تشلسي ماننگ

هذه مقالة جيدة. لمزيد من المعلومات، اضغط هنا.
(تم التحويل من Chelsea Manning)
تشلسي ماننگ
Chelsea Manning
Bradley Manning US Army.jpg
ماننگ في أبريل 2012
Born17 ديسمبر 1987
كرسنت، اوكلاهوما، الولايات المتحدة
Service/branch الجيش الأميركي
سنوات الخدمة2007–2013
Rankجندي[1]
Convictionsخرق قانون التجسس، سرقة ممتلكات حكومية، خرق قانون الاحتيال وسوء استخدام الحاسوب، تهم عدة بعصيان الأوامر[2]
Sentence35 سنة، تسريح من الخدمة، فقدان الرتب[1]
Military awardsوسام خدمة الدفاع الوطني
وسام حملة العراق
وسام خدمة الحرب العالمية على الإرهاب
Army Service Ribbon
Overseas Service Ribbon
Parentsبريان ماننگ
سوزان فوكس

تشلسي إ. ماننگ Chelsea E. Manning[3][4] (و. برادلي إدوارد ماننگ، مواليد 17 ديسمبر 1987)، هو جندي بالجيش الأمريكي، أدين في يوليو 2013 بانتهاكات مختلفة لقانون التجسس وجرئم أخرى، بعد تسريبه مجموعة من الوثائق السرية للعامة. حكم عليه بالسجن 35 عام وبتسريحه من الخدمة.[1] سيسمح له بالإفراج المشروط بعد قضاؤه ثلاثة أرباع المدة، بالإضافة إلى المدة التي قضاها، ومع حسن السير والسلوك، يمكنه الخروج من السجن بعد قضاء ثمان سنوات.[5]

بعد انتقاله في 2009 إلى وحدة عسكرية بالقرب من بغداد، قام ماننگ بالدخول إلى قاعدة البيانات المستخدمة من قبل الحكومة الأمريكية لنقل البيانات المصنفة. كان ماننگ قد اعتقل في العراق في مايو 2010 بعدما أخبر أدريان لامو، هاكر حاسوب، مكتب التحقيقات الفيدرالي أن ماننگ كشف أثناء محادثة على الإنترنت أنه قام بتنزيل مواد من قواعد البيانات تلك وقدمها إلى ويكي‌ليكس. تتضمن هذه المواد ڤيديوهات لغارة بغداد 12 يوليو 2007 وغارة گراني 2009 في أفغانستان؛ 250.000 برقية دبلوماسية أمريكية؛ و500.000 تقرير عسكري أصبحت تعرف بسجلات حرب العراق وسجلات حرب أفغانستان.[6] معظم هذه الوثائق نشرتها ويكي‌ليكس أو شركائها الإعلاميون فيما بين أبريل ونوفمبر 2010.[6]

في النهاية حكم على ماننگ ب22 جريمة، تشمل مساعدة العدو، وهي الجريمة الأكثر خطورة.[7]

عانى ماننگ من اضطراب هوية النوع منذ طفولته وصرح بعد يوم من الحكم عليه بأن هويته أنثى، واتخذ اسم تشيلسي ماننگ وعبر عن رغبته في العلاج بالهرمونات البديلة.[8]

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خلفية

حياته المبكرة

ماننگ طفلاً.

Manning was born in Crescent, Oklahoma, to Susan Fox, originally from Wales, and her American husband, Brian Manning. Brian had joined the United States Navy in 1974 when he was 19, and served for five years as an intelligence analyst, meeting Susan when he was stationed in Wales at Cawdor Barracks. Manning's sister, eleven years her senior, was born in 1976. The couple returned to the United States in 1979, moving first to كاليفورنيا, then to a two-story house outside Crescent, with an above-ground swimming pool and five acres of land where they kept pigs and chickens.[9]

Her sister told the court-martial in 2013 that both their parents had been alcoholics, and that she had been Manning's principal caregiver, waking at night to make her a bottle and get her back to sleep. She also said Manning's mother had drunk continuously while pregnant with Manning. Capt. David Moulton, a Navy psychiatrist, told the court that Manning's facial features showed signs of fetal alcohol syndrome.[10]

Manning's father took a job as an IT manager for a rental car agency, which meant he had to travel. Manning's mother suffered from poor health, was living several miles out of town, and was unable to drive, and as result Manning was largely left to fend for herself. Her father would stock up on food before his trips, and leave pre-signed checks for the children to pay the bills. A neighbor told The New York Times that whenever the school went on field trips, she would give her son extra food or money so he could make sure Manning had something to eat.[11]

Raised as a boy, Manning was regarded as small for her age – as an adult, she reached just 5 ft 2 in (1.57 m) and weighed 105 lb (47.6 kg) – and excelled at the saxophone, science, and computers. Her father told PBS that she created her first website when she was ten years old. She taught herself how to use PowerPoint, won the grand prize three years in a row at the local science fair, and in sixth grade took top prize at a state-wide quiz bowl.[12]

