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Kucinich: Does Treatment of Pfc. Bradley Manning Constitute ‘Cruel and Unusual’ Treatment?
WASHINGTON - Congressman Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) yesterday wrote to Defense Secretary Robert Gates asking for information about reports that the Army ignored evidence of the mental health problems of Pfc. Bradley Manning, the soldier accused of leaking classified information to WikiLeaks. Kucinich also asked for confirmation and explanation of reports that the Army is holding Pfc. Manning in conditions that would likely exacerbate his condition and could contribute a violation of the his Eighth Amendment right of protection from ‘cruel and unusual' punishment.
The full text of the letter follows.
February 2, 2011
The Honorable Robert M. Gates
Secretary of Defense
1400 Defense Pentagon
Washington, DC 20301
Dear Secretary Gates:
This morning, The Washington Post reported that Pfc. Bradley J. Manning, the Army intelligence analyst who is accused of being the source of the WikiLeaks documents, was known by the Army to have had mental health problems even before his deployment to Iraq. "At Fort Drum, Manning balled up his fists and screamed at higher-ranking soldiers in his unit...." A "mental health specialist" recommended that he not be deployed to Iraq, "but his immediate commanders sent him anyway...."
In Iraq, evidence of his mental health problems accelerated. "[A] master sergeant who supervised Manning was so concerned about the private's mental health that he disabled Manning's weapon in December 2009...." "[I]n May 2010, Manning was demoted a rank for assaulting a fellow soldier...."
The Army ignored Private Manning's mental health problems before he was arrested for leaking the documents to WikiLeaks, and the consequences of that disinterest are now obvious. Since his arrest, the Army has reportedly treated Private Manning in a way that is almost certain to exacerbate his mental health problems.
In December 2010, Glenn Greenwald reported on the conditions of Private Manning's confinement at the Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia:
Since his arrest in May, Manning has been a model detainee, without any episodes of violence or disciplinary problems. He nonetheless was declared from the start to be a "Maximum Custody Detainee," the highest and most repressive level of military detention, which then became the basis for the series of inhumane measures imposed on him.
From the beginning of his detention, Manning has been held in intensive solitary confinement. For 23 out of 24 hours every day -- for seven straight months and counting -- he sits completely alone in his cell. Even inside his cell, his activities are heavily restricted; he's barred even from exercising and is under constant surveillance to enforce those restrictions. For reasons that appear completely punitive, he's being denied many of the most basic attributes of civilized imprisonment, including even a pillow or sheets for his bed.... For the one hour per day when he is freed from this isolation, he is barred from accessing any news or current events programs.
In sum, Manning has been subjected for many months without pause to inhumane, personality-erasing, soul-destroying, insanity-inducing conditions of isolation similar to those perfected at America's Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado: all without so much as having been convicted of anything. And as is true of many prisoners subjected to warped treatment of this sort, the brig's medical personnel now administer regular doses of anti-depressants to Manning to prevent his brain from snapping from the effects of this isolation.
On January 3, 2011, the Psychologists for Social Responsibility issued an "Open Letter" in which they protested the conditions of Private Manning's incarceration "based on the exhaustive documentation and research that have determined that solitary confinement is, at the very least, a form of cruel, unusual and inhumane treatment in violation of U.S. law." Their Open Letter quotes extensively from the findings of Dr. Craig Haney, "a psychologist and expert in the assessment of institutional environments...."
Empirical research on solitary and supermax-like confinement has consistently and unequivocally documented the harmful consequences of living in these kinds of environments . . . Evidence of these negative psychological effects comes from personal accounts, descriptive studies, and systematic research on solitary and supermax-type confinement, conducted over a period of four decades, by researchers from several different continents who had diverse backgrounds and a wide range of professional expertise... [D]irect studies of prison isolation have documented an extremely broad range of harmful psychological reactions. These effects include increases in the following potentially damaging symptoms and problematic behaviors: negative attitudes and affect, insomnia, anxiety, panic, withdrawal, hypersensitivity, ruminations, cognitive dysfunction, hallucinations, loss of control, irritability, aggression, and rage, paranoia, hopelessness, lethargy, depression, a sense of impending emotional breakdown, self-mutilation, and suicidal ideation and behavior.
