January 20, 2013

Will Obama And Clinton Testify For Manning?

By rt.com on December 9, 2011

As the defense attorneys for alleged WikiLeaks aide PFC Bradley Manning prepare for a pre-trial hearing, the US government is trying to shut down all of the nearly 50 witnesses they’ve asked to testify, including Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton.

Manning has been under strict and severe military custody for nearly two years for his suspected involvement in WikiLeaks, Julian Assange’s whistleblower site that the government says is detrimental to the security of the nation. Attorneys for Manning, however, believe that they have a strong case to support their client, though are now encountering a new road block with the government giving them the run around.

David E Coombs, attorney for Manning, has asked for both President Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to testify during the Article 32 hearing scheduled to begin next week. Slated to start December 16, the hearing will serve as precursor to further judicial action and will determine if Manning’s case will be fit for a full-scale court martial hearing. Coombs hopes that by grilling the president over remarks he made earlier this year, he will be able to show that the commander-in-chief was out of place by what he says was an expression of “unlawful command influence.”

Back in April, Obama remarked on Manning publically, saying that the soldier had “broke the law.” Such a statement, says Coombs, can cause the case to collapse, noting in a recent court filing that a “superior officer in the chain of command is prohibited from saying or doing anything that could influence any decision by a subordinate in how to handle a military justice matter.”

Additionally, the defense had hoped to question Secretary Clinton on whether the documents Manning had allegedly leaked actually posed any threat to America’s security. Administration officials had earlier expressed that the papers Manning supposedly sent to WikiLeaks were of “rather benign nature” and of no real damage to national security.

The court has called Obama and Clinton “too important” to stand trial, says Coombs, to which the attorney writes is a blow to not just his case but to the judicial system as well.

“The government seems to argue that in matters of justice, if you have too important of a position, you should not be bothered,” Coombs writes. “Military justice should not be controlled by the importance of your duty position.”

Coombs has asked for 50 defense witnesses to take the stand during the Article 32 hearing, but the government seeks to reject all of them sans those that they are also calling as witnesses. If the 48 witnesses the defense has asked for, they will thus be left with only ten.

Specifically, says Coombs in an official filing released to the media, the government has opposed testimonies from witnesses that the defense believes will show a deterioration in Manning’s mental health, which could have led to a lessening of any punishment brought before the private. The government insists that reading written statements will suffice for the sake of the trial, but Coombs responds, “Simply reading the sworn statements of some of these witnesses and hearing from a few others will not allow either party or the Investigating Officer to explore the relevant information.”

“The listed witnesses need to be questioned personally and individually about what they saw, heard, and experienced if there is to be a thorough and impartial investigation,” adds the attorney.

 

Source: http://rt.com/usa/news/obama-manning-wikileaks-government-447/

Bradley Manning: Welsh MEP’s Join Wikileaks Suspect Plea

Two Welsh MEPs have added their names to a growing list of their colleagues concerned about the alleged treatment of Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning.

The US Army analyst, who grew up in Pembrokeshire, is due in court later this month accused of passing sensitive information to the website.

He has been in military custody in the US since May 2010, accused of making intelligence available to “the enemy”.

Plaid Cymru’s Jill Evans and Labour’s Derek Vaughan have signed the letter.

Ms Evans said US treatment of Pte Manning had become an important human rights issue.

“I think anyone who read about the conditions under which he has been held would be very disturbed… it is totally out of proportion to anything that he has been accused of”

During his detainment at a military prison at Quantico, Virginia, it is alleged that the soldier was held in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day and often made to sleep without clothing or bedding.

“I think anyone who read about the conditions under which he has been held would be very disturbed,” said Ms Evans.

“It is totally out of proportion to anything that he has been accused of.”

An open letter has now been sent to President Obama signed by more than 60 members of the European Parliament, including Ms Evans and the Welsh Labour MEP Derek Vaughan.

The letter calls on the US president to allow Pte Manning to meet the United Nation’s special rapporteur on torture, Juan Méndez.

Human rights

The signatories also state they are concerned that the soldier has been charged with the offence of ‘aiding the enemy‘, which could carry the death penalty in the US.

Ms Evans said she hoped the letter would carry added weight in America as a trial date approaches.

“Human rights is an issue that the European Parliament has always fought very hard to protect, and something we feel we have a real role in doing on the world stage,” she added.

The 23-year-old is from Oklahoma but went to Tasker Milward school in Haverfordwest, where he lived with his mother.

He is accused of passing hundreds of thousands of diplomatic cables to the whistleblowing website, detailing operational information in Iraq and Afghanistan.

After mounting concerns were raised in America about his plight behind bars, US authorities announced in April that the soldier was being transferred to another military prison in Kansas, where the custodial regime was viewed as being more relaxed.

Pre-trial case

The US government said the decision had been taken because the Quantico facility had not been designed to hold pre-trial prisoners on a long-term basis.

Pte Manning’s lawyers say they now expect a pre-trial case, called an Article 32 hearing, to go ahead on 16 December.

Proceedings are expected to last around five days, after which recommendations will be made to a general, who will decide whether to proceed to a full trial.

Pentagon officials have previously said Pte Manning is being held in appropriate conditions considering the seriousness of the charges against him.

He has been charged with using unauthorised software on government computers to download classified information and to make intelligence available to “the enemy”, as well as other counts related to leaking intelligence and theft of public records.

 

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-16009062