طلاق والديه، انتقاله إلى ويلز

photograph
High Street in Haverfordwest, Wales, where Manning went to secondary school


العودة للولايات المتحدة

التجنيد في الجيش الأمريكي

الانتقال إلى فورت درم

في سبتمبر 2009


الخدمة في العراق، النقاش مع المستشار

A month later, in November 2009, she was promoted from Private First Class to Specialist. According to her chats with Adrian Lamo, she made her first contact with WikiLeaks that same month, shortly after it posted 570,000 pager messages from the 9/11 attacks, which it released on November 25.[13] Also in November, Manning wrote to a gender counselor in the United States, said she felt female, and discussed having sex reassignment surgery. The counselor told Steve Fishman of New York Magazine that it was clear Manning was in crisis, partly because of her gender concerns, but also because she was opposed to the kind of war in which she found herself involved.[14]

She was by all accounts unhappy and isolated. Because of the army's "Don't ask, don't tell" policy (known as DADT, which was repealed in September 2011), she was not allowed to be openly gay, though she apparently made no secret of it. When she told her roommate she was gay, the roommate responded by suggesting they not speak to each other. Her working conditions – 14–15 hour night shifts in a dimly lit secure room – did not help her emotional well being.[15] On December 20, 2009, after being told she would lose her one day off a week for persistent lateness, she overturned a table in a conference room, damaging a computer that was sitting on it, before other soldiers pinned her arms behind her back. Several witnesses to the incident believed her access to sensitive material ought to have been withdrawn at that point. The following month she began posting on Facebook that she felt alone and hopeless.[16]

Army investigators told a pre-trial hearing (see below) that they believed Manning downloaded the Iraq and Afghan war logs around this time, in January 2010. WikiLeaks tweeted on 8 January that year that they had obtained "encrypted videos of US bomb strikes on civilians," and linked to a story about the May 2009 Granai airstrike in Afghanistan.[17] Manning put the files on a digital storage card for her camera and took it home with her on leave in early 2010. During the same month, she traveled to the United States via Germany for a two-week holiday, arriving on January 24, and attended a party at Boston University's hacker space. It was during this visit that Manning first lived for a few days as a woman, wearing a wig and dressing in women's clothes.[18] After her arrest, her former partner, Tyler Watkins, told Kevin Poulsen of Wired that Manning had said during the January visit that she had found some sensitive information and was considering leaking it.[19]

فقدان الرتبة ومواجهة الاتهامات

Manning told Adrian Lamo she had passed the Baghdad helicopter attack ("Collateral murder") video to WikiLeaks in February 2010.[20] WikiLeaks released the video on April 5, 2010. On April 24 Manning sent an e-mail to her master sergeant, Paul Adkins – with the subject line "My Problem" – saying she was suffering from gender dysphoria, and attaching a photograph of herself dressed as a woman.[21] Adkins discussed the situation with Manning's therapists, but did not pass the email to a more senior officer; he told Manning's court martial that he was concerned the photograph would have been disseminated among other staff.[22] Capt. Steven Lim, Manning's commander, said he first saw the e-mail after Manning's arrest, when information about hormone replacement therapy was found in Manning's room in Baghdad; at that point Lim learned that Manning had been calling herself Breanna.[23] Manning told Lamo that her commander had found out about the gender issue before her arrest, after looking at her medical files at the beginning of May. She said she had set up Twitter and YouTube accounts in Breanna's name to give that identity a digital presence, writing in the Lamo chat: "i wouldn't mind going to prison for the rest of my life, or being executed so much, if it wasn't for the possibility of having pictures of me ... plastered all over the world press ... as [a] boy ... the CPU is not made for this motherboard ..."[20]

On April 30 she posted on Facebook that she was utterly lost, and over the next few days wrote that "Bradley Manning is not a piece of equipment," and that she was "beyond frustrated" and "livid" after being "lectured by ex-boyfriend despite months of relationship ambiguity ..."[24] On May 7 she seemed to spiral out of control. According to army witnesses, she was found curled in a fetal position in a storage cupboard; she had a knife at her feet and had cut the words "I want" into a vinyl chair. A few hours later she had an altercation with intelligence analyst Specialist Jihrleah Showman, during which she punched Showman in the face. The brigade psychiatrist recommended a discharge, referring to an "occupational problem and adjustment disorder." Her master sergeant removed the bolt from her weapon, and she was sent to work in the supply office, although at this point her security clearance remained in place. She was demoted from Specialist to Private First Class just three days before her arrest on May 27.[25]

Ellen Nakashima writes that, on May 9, Manning contacted Jonathan Odell, a gay American novelist in Minneapolis, via Facebook, leaving a message that she wanted to speak to him in confidence; she said she had been involved in some "very high-profile events, albeit as a nameless individual thus far."[26] On May 19, according to army investigators, she e-mailed Eric Schmiedl, a mathematician she had met in Boston, and told him she had been the source of the Baghdad airstrike video. Two days later, she began the series of chats with Adrian Lamo that led to her arrest.[27]