To summarize, there is not a single published study of solitary or supermax-like confinement in which non-voluntary confinement lasting for longer than 10 days where participants were unable to terminate their isolation at will that failed to result in negative psychological effects.
Today's article states that the Army actually recognized that Private Manning had mental health problems, but deployed him to Iraq anyway. Once he was in Iraq, the Army reportedly did not adequately supervise him and allowed his mental health problems to fester. His sergeant recognized that Manning's mental health was so compromised that he took the unusual step of disabling Manning's weapon in a war zone.
Now, reports indicate that the Army has taken Pfc. Manning, a soldier with documented mental health problems, and confined him under conditions that are almost guaranteed to exacerbate his mental health problems. If true, the Army's treatment would obviously constitute "cruel and unusual punishment" in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
If these reports are true, the Army must end the extreme conditions of Private Manning's confinement, and provide him with the mental health treatment that the Army recognized he needed even before his deployment to Iraq. At the very least, the Army must explain the justification for confining someone with mental health problems under conditions that are virtually certain to exacerbate those problems and explain the danger he now presents that only these extreme conditions of confinement can avoid.
I look forward to your response.
Sincerely,
Dennis J. Kucinich
Member of Congress
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124 Comments so far
Show AllThank you Dennis for having the balls to do thjis. Shame on ALL you others there in Congress that have sold your soul. May you rot in hell, if there is such a place.
Yes, in addition to being a "model detainee" Manning is a model of what happens to those who believe Obama's promise to be transparent while ignoring Team Obama's ongoing efforts to stifle transparency except when they are sued for not being transparent.
TODAY FEB 3 IS NATIONAL CALL-IN DAY TO WHITE HOUSE TO PROTEST MANNING'S TREATMENT AT QUANTICO. I KNOW IT'S LATE IN THE DAY SORRY.
Kucinich is right to look for answers about the U.S. Military abuse of Manning...in addition to the U.S. Military's use of highly illegal torture on detainees, the abusive treatment of Manning shows our nation's military needs major reform if its human rights record is going to pass the smell test.
Oaxaca sez: "May you (congresspersons) rot in hell, if there is such a place."
***
It seems Kucinich's entire letter is about such a place.
While I'm glad to see a member of Congress finally speaking up for Bradley Manning (what took you so long?), I'm disturbed by Kucinich's acceptance of the government's contention that Manning was apparently "mentally ill" even before he was placed at Quantico. I've always considered these allegations about Manning's mental state in Iraq to be a government smear campaign against Manning and an attempt to discredit him. When I previously read about Manning allegedly shaking his fists and screaming at military officers, I thought to myself: hmm, could it be that Manning was OUTRAGED by what we were doing over there? Maybe that would explain that incident. Does being outraged at our country's immoral conduct make one mentally ill?
I'm also disturbed by this labeling of Manning as mentally ill because the government will use it as an excuse to (continue to) place Manning on suicide watch and in "protective custody" supposedly to prevent him from harming himself (but in reality, as a means of torturing him in solitary confinement and employing tactics such as depriving him of a blanket and waking him up every five minutes, just to "make sure he's okay."). Kucinich should also know better than to trust anything the Washington Post has to say.
Well stated, anne, and thanks for giving my flying fingers a chance to merely type "what she said". ;)
Heck, arguably half the people in this country are nuts--or so it seems. The actual number may be higher...
The upside to public recognition of the possibility of Manning's being off balance is that any statements he might make in future legal proceedings would be considered the statements of a mad man, for lack of a better word.
True enough. I think it's time that we consider how the label "mentally ill" can be and has been and is still, apparently, used politically. The idea that the military is "protecting" Manning is absurd--they are destroying him through well-known torture techniques, solitary confinement and disrupting circadian rhythms. And I'd still like to know what "anti-depressants" they are using to counter their torture of him, as the line between anti-depressants and neuroleptics--a well-known torture device--is blurring in psychiatry.
I've lost all hope in Kucinich.
Elizabeth, I'd also like to know what "antidepressants" they're giving him. I just read that Manning's friend, David House, who visited Manning at Quantico this past weekend, described Manning as essentially "catatonic." While I'm no mental health expert, I've seen the disastrous effects when prison officials inject prisoners with psychotropic medications or, alternatively, withhold medications that might help them because the prisoners are supposedly feigning mental illness. It's probably a safe bet that Bradley Manning was never catatonic until he ended up at Quantico. While I question whether he was mentally ill before Quantico, he's clearly suffering terribly now.
