern troll” removal of his bedding, it’s torture. And when it’s obvious the authorities in control of the situation are freaked out by the idea that the press is going to get the real scoop on what’s going on and do everything they can to keep the situation opaque rather than transparent, you can tell they *know* darned well it’s torture.

btr1701 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

> When they are enforced upon a person
> by an authority which can easily provide
> adaquate living conditions they are.

No, they’re not. The legal definition of torture has never been so ridiculously expanded.

They could also easily provide Manning with a Blu-Ray player and a library of movies. The fact that they don’t isn’t torture, either.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

18 USC ? 2340 – Definitions

As used in this chapter?
(1) ?torture? means an act committed by a person acting under the color of law specifically intended to inflict severe physical or mental pain or suffering (other than pain or suffering incidental to lawful sanctions) upon another person within his custody or physical control;
(2) ?severe mental pain or suffering? means the prolonged mental harm caused by or resulting from?
(A) the intentional infliction or threatened infliction of severe physical pain or suffering;
(B) the administration or application, or threatened administration or application, of mind-altering substances or other procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or the personality;
(C) the threat of imminent death; or
(D) the threat that another person will imminently be subjected to death, severe physical pain or suffering, or the administration or application of mind-altering substances or other procedures calculated to disrupt profoundly the senses or personality; and
(3) ?United States? means the several States of the United States, the District of Columbia, and the commonwealths, territories, and possessions of the United States.

Yes… yes it is torture…

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Just because there exist populations of people who are subject to a condition doesn’t mean it’s not torture. There are vast numbers of people starving daily, people suffering from medical conditions that are readily treatable. I personally saw a man who had frozen to death on a sidewalk.

If you intentionally inflict any of these things on another human being, that’s absolutely torture. That people suffer them unintentionally doesn’t enter into it.

FuzzyDuck says:

Re: Re:

“I wonder how many people living in poverty in Third World countries do without pillows, sheets and even a bed? Sorry, I reject the notion that not having a pillow and sheets somehow equates to torture. That is simply absurd.”

Yeah because all poor people in the 3rd world are also kept in isolation cells for 23 hours a day and permitted only 1 hour of exercise in another cell each day.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Funny then, that for all the screaming about him acting treasonous, they have yet to actually bring him to trial over his actions.

If it was even close to that cut and dried, the court-case would have been long over with by now, but instead they’ve been treating him worse than even death row inmates are.

Why, it’s almost as thought they know they don’t have enough to actually get a conviction, or worry that some ‘inconvenient’ facts might come to light during the case, and so are putting the guy through hell like this just so he’ll be willing to agree to any plea bargain they offer just to avoid going back.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Execute him for what? They refuse to charge him with anything! That’s how it’s supposed to work here in the US: you charge someone with something, try them, find them guilty, and only then are you allowed to execute them.

The activity you’re suggesting is seen in all the better banana republics, which I wish you’d stop trying to turn my country into, my little chicken-hawk.

out_of_the_blue says:

No, doesn't matter how military viewed it: absolutely was punitive.

“The legal issue is that if this treatment was seen as punitive then that’s a problem.”

Get based in common law. The facts are that Manning was held in highly unusual conditions that meet a definition of torture, and that’s final: we can’t let criminals in the military weasel. Lies and legalisms to avoid responsbility are precisely the problem. The military every day makes decisions to kill people, absolutely black and white, so don’t let ’em claim this easy area is at all gray.

Reach a decision, Mulling Mike. Can’t you even agree here with “250 legal experts”? One of your biggest flaws is hemming and hawing as if equally afraid of being right or wrong. It undercuts even when I want to commend you for this re-write.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: No, doesn't matter how military viewed it: absolutely was punitive.

So it’s ok for members of the millitary to torture, kill and murder innocent people but then that same millitary then holds someone captive in dire conditions. That guy over in Norway who killed all those people is being treated way better then this Manning but tha’s all ok to you!

Anonymous Coward says:

There are many things happening in the US that make me think “regime” not “republic”. Many judicial decisions, law enforcement practices and comments and actions from the DoJ, DHS etc. in seemingly harmless areas like copyright, patent law or school administration are obviously terribly dangerous. “Land of freedom”? Good one, tell another! I really don’t know if anyone in the USA still believes this, but here in Europe, your image is anything but. Depending on who you ask (and I only talk about normal people here, not anyone with a special anti-American bee in their bonnet), the USA is alternately associated with insanity (million dollar awards for hot coffee, legal fights over pets in microwave ovens), militaristic war-mongering (middle east), religous fundementalists (intelligent design, homophobic discrimination) or one of the most dangerous, silent and secretive emerging opressive regimes on the planet (Bradley Manning, attacks on civil liberties from copyright maximalists, law enforcement, intelligence agencies and educational institutions).