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الكشف عن المواد السرية

ويكي‌ليكس

WikiLeaks was set up in late 2006 as a disclosure portal, initially using the Wikipedia model, where volunteers would write up restricted or legally threatened material submitted by whistleblowers. It was Julian Assange – an Australian Internet activist and journalist, and the de facto editor-in-chief of WikiLeaks – who had the idea of creating what Ben Laurie called an "open-source, democratic intelligence agency." The open-editing aspect was soon abandoned, but the site remained open for anonymous submissions.[28]

According to Daniel Domscheit-Berg, a former WikiLeaks spokesman, part of the WikiLeaks security concept was that they did not know who their sources were. The New York Times wrote in December 2010 that the U.S. government was trying to discover whether Assange had been a passive recipient of material from Manning, or had encouraged or helped her to extract the files; if the latter, Assange could be charged with conspiracy. Manning told Lamo in May 2010 that she had developed a relationship with Assange, communicating directly with him using an encrypted Internet conferencing service, but knew little about him. WikiLeaks did not identify Manning as their source. Army investigators told a pre-trial hearing that they had found 14–15 pages of chats between Manning and someone they believed to be Assange, but Nicks writes that no decisive evidence was found of Assange offering Manning any direction.[29]

وصول المواد إلى ويكي‌ليكس

ريكياڤيك13

On February 18, 2010 WikiLeaks posted the first of the material from Manning, a diplomatic cable dated January 13, 2010, from the U.S. Embassy in Reykjavik, Iceland, a document now known as Reykjavik13. In the chat log, Manning called it a "test" document. On March 15 WikiLeaks posted a 32-page report written in 2008 by the U.S. Department of Defense about WikiLeaks itself. On March 29 it posted U.S. State Department profiles of politicians in Iceland.[30]

غارة بغداد

Manning said she gave WikiLeaks the July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike video (so-called "Collateral Murder") in early 2010. Unedited version and edited version[31]

Manning told Adrian Lamo that she gave WikiLeaks the video of the July 12, 2007 Baghdad airstrike after finding it in a Judge Advocate's directory.[32] WikiLeaks named the video "Collateral Murder," and Assange released it during a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., on April 5, 2010.[33] The video showed an American helicopter firing on a group of men in Baghdad, one of them a journalist, and two others Reuters employees carrying cameras that the pilots mistook for anti-tank grenade launchers (RPG-7). The helicopter also fired on a van that stopped to help the injured members of the first group; two children in the van were wounded and their father killed. The Washington Post wrote that it was this video, viewed by millions, that put WikiLeaks on the map. According to Nicks, Manning e-mailed a superior officer after the video aired and tried to persuade her that it was the same version as the one stored on SIPRnet. Nicks writes that it seemed as though Manning wanted to be caught.[33]

سجلات حرب بغداد وسجلات حرب أفغانستان

On July 25, 2010, WikiLeaks and three media partners – The New York Times, The Guardian, and Der Spiegel – began publishing the 91,731 documents that became known as the Afghan War logs. This was followed on October 22 by 391,832 classified military reports covering the period January 2004 to December 2009 that became known as the Iraq War logs. Nicks writes that the publication of the former was a watershed moment, the "beginning of the information age exploding upon itself."[34]

البرقيات الدبلوماسية، ملفات خليج گوانتانامو

Manning told Adrian Lamo she was also responsible for the "Cablegate" leak of 251,287 State Department cables, written by 271 American embassies and consulates in 180 countries, dated December 1966 to February 2010. The cables were passed by Assange to his three media partners, plus El País and others, and published in stages from November 28, 2010, with the names of sources removed. WikiLeaks said it was the largest set of confidential documents ever released into the public domain.[35] The rest of the cables were published unredacted by WikiLeaks on September 1, 2011, after David Leigh and Luke Harding of The Guardian inadvertently published the passphrase for a file that was still online; Nicks writes that one Ethiopian journalist had to leave his country and the U.S. government said it had to relocate several sources.[36] Manning is also thought to have been the source of the Guantanamo Bay files leak, originally obtained by WikiLeaks in 2010, and published by The New York Times over a year later on April 24, 2011.[37]


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غارة گراناي

According to Manning's written memo to the court, she also provided Wikileaks with a classified video of the Granai airstrike.[38] The airstrike occurred on May 4, 2009, in the village of Granai, Afghanistan, killing 86–147 Afghan civilians. The video was never published; Julian Assange said in March 2013 that Daniel Domscheit-Berg had taken it with him when he left Wikileaks, and had apparently destroyed it.[39]

ماننگ وأدريان لامو

أول اتصال

photograph
Adrian Lamo (left) and Wired's Kevin Poulsen (right) in 2001. The man in the middle, Kevin Mitnick, had no involvement in the Manning case.[40]

