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Is Bradley Manning Being Held as Some Sort of “Enemy Combatant”?
In disturbing reports from the US, it appears that Private First Class Bradley Manning, the former intelligence analyst accused of leaking the Afghan and Iraqi war logs, the US diplomatic cables and the “Collateral Damage” video, which have dominated headlines globally since WikiLeaks began making them available in April this year, is being held in conditions that bear a marked and chilling resemblance to the conditions in which a handful of US citizens and residents were held as “enemy combatants” under the Bush administration.
Manning, whose 23rd birthday was on Friday, has been held in solitary confinement for seven months since he was seized in Kuwait, where he was held for the first two months prior to his transfer to a military prison in Quantico, Virginia. According to David House, a computer researcher from Boston who visits him twice a month, his “prolonged confinement in a solitary holding cell … is unquestionably taking its toll on his intellect.” House explained how Manning “was no longer the characteristically brilliant man he had been, despite efforts to keep him intellectually engaged.”
However, what was particularly revealing about House’s comments was his denial of the authorities’ statement that Manning “was being kept in solitary for his own good,” based on a claim that he was initially held on suicide watch. As he explained, “I initially believed that his time in solitary confinement was a decision made in the interests of his safety. As time passed and his suicide watch was lifted, to no effect, it became clear that his time in solitary — and his lack of a pillow, sheets, the freedom to exercise, or the ability to view televised current events — were enacted as a means of punishment rather than a means of safety.”
The key elements here are the elements of profound isolation and suffering identified by House — not just the solitary confinement, with no other human being for company, but also the refusal to allow Manning to have a pillow, sheets, or any access to the outside world through the reporting of current affairs.
It is these factors that mark out his conditions of detention as sharing some key elements with the conditions endured by the three “enemy combatants” held on the US mainland under the Bush administration — the US citizens Yasser Hamdi and Jose Padilla, and the US legal resident Ali al-Marri.
Hamdi, initally held at Guantanamo, was kept in isolation from May 2002 until he won a case before the Supreme Court on June 28, 2004, leading to his release in Saudi Arabia three months later. Padilla, held from May 2002 until he was transferred into federal custody on January 3, 2006 (and subsequently tried and convicted in August 2007, and given a sentence of 17 years and four months in January 2008 for conspiring to kill people in an overseas jihad and to fund and support overseas terrorism), was held for 21 months in total isolation. Al-Marri, who was initially arrested in December 2001, was held alone for five years and eight months (including 16 months in total solitary confinement) before President Obama moved him into the federal court system in February 2009, leading to a trial and an eight-year sentence after a plea deal eight months later.
As I explained in an article two years ago:
As was recently revealed through the disclosure of military documents following a Freedom of Information request (PDF), al-Marri, along with two American citizens also held as “enemy combatants” — Yaser Hamdi and Jose Padilla — was subjected to the same “Standard Operating Procedure” that was applied to prisoners at Guantánamo during its most brutal phase, from mid-2002 to mid-2004. This involved the use of “enhanced interrogation techniques,” including prolonged isolation, painful stress positions, exposure to extreme temperature, sleep deprivation, extreme sensory deprivation, and threats of violence and death.
Although the treatment of prisoners at Guantánamo was disturbingly harsh, it can be argued — with some confidence, I believe — that the treatment of al-Marri, Hamdi and Padilla was worse than that endured by the majority of the Guantánamo prisoners, as all three suffered in total isolation … Held alone in cellblocks that were otherwise unoccupied, al-Marri, Hamdi and Padilla had to survive without even the small comforts available to most of the Guantánamo prisoners, who, when not held in isolation as a punishment or as a prelude to interrogation, could at least communicate with the prisoners in the cells adjacent to them, and could take advantage of what lawyer Clive Stafford Smith has called the “incredible prisoner bush telegraph,” through which information is conveyed around the prison.