Anne - I feel and share your concern and rage.
This young man has been thrown into a "well of despair".
http://www.null-hypothesis.co.uk/science//item/harry_harlow_unethical_psychology_experiments
Comment moved to end of thread.
Don't sell Dennis too short on this. From what he has written, it looks like he is pursuing an alternative strategy to get Manning out of Solitary confinement. Nothing else has worked so far. The Obama administration has shown itself to be at least as cruel in it's treatment of dissidents as the Bush administration was. It's unfortunate that Kucinich has to follow the insanity route to try and get Manning some relief, but all avenues have got to be pursued.
I would carry it a step further. Damage control includes maintaining as 'unspoken' any coherent articulation of a framing of context that differs from the profitable line - keeping all of us 'on message' or 'sane'. To depart from that is claimed to be indicative of mental/intellectual frailty or worse. It is to control who has or does not have a voice.
In terms of hegemony, the economic extractive model requires that certain peoples (the impoverished, indigenous peoples, those politically demonized, imprisoned etc...) be 'externalized' in order to negate their lives making their resources- including life - available for 'development'; like labor being assigned a value as opposed to being a voice at the table. The economic equivalent of 'terra nullis' the mental capacity label makes the 'Manifest Destiny' of hegemonic control of meaning an unchallenged heroic dream (and an unmitigated nightmare ecologically, socially, spiritually, etc).
Anyone who steps into the reality of viewing life from the perspective of those who are sacrificed/negated, making available or articulating what this means, and walks in the shoes of peoples living this, experience the 'terror' of the insidiousness of negation.
This is something that needs to become part of popular conversation in order for western society to achieve a nominal level of 'civilization'.
Excellent analysis, old goat.
I agree. Kucinich is just another effing corporate fascist scum dog in a long line of corporate fascist scum dogs. This letter is truly sickening on a number of levels.
Dennis has been very disappointing, but an effing corporate fascist scum dog? Seriously? Kind vegan little Dennis Kucinich? You sound hysterical and engorged with impotent rage. You also cheapen the meaning and the impact of the word 'fascist.' It should be reserved for those who earn it. Men like Don Rumsfeld and Dick Cheney. Your postings are sickening to sane progressives on a number of levels.
His letter is truly sick and twisted. He outlines in excruciating detail, the government's smear campaign against Manning. It really is insult on top of outrage. Sane progressives like yourself suck it up again as a US citizen is being tortured in prison and smeared in the media. I don't care if Dennis is the Dalai Lama, this letter was disgusting. You're a sick bastard for defending it and if you think you are the definition of sane, I'll be happy to be excluded from your ranks.
Dennis showed his true colors in the corporate welfare healthcare reform debate, he showed them again with this letter. Good luck with your delusions.
I've said it before, and I hate to repeat it, but Dennis is complicit in the problems that beset us. He is, like Bernie Sanders and former Sen. Feingold, trotted out occasionally to make progressive yapping sounds to mollify/hypnotize an entirely too uncritical "left."
Kucinich plays directly into the hands of those who imprison Pfc. Manning by asking if his confinement meets the definition of "cruel and unusual punishment."
I can state unequivocally, and with cocksure authority, that his current confinement is not cruel and unusual punishment as defined in the Constitution.
Kucinich asks a question to which he (and any competent lawmaker) already knows the answer. IT IS THE WRONG QUESTION because Pfc. Manning has not been charged, never mind convicted of ANY CRIME.
The Constitution's ban on cruel and unusual punishment does not apply here because Manning isn't being "punished" for a crime he was convicted of.
Manning's detention is undoubtedly illegal, but not because it violates the ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
The Constitution bans ANY punishment of ANY kind (fine, probation, detention, community service, lethal injection and firing squad) without "due process of law" which means a speedy trial. Military service does not mitigate this fact.
So,while Dennis is hard to speak against, in my eyes, if he meant what he says, he'd split from the treasonous Democrats and come roaring out of the 2012 gates with the New Populist/Fuck the Corporations Party...
But methinks he digs his pension and health care too much. He plays his role well.
Sorry.