On May 20, 2010, Manning contacted Adrian Lamo, a former "grey hat" hacker convicted in 2004 of having accessed The New York Times computer network two years earlier without permission. Lamo had been profiled that day by Kevin Poulsen in Wired magazine; the story said Lamo had been involuntarily hospitalized and diagnosed with Asperger syndrome.[41] Poulsen, by then a reporter, was himself a former hacker who had used Lamo as a source several times since 2000.[40] Indeed it was Poulsen who, in 2002, had told The New York Times that Lamo had gained unauthorized access to its network; Poulsen then wrote the story up for SecurityFocus. Lamo would hack into a system, tell the organization, then offer to fix their security, often using Poulsen as a go-between.[42]

Lamo said Manning sent him several encrypted e-mails on May 20. He said he was unable to decrypt them but replied anyway and invited the e-mailer to chat on AOL IM. Lamo said he later turned the e-mails over to the FBI without having read them.[43]

الدردشة

In a series of chats between May 21 and May 25, Manning – using the handle "bradass87" – told Lamo that she had leaked classified material. She introduced herself as an army intelligence analyst, and within 17 minutes, without waiting for a reply, alluded to the leaks.[20]

May 21, 2010:
(1:41:12 PM) bradass87: hi

(1:44:04 PM) bradass87: how are you?

(1:47:01 PM) bradass87: im an army intelligence analyst, deployed to eastern baghdad, pending discharge for "adjustment disorder" in lieu of "gender identity disorder"

(1:56:24 PM) bradass87: im sure you're pretty busy ...

(1:58:31 PM) bradass87: if you had unprecedented access to classified networks 14 hours a day 7 days a week for 8+ months, what would you do?[20]

Lamo replied several hours later. He said: "I'm a journalist and a minister. You can pick either, and treat this as a confession or an interview (never to be published) & enjoy a modicum of legal protection." They talked about restricted material in general, then Manning made her first explicit reference to the leaks: "This is what I do for friends." She linked to a section of the May 21, 2010, version of Wikipedia's article on WikiLeaks, which described the WikiLeaks release in March that year of a Department of Defense report on WikiLeaks itself. She added "the one below that is mine too"; the section below in the same article referred to the leak of the Baghdad airstrike ("Collateral Murder") video.[44] Manning said she felt isolated and fragile, and was reaching out to someone she hoped might understand.[20]

May 22, 2010:
(11:49:02 AM) bradass87: im in the desert, with a bunch of hyper-masculine trigger happy ignorant rednecks as neighbors... and the only safe place i seem to have is this satellite internet connection

(11:49:51 AM) bradass87: and i already got myself into minor trouble, revealing my uncertainty over my gender identity ... which is causing me to lose this job ... and putting me in an awkward limbo ...

(11:52:23 AM) bradass87: at the very least, i managed to keep my security clearance [so far] ...

(11:58:33 AM) bradass87: and little does anyone know, but among this "visible" mess, theres the mess i created that no-one knows about yet ...

(12:15:11 PM) bradass87: hypothetical question: if you had free reign [sic] over classified networks for long periods of time ... say, 8–9 months ... and you saw incredible things, awful things ... things that belonged in the public domain, and not on some server stored in a dark room in Washington DC ... what would you do? ...

(12:21:24 PM) bradass87: say ... a database of half a million events during the iraq war ... from 2004 to 2009 ... with reports, date time groups, lat-lon locations, casualty figures ...? or 260,000 state department cables from embassies and consulates all over the world, explaining how the first world exploits the third, in detail, from an internal perspective? ...

(12:26:09 PM) bradass87: lets just say *someone* i know intimately well, has been penetrating US classified networks, mining data like the ones described ... and been transferring that data from the classified networks over the “air gap” onto a commercial network computer ... sorting the data, compressing it, encrypting it, and uploading it to a crazy white haired aussie who can't seem to stay in one country very long ...

(12:31:43 PM) bradass87: crazy white haired dude = Julian Assange

(12:33:05 PM) bradass87: in other words ... ive made a huge mess :’([20]

Manning said she had started to help WikiLeaks around Thanksgiving in November 2009 – which fell on November 26 that year – after WikiLeaks had released the 9/11 pager messages; the messages were released on November 25. She told Lamo she had recognized that the messages came from an NSA database, and that seeing them had made her feel comfortable about stepping forward. Lamo asked what kind of material Manning was dealing with; Manning replied: "uhm ... crazy, almost criminal political backdealings ... the non-PR-versions of world events and crises ..." Although she said she dealt with Assange directly, Manning also said Assange had adopted a deliberate policy of knowing very little about her, telling Manning: "lie to me."[20]

May 22, 2010:
(1:11:54 PM) bradass87: and ... its important that it gets out ... i feel, for some bizarre reason

(1:12:02 PM) bradass87: it might actually change something

(1:13:10 PM) bradass87: i just ... dont wish to be a part of it ... at least not now ... im not ready ... i wouldn't mind going to prison for the rest of my life, or being executed so much, if it wasn't for the possibility of having pictures of me ... plastered all over the world press ... as [a] boy ...

(1:14:11 PM) bradass87: i've totally lost my mind ... i make no sense ... the CPU is not made for this motherboard ... [...]