Which is bad enough in and of itself, but things like data espionage via the patriot act on foreign data (because most major digital services belong one way or another to an American company), the ongoing arrogant attempts to enact and enforce US law on the souvereign territory of other nations (O’Dwyer, Megaupload) and meddlings in foreign politics (UK/Swedish Assange drama, Spanish copyright law, TPP/ACTA/CETA) combined with absolutely no respect for even their own laws evident in your law enforcement, executive branch and even parts of your courts (Megaupload, Manning)… that makes you dangerous to us. An enemy to be wary of.

And it worries me alot that even though Americans I have any kind of personal contact to, even one as superficial as reading their blogs, generally seem opposed to those developements and wary of them, too, but there is absolutely no sign of any of this awareness and wariness in your government, military, courts and law enforcement. Ok, there is some, but… like drops in the sea. Meaningless. And if people around here go on a rant about those insane/idiotic/paranoid/fascist/megalomaniac Americans it gets ever harder to argue against that, because if I tell them again and again “You got it wrong, the people are allright, it’s just their country that’s nuts” it sounds stupid even to me. How can a country full of normal, sensible people be at the same time a dangerous, agressive, hostile nation? If people talk about democratic states based on a fair and equal rule of law around these parts, noone includes the USA anymore. And the threat from this worries me far more that a hundred hijacked planes and explosive stuffed cars ever could. Because terrorists just threaten my life, but regimes threaten my freedom.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Fair enough, as in the US many Europeans are regarded as feckless socialists- who are by and large lazy, incompetent and fiscally irresponsible. Unwilling and afraid to confront aggression, much less international terrorism you cower in the corner begging the US military to do the heavy lifting for you, including in your many failed former colonies. While the US has many flaws, it is still the country that most people seek to emigrate to. Perhaps they know something you don’t.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I would rather deal with the international terrorism than have the US military doing the “heavy lifting”. Yea, a few extremists have managed to set off a few bombs… they managed to hijack a couple of planes. Do you honestly believe that you’ve made it any safer in the world?

No all you’ve really done is made things more difficult for the average person. The US is like a bad example of DRM. They push for heavier restrictions in the name of public safety and good intentions. Sadly all they manage to do is inconvenience those that are innocent of any wrong doing.

The international community should collectively be telling the US to F off, unfortunately no one trusts that such a move wouldn’t result in a large number of nuclear missiles being launched in retaliation. The sooner the US crumbles upon itself to refind it’s own roots, the better off the rest of the world will be.

I welcome the few terrorists and all the risks that entails over tyranny of the US military

Dionaea (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

I recently decided against applying for a job in Florida which I’d probably have gotten, since the person doing the hiring asked me whether I’d be interested. Why? Because of everything AC stated. I don’t want to go to your country and get sued for millions of dollars for having done something which is legal here. Perhaps I know something they don’t.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

“…lazy, incompetent, and fiscally irresponsible”. Sounds like you just described the US government.

“…it is still the country that most people seek to emigrate to. Perhaps they know something you don’t”. Perhaps I know something THEY don’t. A lie is a lie no matter how many people believe it. I don’t believe the hype.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

I completely fail to see what your generalizing insults to Europeans have to do with anything I wrote about. What worries me is not some personal flaw in Americans, but the ample signs of a corrupt and oppressive governement that is just as dangerous to it’s own people as to anyone else. I explicitly stated that the actions of the USA as a country and it’s citizens as people seem totally alien to each other from my view point. And while your rant about Europeans consists of unfounded insults, my worries about the USA stem from well documented problems, documented by Americans themselves I might add. Because of all that, don’t be surprised if I judge your answer as generally trollish 🙂

Anonymous Coward says:

and the ‘free world’ were of the opinion that The Gestapo disappeared at the end of WWll! regardless of what he did, or what he is accused of doing, he should be treated like a human being! what the hell is wrong with governments today? millions died to remove the tyranny associated with Fascism and keep freedom as the main advantage of the democratic world. now look what we have. people being treated worse than scum, locked up with no clothes, no contact other than with prison guards, every ounce of dignity taken away. as a society, it seems to me that we are back peddling to the days of the cave man!

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Solution long lost

As a veteran, I’d say the reason he is in the predicament is because the soldier *did* the right thing.

It takes a lot of balls for one person to throw his life away to stop injustice. We can bicker all day long on if he released too much information, but if I were in his position, I’d also be more likely to grab more information than was needed to shed light on the situation, than too little– because I’m sure he knew he was going to jail, regardless.

There is a difference between loving one’s country, and loving one’s government.