In the case of Hamdi (who was picked up in Afghanistan in November 2001 and initially held in Guantánamo until it was discovered that, although he had lived in Saudi Arabia since he was a child, he was born in Baton Rouge and was an American citizen), the effects of this near-total isolation were already apparent in June 2002, just a month after his transfer from Guantánamo. As one of the officers responsible for him explained in an email to his superiors, “with no potential end in sight and no encouraging news and isolated from his countrymen, I can understand how he feels … I will continue to do what I can to help this individual maintain his sanity, but in my opinion we’re working with borrowed time.”
In the case of Jose Padilla, who was held in strict solitary confinement for 21 months, the effects of his isolation were so intense that it has been reported that he literally lost his mind (his warders described him as “so docile and inactive that he could be mistaken for ‘a piece of furniture’”) [Further details of Padilla's harrowing mental collapse can be found here].
Al-Marri’s experience was similar. As his lawyers explained in May [2008], in court documents protesting his treatment (PDF), for the 16 months that he was held incommunicado, “He was denied any contact with the world outside, including his family, his lawyers, and the Red Cross. All requests to see, speak to, or communicate with Mr. al-Marri were ignored or refused. Mr. al-Marri’s only regular human contact during that period was with government officials during interrogation sessions, or with guards when they delivered trays of food through a slot in his cell door, escorted him to the shower, or took him to a concrete cage for ‘recreation.’ The guards had duct tape over their name badges and did not speak to Mr. al-Marri except to give him orders.”
There is, at present, no suggestion that Bradley Manning has been subjected to a wide range of “enhanced interrogation techniques,” but prolonged isolation is confirmed, and depriving him of a pillow, sheets, or any access to the outside world through the reporting of current affairs are all elements of discomfort and further isolation that were key to the program of belittling and punishing “enemy combatants,” and, crucially, “softening them up” or “breaking” them for interrogation. It is, sadly, all too easy to imagine that other techniques designed to disorientate Manning and to further erode his will — involving elements of sleep deprivation, threats and sensory deprivation — could also be applied, or are, perhaps, already being apllied, especially if, as has been suggested by the Independent, the authorities are hoping to cut a plea deal with him, reducing a 52-year sentence in exchange for a confession that Julian Assange of WikiLeaks, whom the US is seeking to extradite to the US, was not just a passive recipient of the information leaked by Manning, but was instead a conspirator.
Assange, who was released on bail in the UK on Thursday, after being imprisoned for nine days following an extradition request from Sweden relating to rape charges, denies knowing Manning at all. After his release from Wandsworth prison, he said, “I had never heard of the name Bradley Manning before it was published in the press. WikiLeaks technology [was] designed from the very beginning to make sure that we never know the identities or names of people submitting us material.”
In contrast, however, as the Independent explained, “Adrian Lamo, a former hacker who had been in contact with Pte. Manning and eventually turned him in to the government, has told the FBI that Mr. Assange had given the young soldier an encrypted internet conferencing service as he was downloading government files and a dedicated server for uploading them to WikiLeaks. Mr. Lamo claims that Pte. Manning had ‘bragged’ about this to him. In one email, now in the possession of the Justice Department, the soldier allegedly wrote: ‘I can’t believe what I’m confessing to you … I’m a source, not quite a volunteer, I mean, I’m a high-profile source … and I’ve developed a relationship with Assange.’”
As this story continues to develop, further clues about the kinds of pressure exerted on Manning can be gleaned from David House’s description of the lengths to which the authorities are going to harass those who know Manning. House told the Guardian that “many people were reluctant to talk about Manning’s condition because of government harassment, including surveillance, warrantless computer seizures, and even bribes,” stating, “This has had such an intimidating effect that many are afraid to speak out on his behalf”
The Guardian added, “Some friends report being followed extensively. Another computer expert said the army offered him cash to — in his words — ‘infiltrate’ the WikiLeaks website.” He said, “I turned them down. I don’t want anything to do with this cloak and dagger stuff.”