(1:39:03 PM) bradass87: i cant believe what im confessing to you :’([20]

Lamo again assured her that she was speaking in confidence. Manning wrote: "but im not a source for you ... im talking to you as someone who needs moral and emotional fucking support," and Lamo replied: "i told you, none of this is for print."[20]

Manning said the incident that had affected her the most was when 15 detainees had been arrested by the Iraqi Federal Police for printing anti-Iraqi literature. She was asked by the army to find out who the "bad guys" were, and discovered that the detainees had followed what Manning said was a corruption trail within the Iraqi cabinet. She reported this to her commanding officer, but said "he didn't want to hear any of it"; she said the officer told her to help the Iraqi police find more detainees. Manning said it made her realize, "i was actively involved in something that i was completely against ..."[20]

She explained that "i cant separate myself from others ... i feel connected to everybody ... like they were distant family," and cited Carl Sagan, Richard Feynman and Elie Wiesel. She said she hoped the material would lead to "hopefully worldwide discussion, debates, and reforms. if not ... than [sic] we're doomed as a species." She said she had downloaded the material onto music CD-RWs, erased the music and replaced it with a compressed split file. Part of the reason no one noticed, she said, was that staff were working 14 hours a day, seven days a week, and "people stopped caring after 3 weeks."[20]

May 25, 2010:
(02:12:23 PM) bradass87: so ... it was a massive data spillage ... facilitated by numerous factors ... both physically, technically, and culturally

(02:13:02 PM) bradass87: perfect example of how not to do INFOSEC

(02:14:21 PM) bradass87: listened and lip-synced to Lady Gaga's Telephone while exfiltratrating possibly the largest data spillage in american history [...]

(02:17:56 PM) bradass87: weak servers, weak logging, weak physical security, weak counter-intelligence, inattentive signal analysis ... a perfect storm [...]

(02:22:47 PM) bradass87: i mean what if i were someone more malicious

(02:23:25 PM) bradass87: i could've sold to russia or china, and made bank?

(02:23:36 PM) info@adrianlamo.com: why didn't you?

(02:23:58 PM) bradass87: because it's public data [...]

(02:24:46 PM) bradass87: it belongs in the public domain

(02:25:15 PM) bradass87: Information should be free[20]

بلاغ لامو لمكتب التحقيقات الفيدرالي، ونشر سجلات الدردشة

Lamo first discussed the chat with Chet Uber of the volunteer group, Project Vigilant, which researches cyber crime, and a friend who had worked in military intelligence. Both men advised Lamo to go to the FBI; they also reported what he had told them to the United States Army Criminal Investigation Command.[45] Lamo contacted the FBI shortly after the first chat on May 21; he said he believed Manning was endangering lives.[46] Lamo was largely ostracized by the hacker community afterwards. Nicks argues, on the other hand, that it was thanks to Lamo that the government had months to ameliorate any harm caused by the release of the diplomatic cables.[47]

Lamo met with FBI and Army investigators on May 25 in California, and showed them the chat logs. On or around that date he also passed the story to Kevin Poulsen of Wired, and on May 27 gave him the chat logs and Manning's name under embargo. He saw the FBI again that day, at which point they told him Manning had been arrested in Iraq the day before. Poulsen and Kim Zetter broke the news of the arrest in Wired on June 6.[48] Wired published around 25 percent of the chat logs on June 6 and June 10, and the full logs in July 2011, after the material about Manning's gender dysphoria had appeared elsewhere.[49]

الاجراءات القانونية

القبض عليه والاتهامات

Manning was arrested on May 27, 2010, and transferred four days later to Camp Arifjan in Kuwait.[50] She was charged with several offences in July, replaced by 22 charges in March 2011, including violations of Articles 92 and 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), and of the Espionage Act. The most serious charge was "aiding the enemy," a capital offense, although prosecutors said they would not seek the death penalty.[51]

الاعتقال

قالب:Manning timeline While in Kuwait, Manning was placed on suicide watch after her behavior caused concern.[52] She was moved from Kuwait to the Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, on July 29, 2010, and classified as a maximum custody detainee with Prevention of Injury (POI) status. POI status is one stop short of suicide watch, entailing checks by guards every five minutes. Her lawyer, David Coombs, a former military attorney, said Manning was not allowed to sleep between 5 am (7 am at weekends) and 8 pm, and was made to stand or sit up if she tried to. She was required to remain visible at all times, including at night, which entailed no access to sheets, no pillow except one built into her mattress, and a blanket designed not to be shredded.[53] Manning complained that she regarded it as pre-trial punishment.[54]

Her cell was 6 × 12 ft with no window, containing a bed, toilet and sink. The jail had 30 cells built in a U shape, and although detainees could talk to one another, they were unable to see each other. Her lawyer said the guards behaved professionally, and had not tried to harass or embarrass Manning. She was allowed to walk for up to one hour a day, meals were taken in the cell, and she was shackled during visits. There was access to television when it was placed in the corridor, and she was allowed to keep one magazine and one book.[53] Because she was in pre-trial detention, she received full pay and benefits.[55]