Hmmm. Wasn't aware Private Manning had "mental health problems." That sort of negates his "hero" status a bit. On the other hand, "mental health problems" could actually be anti-war idealogy manifesting after he discovered exactly what the whole fiasco of this so called "war" was all about. To make the case for prior mental health problems puts the U.S. army in a bad situation tho. I'd like to see how they squirm out of this one.
Thank you Dennis for adding your voice to this issue. Dennis Kucinich has been ignored and discredited so much now that it seems almost "after the fact" that he speaks up now. He should be one of the first persons to be listened to, given his proven record of humane interests....instead of the last voice to be heard.
Yeah. I'll bet Defense Secretary Gates will be getting right on Dennis's request to give Manning the mental health care (or any other care) that he might need.
Gawd bless AmeriKKKa!
Feb. 3, 2011
To: The Honorable Rep. Dennis Kucinich
U.S. House of Representatives
Dear Representative Kucinich;
So?
Sincerely,
Robert Gates,
Secretary of Defense
Kucinich's salutation begs the question why Gates should be given the title of Honorable considering the fact that Gates' position of Secretary of Defense [sic], which entitles him, via Obama, to launch 500 lb. bombs and drone missiles upon many innocent people in the Middle East, is anything but honorable.
I guess he missed the Pentagon press conference where they were actually threatening reporters, and bloggers, covering the story!
The bottom line is, whether he is guilty of anything or not, and even though the Pentagon confessed that they can't tie him to Assange or Wiki-leaks, he will have been illigally held in solitary confinement while innocent of any crime, pretrial. He will have at least 5 months more to go before a court is appointed, if one is appointed.
Two things need to happen:
.The president needs to order the Secretary of Defense to release him to general population while awaiting trial in accordance with the Uniform Code of Military Justice currently being violated.
. Something needs to be added to the UCMJ that gives a prisoner a right to appeal unlawful punishment, and somewhere to appeal it to.
Personally I don't care what right-wing nut-jobs think. I know what is right. I know what "Honor" stands for and I know that most POW's in Vietnam were NOT treated in this manner by having seen their treatment.
Oh yes, each service should maintain there own prisoners. This kid is a little over 100 lbs, he is not a 250 lb 101st Airborne (Ranger) type in a Marine brig!
Exquisitely succinct summation of the situation, Goebbels.
I'm afraid rep. Kucinich is attempting to redeem his progressive credibility more than promote the liberation of Bradley Manning.
Neither is possible within the parameters of Dennis' present strategy.
Yeah, you said it, shorter and sweeter than I did above.
This reminds me of the time when the Soviet Union was severely criticized for labelling dissidents mentally ill.
Exactly.
only if we could build more mental hospitals to drug up and lock away those insane folks,
and then make sure no "insane" one can ever get his or her hands on the gun,
no peace-loving civilized patriot like giffords will be victimized again! never again!
When you live in a society where sanity is defined by the acceptance and coddling of war criminals, torturers, murderers, thieves and traitors how can any moral person NOT be considered insane?
Indeed.
It would make a great Twilight Zone episode.
Exactly, polycarpe, and I know I post on this issue more than anyone, and thus may seem to be a crazed single voice, but the concepts of sanity/insanity that have been built these last few decades are important to consider in our political climate. In the tragic case of Manning, we are seeing the worst of classic CIA/KGB tactics out in the open. That is shameful, but far worse is the general yawn in the face of it. Sanity has become the placid acceptance of insanity. It always tends this way, it seems, but we need to push against it.
Does this mean we can expect Kucinich to be offered another ride in Air Force One some time soon?
Yup. Who knows, maybe they'll even continue to let Kucinich land with them.
BRAVO DENNIS KUCINICH !!!
(Where are the letters from Barbara Boxer, who we just voted in in CA to prevent a regressive from winning ??? And from the rest of Congress, so enamored of the Constitution as they purport to be ?? Especially those Repubs who were just READING it to US, so ignorance should not be an excuse...)
Let's not forget that Mr. Manning is alleged to have released video documentation of multiple U.S. war crimes that were released by WikiLeaks and posted at:
http://www.CollateralMurder.com
On the "Full version" video at the above site starting around the 31st minute, a scene starts that ends with them shooting "hellfire missiles" into a multi-story building, because at least two men with rifles were seen disappearing into it. The US soldiers ignore the passersby along with the fact that they had no idea who was in the building, besides those who they saw go in. Also it's been said that in those days it was very common & perfectly legal for men to carry rifles in the streets for self-defense.