House also explained how, on November 3, he “found customs agents waiting for him when he and his girlfriend returned to the US after a short holiday in Mexico. His bags were searched and two men identifying themselves as Homeland Security officials said they were being detained for questioning and would miss their connecting flight. The men seized all his electronic items and he was told to hand over all passwords and encryption keys — which he refused. The items have yet to be returned.”
In conclusion, then, anyone concerned with justice needs to keep a close eye on Bradley Manning’s case, not just because any pressure exerted on Manning to implicate Julian Assange in his decision to leak classified US documents would have a disastrous impact on freedom of speech, and would, possibly, pave the way for an unprecedented assault on the freedom of the Internet, where alternative voices to the mainstream are needed more than ever, but also because of the suspicion that, in exerting pressure on Manning, the Obama administration has crossed a line and is drawing inspiration from the discredited — if not thoroughly repudiated — practices of the Bush administration.
Note: Anyone interested in supporting Bradley Manning — and contributing to his legal fund — should visit the website of the Bradley Manning Support Network.
- Posted in
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40 Comments so far
Show AllIn all the intrigue and commotion over Julian Assange, the guy who's taken the biggest risk of all has been forgotten. If nothing else we can show our solidarity and thanks through Facebook and contributions to his defense fund:
http://www.facebook.com/savebradley
And here's a good idea--just imagine if it came true!
Lady Gaga, Stand Up for Bradley Manning
http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100000946434027#!/pages/Lady-Gaga-Stand-Up-for-Bradley-Manning/113967602005909
Mr. Worthington does a good job of keeping the attention where it rightfully belongs - the Manning case.
The whole situation with Lamo stinks.
Below is a great article by Glenn Greenwald from June which details all the shady aspects of the case, how little we know as to what went on and how all of our info is basically dependent upon two people.
The military had it out for Wikileaks since 2008 - as detailed in the article below - more than enough time to get their ducks in a row.
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/06/18/wikileaks
Excellent Greenwald article. Lamo's character, along with his expertise as a hacker, should be taken into consideration. I've had my email hacked into, as have many people I know, so who's to say that Lamo didn't modify,or indeed create the emails attributed to Manning. I find it highly unlikely that Manning would have trusted Lamo to the extent he is said to have done.
The level of barbarity in this country is overwhelming. We've accepted torture for so long now that we've set ourselves up. We have more people in solitary confinement in our prisons than any other nation. It is torture in itself. I've no doubt those guarding Manning are just the sort who would maximize his pain.
Sometimes I feel for Greenwald.
I mean, he could have a team of 30 people under him and he would still not be able to investigate and expose all of the scandals and outrages committed by our government on a daily basis.
He's truly a shining beacon of intelligence, insight and integrity and I wish other "journalists" displayed half the effort he puts forth every day.
Obviously they're trying to "make an example" of Manning, treating him as harshly as they can manage rights be damned to make sure no one else with access to embarrassing classified information even considers letting loose with it.
But I was in the Army many years ago and I don't understand how a PFC had access to all that classified stuff. Doesn't sound like "security" was all that hard to "breech." Who's responsible for that? Shouldn't whoever is be in the slammer also?
I agree that the level of security in the Defense Department seems sloppy, to say the least. My wife was once the security administrator for an insurance company's mainframe computer systems. The software she ran kept track of every keystroke on every computer (in-house or on agents' remote terminals) connected to the mainframes. Any time someone tried to get access to a file he or she was not entitled to access, that access was denied, and a flag appeared on my wife's monitor.
Is it asking too much that something similar (if not better) be installed in the DOD systems? I can understand how Manning might have had a high-level security clearance, but I cannot understand why he was allowed to download anything. And I have no idea how he could get access to State Department computer systems. The IT people at "State" must be rank amateurs.
Bradley Manning deserves as much as progressive support as Jullian Assuange and maybe more as the US military may be torturing him while he gets no due process.
AD
"May be torturing him"? What are you, daft? He's being tortured.