On January 18, 2011, after an altercation with the guards, the jail classified her as a suicide risk. Manning said the guards had begun issuing conflicting commands, such as "turn left, don't turn left," and upbraiding her for responding to commands with "yes" instead of "aye." Shortly afterwards, she had her clothing and eyeglasses removed and was required to remain in her cell 24 hours a day. The suicide watch was lifted on January 21 after a complaint from her lawyer, and the brig commander who ordered it was replaced.[56] On March 2 she was told that her request for the removal of her POI status had been denied. Her lawyer said Manning joked to the guards that, if she wanted to harm herself, she could do so with her underwear or her flip-flops. The comment resulted in her having her clothes removed at night, and she had to present herself naked one morning for inspection.[57]

The detention conditions prompted national and international concern. Juan E. Mendez, a United Nations Special Rapporteur on torture, published a report saying the detention conditions had been "cruel, inhuman and degrading."[58] In January 2011 Amnesty International asked the British government to intervene because of Manning's status as a British citizen by descent, although Manning's lawyer said Manning did not regard herself as a British citizen.[59] The controversy claimed a casualty in March that year when State Department spokesman Philip J. Crowley criticized Manning's treatment and resigned two days later.[60] In early April, 295 academics (most of them American legal scholars) signed a letter arguing that the treatment was a violation of the United States Constitution.[61] On 20 April the Pentagon transferred Manning to the Midwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility, a new medium-security facility in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where she was placed in an 80-square-foot cell with a window and a normal mattress, able to mix with other pre-trial detainees and keep personal objects in her cell.[62]

تقديم الأدلة

In April 2011, a panel of experts ruled that Manning was fit to stand trial.[63] An Article 32 hearing, presided over by Lieutenant Colonel Paul Almanza, was convened on December 16, 2011, at Fort Meade, Maryland; the hearing resulted in Almanza recommending that Manning be referred to a general court-martial. She was arraigned on February 23, 2012, and declined to enter a plea.[64]

During the Article 32 hearing, the prosecution, led by Capt. Ashden Fein, presented 300,000 pages of documents in evidence, including chat logs and classified material.[65] The court heard from two army investigators, Special Agent David Shaver, head of the digital forensics and research branch of the army's Computer Crime Investigative Unit (CCIU), and Mark Johnson, a digital forensics contractor from ManTech International, who works for the CCIU. They testified that they had found 100,000 State Department cables on a workplace computer Manning had used between November 2009 and May 2010; 400,000 military reports from Iraq and 91,000 from Afghanistan on an SD card found in her basement room in her aunt's home in Potomac, Maryland; and 10,000 cables on her personal MacBook Pro and storage devices that they said had not been passed to WikiLeaks because a file was corrupted. They also recovered 14–15 pages of encrypted chats, in unallocated space on Manning's MacBook hard drive, between Manning and someone believed to be Julian Assange. Two of the chat handles, which used the Berlin Chaos Computer Club's domain (ccc.de), were associated with the names Julian Assange and Nathaniel Frank.[66]

Johnson said he found SSH logs on the MacBook that showed an SFTP connection, from an IP address that resolved to Manning's aunt's home, to a Swedish IP address with links to WikiLeaks.[66] There was also a text file named "Readme" attached to the logs, a note apparently written by Manning to Assange, which called the Iraq and Afghan War logs "possibly one of the most significant documents of our time, removing the fog of war and revealing the true nature of 21st century asymmetric warfare."[67] The investigators testified they had also recovered an exchange from May 2010 between Manning and Eric Schmiedl, a Boston mathematician, in which Manning said she was the source of the Baghdad helicopter attack ("Collateral Murder") video. Johnson said there had been two attempts to delete material from the MacBook. The operating system had been re-installed in January 2010, and on or around January 31, 2010, an attempt had been made to erase the hard drive by doing a "zero-fill," which involves overwriting material with zeroes. The material had been overwritten only once, which meant it could be retrieved.[66]

Manning's lawyers argued that the government had overstated the harm the release of the documents had caused, and had overcharged Manning to force her to give evidence against Assange. The defense also raised the issue of whether Manning's gender identity disorder had affected her judgment, and whether the "don't ask, don't tell" policy had made it difficult for her to serve in the army.[68]

الإقرار بالذنب، والمحاكمة، السجن

United States v. Manning
المحكمةUnited States Army Military District of Washington
اسم النزاع الكاملUnited States of America v. Manning, Bradley E., PFC
تاريخ الحكمJuly 30, 2013
Case history
Prior action(s)Article 32 hearing, opened December 16, 2011
Formally charged, February 23, 2012
Article 39 (pre-trial) hearing, opened April 24, 2012
Court membership
Judge sittingColonel Denise Lind