The fact that you’d already tried and sentenced him in your mind, before was given his constitutionally guaranteed rights, makes *you* less of a patriot than him.

He has my full support. All patriots do.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Solution long lost

You know what, The Infamous Joe? I truly find your comment insightful. I know a number of people who have served in the military and a number who are still serving, and the hatred I’ve seen and comments they’ve made about Manning and Assange has truly bothered me.

And your comment has reaffirmed my belief that not all those in service of the country are “bad” people. I put that in quotes because I don’t mean bad, I just mean that way too many have a mindset which I find truly disturbing given that these are people we are arming and putting in the position of fighting for and defending our rights. And the mindset seems to be with a majority that questioning the government is the same as saying you hate America. Or, “If you don’t like it, you can get the f*ck out.” Another comment I’ve seen way too often on various forums and sites when it comes to Manning/Assange. Is that what we’ve come to? Questioning or taking issue with his treatment means we don’t deserve to live in this country? If anything, such thinking is as un-American and far from patriotic as you can get. In my opinion that is.

And while the military might have a different way of doing things from civilian courts, I think it goes without saying that locking someone up and doing so in a manner that some see as torturous goes against the founding ideals of this country and in no way should it be seen as acceptable/okay. No matter what the crime may be. Or better and more correctly said, ALLEGED crime may be. If things truly were as cut and dry as they’re being made out to be, a trial would be pretty straight forward and determining Manning’s guilt would require no effort. The fact that he still hasn’t had one says a lot more to me than anything about how not cut and dry things are.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Solution long lost

You obviously have no concept of the conditions that existed in this country’s prisons and jails when the Eighth Amendment was written. By the standards that existed at the time the men who wrote and ratified the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment, Manning is living at the Hilton. Sorry about his blanky.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Solution long lost

I actually do have such a concept, I also have been incarcerated (for a few days) myself and have a significant portion of one side of my family living in prison. And while things have come a long way from how they used to be, that DOES NOT excuse what has been done to Bradley Manning. Saying, “He’s got it made compared to how things used to be,” DOES NOT excuse his treatment.

The fact that you, a self admitted veteran, are saying the things you’re saying is rather disheartening. But of course, I’m sure if the shoe was on the other foot, you’d just grin and bear it, right? (I highly doubt you would.)

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Solution long lost

Questioning or taking issue with his treatment means we don’t deserve to live in this country? If anything, such thinking is as un-American and far from patriotic as you can get. In my opinion that is.

In my opinion also. Questioning authority is one of the MOST patriotic actions a US citizen can do.

“It is the first responsibility of every citizen to question authority.” ― Benjamin Franklin

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Solution long lost

Chain of command? More often than not, that exists solely to obfusticate the processes of getting anything done. Almost literally, shit will flow down from the top until it all settles at the bottom with no place else to go. Sergeant Major treats the Lieutenants like garbage, Lieutenants treat the Sergeants like pond scum, Sergeants treat the Privates like some forbidden plague. The chain of command is no more than a procedure to make sure those at the bottom always get the shit end of the stick.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Solution long lost

I wonder what branch you served in?

“I, XXXXXXXXXX, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the same; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me, according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military Justice. So help me God.”

Which article of the Constitution do you claim is violated?

Gwiz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Solution long lost

….is contending that the US Constitution is conclusive on foreign soil?

I would argue that the Constitution does protect anyone and everyone who has dealings with the US government, regardless of citizenship.

The Constitution doesn’t apply to a person or groups of people at all, per se. It only grants and denies power to the US government itself. The wording of the document uses “people” instead of “citizens” and is not limited only to citizens in any way. Therefore the Constitution is applicable everyone who has dealings with the US government.

This simple fact seems to be overlooked or purposely misinterpreted in this day and age because it would mean that the foreign nationals being held and tortured at Gitmo and other places would have Constitutional protections of due process and a speedy trial. And that’s not even considering at the Constitutional implications of torturing prisoners.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Solution long lost

I’m not sure I understand your point, but I’ll try… I’m assuming that by “douchenozzle” you mean me?

First, yes, the US Constitution constrains the actions of the US government everywhere on the planet when dealing with people of any nationality, not just on US soil or when dealing with US citizens. This is not even remotely incompatible with thinking that the US overreaches in applying US law to other countries.

But, in any case, I was not commenting about whether or not Manning was correct in his beliefs. I’m only saying that if those were his beliefs, then he was acting honorably and in accordance with his oath, even if he’s wrong in those beliefs.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Solution long lost

“”You know what the chain of command is? It’s the chain I go get and beat you with until you understand who’s in ruttin’ command here.” ―Jayne Cobb

That’s essentially the argument you’re bringing to the table. Follow orders and do as you’re told or you’ll get it. That’s not an argument, nor is it validation that Manning was in the wrong.