In any event, young, ignorant, heartless, US soldiers decided to give everyone in that building the death penalty. Why aren't the murderers in jail? Why isn't Mr. Manning being celebrated as a hero?
Apparently WL has another video of the Granai massacre where an estimated 92 Afghan children were murdered by US soldiers. When the truth is widely know, it seems likely that everyone will agree that the US military Industrial complex should be totally shut down.
Please call your Senator & Congressperson to express your views - tell them to press for prosecution of war crimes and to give Bradley Manning his freedom back plus medals of honor & courage!
"Apparently WL has another video of the Granai massacre where an estimated 92 Afghan children were murdered by US soldiers. When the truth is widely know, it seems likely that everyone will agree that the US military Industrial complex should be totally shut down."
It is not posted for viewers. Why not?
I'm sure Sec. Gates will be all broken up about Manning's well being and his Constitutuional and human rights. But it sounds like good PR.
Is he the same Gates (Uncle Bobby) that was appointed by Bush Jr. and a long-time friend of Bush Sr.?
No, it must be another Gates. A progressive like Obama would never appoint such a war criminal.
Like the post earlier would indicate, many have lost all respect for Dennis K. after the famous AF-1 ride.
hmmm . . . the same gates who used to run the cia?
naaah. it must be a coincidence.
as another poster suggested: gates of hell.
'anne faith February 3rd, 2011 2:58 pm
While I'm glad to see a member of Congress finally speaking up for Bradley Manning (what took you so long?), I'm disturbed by Kucinich's acceptance of the government's contention that Manning was apparently "mentally ill" even before he was placed at Quantico. I've always considered these allegations about Manning's mental state in Iraq to be a government smear campaign against Manning and an attempt to discredit him.'
Screamingly evident....
¬sc
It's possible Kucinich is not necessarily accepting the government's contention, but is rather trying to beat the Army at its own game, by using its own prior reports about Manning's mental condition in order to indict the Army for deploying him in the first place. After all, if the Army deployed a person whose mental state they claim was already in question, to a position where he would have access to so much sensitive, classified information, then whose fault is it really that the result was (in their view) a security breach?
In the current environment, the military doesn't easily give up on one of its weapons so easily. Units are keeping damaged soldiers around so they can simply keep their rolls filled. All kinds of damaged men and women are being re-deployed into these losing wars. Unit commanders don't like to do anything to help those who develop great problems about how they are being used by this war machine. There's often a stigma associated with seeking help. Doctors and chaplains work to calm the bodies and souls enough to keep the soldier in the military. I'm not surprised they insisted Manning be re-deployed.
I am surprised they allowed him to keep a security clearance of any kind.
In regards to him being crazy - if a person DOESN'T act crazy in response to abnormal crazy situations, maybe they really are crazy. In Bradley's case, he was reacting normally to what he saw to be abnormal, out of control issues. His conscience won.
But now - after being locked up for so long, maybe he's landed on a runaway crazy train.
He should be released!
At the very least, put him in some kind of humane situation.
Thank you Dennis Kucinich for speaking out about this.
Too bad nobody is listening.
dianere, I thought you had more sense than this! I think your post is kind-hearted and sincere, but
"He should be released!
At the very least, put him in some kind of humane situation."
Who's going to decide this "humane situation"? The mental health folks? Hell, they're the ones who made a science of making him near-catatonic.
Quit being so naive, else I'll think you're truly nuts.
"In regards to him being crazy - if a person DOESN'T act crazy in response to abnormal crazy situations, maybe they really are crazy. In Bradley's case, he was reacting normally to what he saw to be abnormal, out of control issues. His conscience won."
"Catch 22" perhaps?
i was wondering if anyone was going to cite Catch 22.
Mr. Kucinich,
get the HELL out of the whorehouse called congress, and
join other progressives to kick-start a socialist movement / program / party, please!
there's NOTHING you can achieve from within that is worth achieving.
please stop making a fool out of yourself and wasting your precious resources on futile attempts like this.
"they sentenced me to twenty years of boredom for trying to change the system from within." Leonard Cohen
his "Nancy" is my all time favorite song.
"He should be released!
At the very least, put him in some kind of humane situation."
That's putting it mildly!!!