في ديسمبر 2012 the judge, Army Colonel Denise Lind, accepted terms that would allow Manning to plead guilty to lesser charges in exchange for a maximum sentence of 16 years.[69] She ruled in January 2013 that her sentence would be reduced by 112 days because of her treatment at Quantico.[70] She pleaded guilty to 10 of the 22 charges on February 28.[71] Reading for over an hour from a 35-page statement, she said she had leaked the cables "to show the true cost of war." Prosecutors pursued a court-martial on the remaining charges.[72]

The trial began on June 3, 2013. She was convicted on July 30 of 17 of the 22 charges in their entirety, including five counts of espionage and theft, and an amended version of four other charges; she was acquitted of aiding the enemy. The sentencing phase began the next day.[2] A military psychologist who had treated Manning, Capt. Michael Worsley, testified on her behalf that she had been left isolated in the army, trying to deal with gender-identity issues in a "hyper-masculine environment." On August 14, Manning apologized for her actions, telling the court: "I am sorry that my actions hurt people. I'm sorry that they hurt the United States. I am sorry for the unintended consequences of my actions. When I made these decisions I believed I was going to help people, not hurt people. ... At the time of my decisions I was dealing with a lot of issues."[73]

The offenses she was convicted of carried a maximum sentence of 90 years.[5] The government asked for a 60-year sentence to act as a deterrent to other soldiers, while her lawyer asked for no more than 25 years. She was sentenced on August 21 to 35 years and given a dishonorable discharge. Her rank was reduced from Private First Class to Private, and she will forfeit all pay and benefits. She was given credit of 1,293 days served, including the 112 days for her treatment at Quantico, and will be eligible for parole after serving one-third of the sentence.[1] She may also be given additional credit for good behavior, and could be released in about eight years.[5]

تغيير الجنس

A photo provided by the Army in which Manning poses in a feminine wig and lipstick

In the chat conversations with Adrian Lamo in May 2010 (prior to the leaks to Lamo), it was revealed that Manning was pending discharge for "adjustment disorder" in lieu of "gender identity disorder".[20]

Manning released a statement via her lawyer on August 22, 2013, read out on NBC's Today Show, that she intended to undergo gender reassignment and considered herself a woman. She has taken the name "Chelsea E. Manning":[74]

"As I transition into this next phase of my life, I want everyone to know the real me. I am Chelsea Manning. I am a female. Given the way that I feel, and have felt since childhood, I want to begin hormone therapy as soon as possible. I hope that you will support me in this transition. I also request that, starting today, you refer to me by my new name and use the feminine pronoun (except in official mail to the confinement facility)".[75]

رد الفعل على التصريحات

The publication of the leaked material, particularly the diplomatic cables, attracted in-depth coverage across the globe, with several governments blocking websites that contained embarrassing details. Alan Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian, said: "I can't think of a time when there was ever a story generated by a news organisation where the White House, the Kremlin, Chávez, India, China, everyone in the world was talking about these things. ... I've never known a story that created such mayhem that wasn't an event like a war or a terrorist attack."[76]

photograph
Billboard erected in Washington, D.C., by the Bradley Manning Support Network

Denver Nicks wrote that Manning's name "appended like a slogan to wholesale denunciations and exultations alike." United States Navy Admiral Michael Mullen, then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the leaks had placed the lives of American soldiers and Afghan informants in danger. Journalist Glenn Greenwald argued that Manning was the most important whistleblower since Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers in 1971.[77] President Barack Obama commented too, saying of Manning that she "broke the law"; Eugene Fidell of the National Institute of Military Justice called the remark "unlawful command influence."[78]

Manning and WikiLeaks were credited as catalysts for the Arab Spring that began in December 2010, when waves of protesters rose up against rulers across the Middle East and North Africa, after the leaked cables exposed government corruption.[79] Heather Brooke writes that, in Tunisia, where the uprisings began on December 17 with the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi in protest at being unable to make a living, one of the cables – published around 10 days earlier – showed that the President's daughter and her husband had their ice-cream flown in from Saint-Tropez. As Time magazine designated "the protester" as its 2011 person of the year, Brooke writes that WikiLeaks came under tremendous pressure, experiencing distributed denial-of-service attacks that shut down their servers, and finding themselves unable to receive donations when PayPal, banks, and credit-card companies refused to process them.[80]

A Washington Post editorial asked why an apparently unstable Army private had been able to access and transfer sensitive material in the first place. According to Nicks, Manning's sexuality came into play too. "Don't ask, don't tell" was repealed not long after her arrest, with Manning illustrating for the far right that gay people were unfit for military service, while the mainstream media presented her as a gay soldier driven mad by bullying.[81]