And as was pointed out during the Nuremburg trials, “I was following orders,” is NOT an acceptable excuse. Saying Manning should just have done what he was allowed to is the same thing. If there is a wrong being done, regardless of any oaths taken, it is the duty of EVERY American citizen, be they in uniform or not, to make sure the people find out.

Since I’m quoting scifi might as well go with the gem, “The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.” And sorry to say, but contrary to what some like you might have us believe, no legitimately harmful information was ever revealed. That any was revealed at all, contrary to any oaths or orders taken/issued by/to Manning is irrelevant.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Solution long lost

He says he did. (Found via this post.)

02:35:46 PM) Manning: was watching 15 detainees taken by the Iraqi Federal Police? for printing ?anti-Iraqi literature?? the iraqi federal police wouldn?t cooperate with US forces, so i was instructed to investigate the matter, find out who the ?bad guys? were, and how significant this was for the FPs? it turned out, they had printed a scholarly critique against PM Maliki? i had an interpreter read it for me? and when i found out that it was a benign political critique titled ?Where did the money go?? and following the corruption trail within the PM?s cabinet? i immediately took that information and *ran* to the officer to explain what was going on? he didn?t want to hear any of it? he told me to shut up and explain how we could assist the FPs in finding *MORE* detainees?(emphasis mine)

I’m going to assume you’re on Team Manning, now, yes?

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Solution long lost

Holy shit. Bravo Zulu, my friend. I honestly thought you were more than a troll, but I refuse to believe any human is so dense as to not be able to connect these dots. If his CO slapped him down once for trying to bring up something he felt wasn’t right, you think he should continue to bring things to his CO? I’d call that a break down of his chain of command. Everything after that is whistle blowing.

10/10, troll. You had me hook, line, and sinker.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Solution long lost

It is a CHAIN of command. Stopping at your platoon leader (a first or second lieutenant) is not exactly a stunning example of due diligence. He could easily taken this all the way to battalion level. You know that if you served. Stop pretending to be an idiot to score a point.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Solution long lost

A democratic society does not jail people for political dissent. Since all parties involved claim to be democratic, I think the right action would be to go my CO. Which he did.

The wrong action is to be told to shut up and find more people exercising free speech for the IFP to jail.

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7 Solution long lost

I feel like we’re arguing different things.

It doesn’t matter what incident he’s charged with; The question is whether he is a “leaker” or a “whistle blower”. Since he went to his CO with concerns and was told to get back in line, he is, in my mind, a whistle blower, which affords him several protections. (Like, not being in jail.)

The Infamous Joe (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:9 Solution long lost

So, how many people should he have to go through before he’s justified? Two? Five? Should he have just have cut to the chase and called the President?

He went to someone in charge and said “I think this is wrong.” and that person, in charge of him, said “Shut up and find more people to oppress.”

I feel like you wouldn’t have even said anything– I mean, Iraq isn’t a real democracy, so who gives a fuck if some brown people go to prison for looking into government corruption, right? They’re not ‘mercuns, so they don’t deserve the rights we claim “all men” should have.

Sometimes breaking the law is the moral and just action.

art guerrilla (profile) says:

Re: Re: Solution long lost

THANK YOU!

you sound like one of the few -like manning- who put basic morality and human decency first, rather than abject obeisance to authority figures…

it has ALWAYS bothered me that SUPPOSEDLY any/all military members are SUPPOSED to question or refuse to obey illegal/immoral orders, and yet that almost NEVER happens: we have atrocities by the score (of which i’m certain we only ever hear about a small percentage), we commit war krimes on a daily basis, we violate our own -and international- laws as a matter of course, but NO ONE ever speaks out…

but the FACT of the matter is, you are conditioned by the military to follow orders WITHOUT question, no matter what… theoretical objections over legality or morality are ignored or vilified… the few like manning who dare to question such illegal actions are demoted, railroaded, or otherwise harassed into silence…

they give lie to their so-called ‘honor’ and ‘duty’ by their actions which are 180 degrees from those values…

our forefathers had it right: NO STANDING ARMIES…
(no sitting ones, either!)
if you have an army, you ARE going to use it, doesn’t matter if it is ‘necessary’ or not…

art guerrilla
aka ann archy
eof

btr1701 (profile) says:

Huh?

> Lt. Gen. Flynn was upset that he
> read about Manning standing outside
> his cell naked in the New York Times.
> ?It would be good to have leadership
> have heads up on these things before
> they?re read in the early bird!? Lt.
> Col Flynn wrote in an email.

So is Flynn an LTC or an LTG? Kinda hard to take a media outlet seriously when it can’t report basic stuff like this correctly.

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