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2017.01.19

The Curious Case of PVT Manning (UPDATED)

Sentence commutation makes sense, when you look at many factors


Black and white photo image of PVT Bradley Manning with the word "TRAITOR" superimposed in red

 

Like many of my brothers and sisters who have served this country, I was outraged when the news first reported that PVT Manning, the Army soldier who infamously provided classified information to WikiLeaks, had actually made "the short list" for sentence commutation at the close of President Obama's second term.

Here's a quick refresher on Manning's case, courtesy of Wikipedia:

After serving in Iraq since October 2009, Manning was arrested in May 2010 after Adrian Lamo, a computer hacker in the United States, provided information to Army Counterintelligence reporting that Manning had acknowledged passing classified material to the whistleblower website, WikiLeaks. Manning was ultimately charged with 22 specified offenses, including communicating national defense information to an unauthorized source, and the most serious of the charges, aiding the enemy. Other charges included violations of the Espionage Act, stealing U.S. government property, charges under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act and charges related to the failure to obey lawful general orders under Article 92 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Manning entered guilty pleas to 10 of 22 specified offenses in February 2013.
(I primarily wanted to provide this background to distinguish Manning from Bowe Bergdahl, the soldier who separated from his unit in Afghanistan in 2009 and was released from six years of captivity in Pakistan in exchange for five Taliban prisoners held in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.)

The Washington Post writes:

From the moment a military judge handed down a 35-year prison term for Chelsea Manning in 2013, President Obama and some administration officials saw the sentence as excessive.... The key question for the president was how much time Manning should serve. He and his advisers looked at other government leak cases, which indicated that 35 years was the longest sentence ever imposed for a leak conviction.
NBC News reported that the sentence was 10 times longer "than those of recent whistle-blowers."

PVT Manning's sentence was the result of having committed multiple offenses, and of having provided over 700,000 documents, including secret diplomatic communications, to WikiLeaks. The New York Times characterized the contents as "some 250,000 diplomatic cables, dossiers of detainees being imprisoned without trial at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, and hundreds of thousands of incident reports from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan." The WikiPedia page of the case against Manning offers a more granular account:

The material in question includes 251,287 United States diplomatic cables, over 400,000 classified army reports from the Iraq War (the Iraq War logs), and approximately 90,000 army reports from the war in Afghanistan (the Afghan War logs). WikiLeaks also received two videos. One was of the July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike (dubbed the "Collateral Murder" video); the second, which was never published, was of the May 2009 Granai airstrike in Afghanistan.

I don't understand. What makes Manning a "whistle-blower?" PVT Manning was a US solider on active duty in a war zone. To my military mind, any breach of classified material by a soldier or sailor is described with words like "treason" and "espionage," not "whistle-blowing."

The NBC News article also mentions that the length of the sentence was likely meant to send a message to Edward Snowden, whose disclosures to WikiLeaks were discovered while the Manning case was in process. I think that's plausible.

One might imagine the topic of the commuted sentence became a hot topic yesterday when the news broke. On its face, the notion of commuting Manning's sentence flies directly in the face of the oath he took, the NDA's he signed, and position he held. And that's why I used the terms "treason" and "espionage." In my view, it's not like Manning didn't know what handing over that material to WikiLeaks meant. He knew full well. It's the risk he took.

In conversations with a small circle of friends (we were all stationed together in our military days), one offered a different perspective:

I will respectfully disagree. I think [commuting Manning's sentence was] actually a good move. The gender thing came up after conviction and the change was going to be on DoD's dime. This way DoD isn't paying for it, Manning has a [Bad Conduct Discharge] so [Manning will receive] no VA benefits and can go do whatever convicted felons do. The commutation just saved DoD an unneeded distraction.
An excellent point. DoD has been wrestling with gender and gender preference issues for years — think of the controversies of women in combat units, women serving on submarines and so forth; of gays in the military and "don't ask, don't tell." Manning's request brought with it the spotlight of the media (because it was announced during a TODAY show interview). Gender reassignment? Can you imagine the headache this represented for the DoD? The New York Times recounted some of the arguments and milestones: The DoD did not provide that kind of care in 2013, at the time of Manning's sentencing. Three years on, the DoD announced it would allow transgendered soliders and sailors to openly serve, and that it would provide services for treatment of gender dysphoria, to include gender reassignment. I would imagine that PVT Manning is revered by the LGBTQ community — particularly those in service to our nation — for this reason. (By the way, the Trump Administration may reverse those new DoD protections, as Rolling Stone and New Republic report.)

Let's not confuse treason and gender dysphoria. The former is what bought PVT Manning 35 years in Fort Leavenworth. The latter is likely at least partly responsible for the commutation of his sentence, along with other factors: He accepted responsibility (read: plead guilty), allegedly little actual damage was done regarding national security, and he's already served six years (and was eligible for parole this year).

To all of these factors, my military mind says, "I don't care. What he did was treason."

And now for something completely different: a tweet from WikiLeaks that reads, "If Obama grants Manning clemency Assange will agree to US extradition despite clear unconstitutionality of DoJ case." WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange (who is named in the WikiPedia account of the case, by the way) would actually be willing to leave the Ecuadorean embassy and be extradited to the United States in exchange for Manning's clemency. WOW.

Suddenly this becomes a game of "What's more important": Keeping Manning in Leavenworth (remember, up for parole this year) OR getting Assange? (What? You've never watched Law and Order?)

So there we have it: the multiple dimensions of the basis for the President's clemency action: the notion the sentence was heavy-handed to begin with (and more about Snowden than it ever was about Manning); a financial motivation (Manning no long burdens military healthcare system); a political motivation (Trump); a shot at a much bigger fish (Assange). The cost? Negligble, comparatively. Manning is released this coming May, a convicted felon.

When one looks at all of these factors, the situation appears far more complex than it does on its face. What does my military mind say now? "Manning deserves everything he gets with regard to sentencing for espionage... but think of just the intelligence value Julian Assange represents. What government wouldn't make that trade?"

You can bet the US would absolutely jump at the chance to get hold of Assange. And yes, it's worth letting Manning walk early.


UPDATE:
Gizmodo, citing The Hill on Wednesday, reported that Assange is not availing himself to US authorities after all; the White House apparently denied that a potential deal with Assange had anything to do with the clemency decision.



personal statement

Humor posts aside, I only seek to understand the events I describe in these posts, and to form an opinion after considering the material I've gathered. I believe we need leaders in Washington to act in the best interest of the United States as a citizen nation of the world, and who represent the interests of the people they serve above the interests of party affiliation.