[But I was in the Army many years ago and I don't understand how a PFC had access to all that classified stuff. ]
I don't think any reasonable person really thinks that he did have access to any of the files which were sent. Of course, give him a few more months of solitary torture and he'll be claiming that he did. For the greater glory of lenin or allah, or whoever else the torturers want to damn for this act of exposure.
The Obama administration asserts that Mr. Assange endangers the lives of Americans. I bring to your attention that there is a potential that Mr. Obama himself may seriously endanger American lives in Iraq. Whatever else SOFA (Status-of-Forces-Agreement)-Iraq is, it marks the end of foreign military/armed occupation of Iraq at midnight December 31, 2011. The overwhelming majority of Iraqis and especially the followers of El Sadr will consider Iraq to become a "normal country" on that date which means that foreigners must have a permit issued by the government of Iraq to have and carry arms. That includes the marines which will be stationed at the gigantic Embassy in Baghdad. If the Obama administration tries tricks to maintain a substantial armed force in Iraq, either in or out of uniform it will be playing with fire. El Sadr and his followers will not tolerate this and will attack Americans whether uniformed or not uniformed and they can legally do this. The armed Americans who are not in uniform can be considered to be "Enemy Combatants". I hope you will remember this piece when the shit hits the fan in 2012.
This is where we should be heading. If our politicos really wish to head down this path, we need to turn up the heat and bring this to their doorsteps... The politicos brought us to war for their own nefarious reasons. Most of the people I talk to never bought into WMD or any of the other lies used as excuses to get Western Oil companies the rights in Iraq or now Afghanistan. THEY endanger US security and the lives of Americans and the world by murdering in the name of "democracy." They hate Assange because he is the only person to successfully shine the light of truth on their evil ways. Turn this on our Politicos and make sure they understand who truly is responsible for US security concerns.
The US populace has, indeed, achieved true "groupthink" on the Wikileaks, Asssange, Manning matter. Not surprising at all, since this is exactly what our masters want.
Truly, "We have met the enemy, and he is us."
Jim Shea
Quite wrong. But understandable, as the only voices you'll hear in opposition to the media and the gov't denunciations of Wiki are online or muted.
As long as you have no power to effect change, or you are not a member of the hoi polloi you are totally free to say what you will; and you shall be ignored just as if you had said nothing at all, or if you had echoed your new masters.
Hence the need for due process and juries/jurors knowledgeable enough to understand jury nullification. It's the last refuge of the people against the gov't.
Obama, Biden, Lieberman.
They kill the messenger, but the message still exists.
Whatever will they do?
They have trapped themselves with their own lies.
And now the world watches.
Trapping themselves with
Their own lies - world watches them
Kill the messenger.
The USA has a policy of torturing anyone, anywhere.
Why is this a surprise to some?
Don't like living in Stalin's regime, then change it! Hit the streets and don't be gentle.
That may not be so easy - you might want to read Alexander Solzhenitsyn's accounts of what happened to those who resisted the Soviet system. Or even exercised a little freedom of expression. I found them quite fascinating.
Enemy combatant or not, Private Manning is now wholly owned by the Commander in Chief--a political hack who once promised change and who, immediately after his election, did.
he's being held as a 'scapegoat'...........
They will destroy him, just as they destroyed Jose Padilla.
Manning's treatment reveals a fundamental truth about the USA - it is an Old Testament country that believes in vengeance, not justice, and has not one ounce of compassion in its attitudes towards those who are not "with it". There are plenty of echoes of this regime of brutal oppression in the calls (including by feminists convinced Assange is guilty before he is even charged) for assassination, life imprisonment, homosexual rape etc littering the message boards of liberal European media organisations. And similarly, these conditions are normal in the ghastly American penal system. America is a savage country, not a civilised one.
If anyone still doubts that we are now living in a full blown dictatorial police state, here's the evidence along with the articles by Glenn Greenwald. And the tyrant/front man himself is unique in world history in having on his resume a fresh, new Nobel Peace Prize as he heads the most vicious warfare juggernaut in all of history. But the ruling elites who have promoted and conducted the destruction of the entire nation of Iraq with a million plus dead civilians and millions more internal or external exiles, will not blink at the destruction of Bradley Manning or Julian Assange for daring to challenge their imperial perogatives and rule. And into this soul searing nightmare come the empty hearted G/Ls all so eager to "serve their country", as they eagerly swallow the empire's endless lies.
Not full blown quite yet. You still can speak out, even if your voice is ignored. It's when you can't speak your mind in any forum, online or off, that we'll be in a north american police state.
"Nothing was your own except the few cubic centimeters inside your skull."
--George Orwell, "1984" - opening words to Chapter Two.
There's a difference between the fictional tale of nineteen eighty four and the world of today. In the totalitarian states of Orwell's novel the government gave a damn about what the middle class believed/said or did, the proles were ignored. In today's america, the government doesn't give a damn what you say, or think, as long as your taxes are paid.
Your speech is still free. And utterly without meaning. Should you actually say something that did threaten the PTB, I suppose they might give a damn about you.
Sorry, I know you'd like to think they gave a damn about you and the posters on this site. But really, I don't think they do.
Disgusting and predictable, and so very real.
The guards of Prison America continue their zeal.
The prisoner breaks under conditions extreme,
Signs a full confession to whatever they dream.
With concocted evidence, the usual sort,
All wanted accomplices included by report.
Procede the arrests and extraditions.
Or even some extraordinary renditions.
Justice in America uses the whitest paint.
All terrorism is resistance to power.
And power is freedom from any restraint
to control others and above all to tower.
Ever hungry for more of the commons,
Power takes what to the world belongs.
It never has to answer to a price.
Power never needs to ask for anything twice.
Truth is whatever power will request,
It decides what truths serve its needs.
Humans are poor tools at its behest,
To be broken in service of its deeds.
One can only imagine the torture Manning is going through. I was isolated by acute respiratory distress syndrome in 2004. I awoke from a medically induced coma, unable to speak or move. I would have killed myself, but didn't have the means--just like Manning. Here is what I went through (from new-york-commoners-law.com and dons-review.com and 'Prairie Fever'):
Joe had survived the ordeal by the skin of his teeth. He had approached the edge of sanity many times after waking up without the ability to move his arms, legs, or vocal cords. He had become a quadriplegic, unable to communicate except by mouthing words. If his nurse, doctor, nurse’s aide, or relative or friend couldn’t read lips as they stood by his bedside, he was out of luck. It struck him as funny how some people had a skill for reading his two-word sentences that were inaudible. He would mouth “change diaper” or “water” or “change channel (the TV had only two main channels)” and only three or four people would understand. Gradually, his left hand and arm came back and he was able to point to his mouth (indicating water) or to his diaper (indicating change it. One of his few pleasures was the ability to control when he would pee. Peeing itself felt numb and tingly at the same time, but at least he could initiate it. He could do nothing else except form two-word silent sentences and slightly move his left hand and right big toe.).
But he had awoken with despair on his mind. He had two doctors who came by most often. One was a long-haired beautiful Indian woman who looked about 30. She could read his lips and did give him water. His mouth was caked with gunk and deposits from the oxygen they blew into his throat via the tracheotomy. At one point, he mouthed the words “poison me,” “let me die” to her, but she only smiled. Nevertheless, he thought she understood, but just wouldn’t comply.
He finally could make the motions, mainly with his left hand and his mouth, that he wanted a nurse “call button.” His pneumonia was so terrible that his trach and mouth filled with saliva and secretions about twice an hour. He had been suctioned so much that the inside of his trachea was ultra-sensitive. Yet it had to be done. He heard rumors that the rehab hospital wouldn’t take him, because he had to be suctioned so much and they “weren’t in that business.” He knew he’d be drugged up at a nursing home, but decided that he would prefer that to this environment, in which no one came for hours on end, especially at 3 a.m., when he often had laid there thinking he would drown in his own saliva. He had to turn his head to the left and spit out saliva onto his pillow; he had to let the build-up of solid-like formations in his mouth nearly cover his esophagus before mustering the energy to clear his throat; he had to tell God several times “Here I come, please be merciful on a jerk like me.”
NARR: EGO TUNNEL, liquid dreams
Throughout all of this, he had been “entertained,” as he called it, by “hallucinations.” These were repeated dream-like excursions into scenarios that remained crystal clear in his memory for weeks, now years, on end. They had involved nearly everyone he knew before his illness. He didn’t even attempt to interpret them, just relaxed and enjoyed them or replayed the memories in his mind.
After the ordeal, the easiest one to relay to his friends involved TV talk-show host David Letterman. In his “hallucination,” he himself was reading the local paper and upon turning a middle page found a photo of Letterman sitting at his New York Rockefeller Center office reading something about cancer. The caption in the newspaper said, “Mr. Letterman has come to grips with his impending death from cancer.” Joe saw this dream several times and thought it was true. He couldn’t discern reality from fantasy. When he finally was transferred to the rehab hospital a month later, he was shocked to find a brand-new Letterman show playing on his TV one night when he couldn’t sleep.
Another dream involved himself and a homeless man, both visiting an apartment in the upper corner of a shabby building in midtown New York. The woman was young and beautiful and Joe, in the dream, found himself competing with this beggar for her affections. Gaining access to her apartment for a date required intricate maneuvering of the metal lock. If she decided to spend the evening with either Joe or the man, she would stroll with one of them throughout the parks of New Jersey and the date would end with them climbing back up to her apartment through yards and yards of wooden hallways. Then Joe and the man would somehow get to the other corner of the building where a balcony or fire escape landing awaited them. They would then compete for her affections by diving – from 10 stories up – to the pavement below, landing on one – yes, one – finger and, somehow, propelling themselves backwards 10 stories to land on that same fire escape platform. In the dream most remembered by Col, he bested the beggar by being slightly faster and fancier in his dives. When Joe awoke at his first hospital and later at the rehab hospital, he thought there might, indeed, be a letter or call waiting from that woman.
You think anything said on this website makes a difference? Sorry folks, you've been had! We live in a full blown police state, and you so-called progressives think you know what's happening. When somebody dies, then maybe something will change, but I wouldn't count on it. You're all too complicit in the system, to change anything. So just shut up!
Oh NOooo!
Are you accusing the folks here of mental masturbation?
Not bad for a pessimistic troll.
Curmudgeon99, my thought was that we live in a "full-blown police state", but I'm supposed to pay attention to what some nobody in an Internet comments thread thinks I should or shouldn't do?
Please.
We are often guilty of chewing the fat, ad nauseum, sure. But does that mean we should 'shut up?'
Absolutely not.
But there are things you can do to break the machine. As I have said elsewhere - brew your own booze, grow our own food, set up a Transition Town initiative, tell your Grandma about Peak Oil, avoid the outlet malls, shop at thrift stores, download torrents, declare bankruptcy, buy books from independent bookstores, avoid the police in resolution issues, work under-the table if possible - or, better still, set up LETS schemes to trade goods and services.
But never write letters to your congressman / Member of Parliament - it is a complete waste of time. They are not going to change. We need to change. Lead by example.
And the trick is, to do some - or all of the above - in the knowledge that others may not, indeed, follow that lead.
So, do I do all of that which I have suggested? No, I do not: it is a journey not a destination. I am working at extricating myself, one day at a time, as the AA'ers put it.
Bradly Manning in 2012 - if he's old enough then he has my vote.
well, he turns 23 this week I think...
Maybe if you use the New Mathematics that's advocated by the Texas School Board...
Trust we are all letting Obama know how we feel about
this TORTURE of Manning -- about our support for WikiLeaks
and Assange --
http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/
Right now, I'm ashamed to be an American -- and to have
had anything to do with the election of this president
and his administration -- and that includes Biden who has
been urging Israel to attack Iran for more than a year now
saying "Israel would be justified in attacking Iran!" --
Further, I can't any longer look at my vote as supporting
a party -- any further voting for either the Democratic or
Republican party would have to be viewed by me as a vote
for criminal activity -- organized crime.
.
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
The inhumanity and cruelty of the Right is increasing as their power grows. The charade of Democracy grows thinner with each passing day. American Fascism is basking in the sun. Manning is caught in it's jaws and being broken. The voices of sanity are ringing, yet widely unheard. There is a madness afoot in this land. People of reason and conscience suffer under the burden of the hardship of others. There is no relief, nor has there been for a long time. The sociopaths are taking over. The smell of death is everywhere and burns particularly bright in the hearts of extremists. This will end but not well.
well said, stone, but let's not forget that in "the game of life" when it's over, the winners take their bows---and the game continues.
Consider writing to Bradley Manning, on a routine basis. I have been sending post cards.
Bradley Manning
Quantico Marine BRIG
Marine Corps Base Quantico
3247 Elrod Avenue
Quantico, VA 22134
is he even allowed to receive mail?
My thinking follows that of several commenters: Private Manning is being intentionally destroyed mentally and physically, either to get him to confess improperly, or to render him incapable of testifying in or out of court.
In these circumstances, it is reasonable to assume that the flaws in the system are the result of actions by high-ranking officials, most likely both in the military and in the civilian sector of the Government. A trial of Private Manning would almost certainly reveal these tactical failures.
When the pending release of the diplomatic cables was announced and tentatively blamed on Private Manning, my immediate reaction was, "How did Manning have access to those documents?" It makes no sense at all. Security is based on "Need to Know." For any serviceman or woman in a combat theater to have access to diplomatic cables is unheard of and completely illogical. Private Manning should have had no way to obtain those records. The obvious alternative is that one or more other parties compiled and released the diplomatic cables to Wikileaks, but whether they came from Manning or anyone else, the military, intelligence, and government security systems are unquestionably dangerously insecure, or there are other disgruntled employees somewhere in the government's vast network of intelligence, diplomatic, and military agencies.
Subsequent reports indicated that, post-9/11, the leadership at various intelligence agencies and in the administration decided to link those agencies more closely, because "lack of communication" was concluded to have been a primary cause for the failure of those agencies to detect and prevent the attacks. Some agents expressed concern that the "openness" was excessive, and may have led to the information having fallen into Private Manning's hands, if, indeed, the information did come from Private Manning.
No one has definitely linked, or claimed to have linked, Private Manning to the diplomatic cables, although he has indicated that he released the helicopter attack video and the military records. Under military protocol, Private Manning is presumably being held while "independent investigators" research his background and activities, and try to establish whether he did, in fact, release the military documents (and now, the diplomatic cables). That investigation should determine whether there are sufficient grounds for a court-martial.
One is justified in questioning the inordinate time that has passed. However, it has been reported that communications with Wikileaks occur through the Tor Project, a software package and routing system that completely hides the trail a file makes on the Internet. Our military and government agencies routinely use Tor.
Still, from my experience in the military, I submit that charges should have been brought and a trial begun by now, especially since Private Manning has all but officially confessed that he released the military records.
The link to Salon.com posted previously (http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/06/18/wikileaks) is a very powerful indictment of Adrian Lamo, painting his testimony as questionable, at best, and worthless and falsely fingering Private Manning, at worst.
Private Manning is clearly and understandably idealistic, and I applaud his displeasure with the irrational and ill-advised U. S. military involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan. He is also young and naïve. He sought help and support through the Internet, and unfortunately fell into Adrian Lamo's hands. Had Private Manning done his research secretly and privately, and never broadcast his intentions or activies, he would probably still be in Afghanistan today, a free person (to the extent that one is free in the military), silently (if nervously) awaiting discharge.