انظر أيضاً

الهوامش

  • Note: Sources that are used repeatedly or are central to the article are presented in shortened form in this section, as are books; for full citations for those sources, see the References section below. Other sources are cited in full in this section.
  1. ^ أ ب ت ث Tate, Julie. "Judge sentences Bradley Manning to 35 years", The Washington Post, 21 August 2013.
  2. ^ أ ب خطأ استشهاد: وسم <ref> غير صحيح؛ لا نص تم توفيره للمراجع المسماة verdict
  3. ^ "'I am Chelsea': Read Manning's full statement". today.com. 22 August 2013. As I transition into this next phase of my life, I want everyone to know the real me. I am Chelsea Manning. I am a female. Given the way that I feel, and have felt since childhood, I want to begin hormone therapy as soon as possible. I hope that you will support me in this transition. I also request that, starting today, you refer to me by my new name and use the feminine pronoun (except in official mail to the confinement facility). I look forward to receiving letters from supporters and having the opportunity to write back.
  4. ^ Stamp, Scott (22 August= 2013). "Bradley Manning: I want to live as a woman". today.com. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ أ ب ت Sledge, Matt. "Bradley Manning Sentenced To 35 Years In Prison For WikiLeaks Disclosures ", The Huffington Post, 21 August 2013.
  6. ^ أ ب Leigh and Harding 2011, pp. 194ff, 211.
  7. ^ Nicks, 23 September 2010.
  8. ^ Stamp, Scott (August 22, 2013). "Bradley Manning: I want to live as a woman". today.com.
  9. ^ Fishman, 3 July 2011, pp. 2–3.
  10. ^ Tate, Julie. "Manning apologizes, says he ‘hurt the United States’}, The Washington Post, 14 August 2013.
  11. ^ For her mother not adjusting, Manning fending for herself, and the neighbor, see Thompson, 8 August 2010, p. 1.
  12. ^ Kirkland, Michael. "Under the U.S. Supreme Court: Bradley Manning, WikiLeaks martyr?", United Press International, 13 March 2011.
  13. ^ Leigh and Harding, 2011, p. 31, and Hansen, 13 July 2011.
  14. ^ Fishman, 3 July 2011, p. 5.
  15. ^ * For the roommate, see Rushe, Dominic and Williams, Matt. "Bradley Manning pre-trial hearing – Monday 19 December", The Guardian, 19 December 2011.
  16. ^ For a description of the incident, and the view that her access to sensitive material ought to have been withdrawn, see Nicks 2012, pp. 133–134.
  17. ^ For the WikiLeaks tweet, see "Have encrypted videos ...", Twitter, 8 January 2010 (archived from the original, 8 May 2012). The tweet said:
  18. ^ Nicks 2012, pp. 131–135, 137–138.
  19. ^ Poulsen and Zetter, 6 June 2010.
  20. ^ أ ب ت ث ج ح خ د ذ ر ز س ش Hansen, 13 July 2011; also see Nicks 2012, pp. 171–184.
  21. ^ Nicks 2012, pp. 162–163.
  22. ^ Lewis, Paul. [http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/13/bradley-manning-email-drag-photo-sentencing "Bradley Manning supervisor 'ignored photo of soldier dressed as woman'", The Guardian, 13 August 2013.
  23. ^ Radia, Kirit and Martinez, Luis. "Bradley Manning Defense Reveals Alter Ego Named 'Breanna Manning'", ABC News, 17 December 2011.
  24. ^ Nicks 2012, p. 164, and "Bradley Manning's Facebook Page", PBS Frontline, March 2011.
  25. ^ For the storage cupboard, the psychiatrist, and the recommended discharge, see Nakashima, May 4, 2011.
  26. ^ Nakashima, 4 May 2011.
  27. ^ Dishneau, David and Jelinek, Pauline. "Witness: Manning said leak would lift 'fog of war'", Associated Press, 19 December 2011.
    • Also see Nicks 2012, p. 164.
  28. ^ أ ب Leigh and Harding 2011, pp. 52–56.
  29. ^ For WikiLeaks security, see Domscheit-Berg 2011, p. 165.
  30. ^ For the publishing sequence, see Leigh and Harding 2010, p. 70.
  31. ^ Also see Open Secrets: WikiLeaks, War and American Diplomacy, The New York Times Company, 2011.
  32. ^ She told Lamo: "At first glance it was just a bunch of guys getting shot up by a helicopter. No big deal ... about two dozen more where that came from, right? But something struck me as odd with the van thing, and also the fact it was being stored in a JAG officer’s directory. So I looked into it." See Hansen, 13 July 2011.
  33. ^ أ ب Nicks 2012, pp. 157–161.
  34. ^ For Nicks's analysis, see Nicks 2012, pp. 191–193; for the number of documents in the Afghan and Iraq War logs and Cablegate, and for the publication dates, see pp. 204, 206.
    • Note: there were 91,731 documents in all in the Afghan War logs; around 77,000 had been published as of May 2012.
  35. ^ Leigh and Harding, 2010, p. 70 for the publishing sequence; pp. 194ff for the material WikiLeaks published; and p. 211 for the number of documents and comment from WikiLeaks.
  36. ^ For the Ethiopian journalist and the relocation of sources, see Nicks 2012, p. 208.
    • For the inadvertent publication of the passphrase, see:
  37. ^ Leigh, David. "Guantánamo leaks lift lid on world's most controversial prison", The Guardian, 25 April 2011; and Nicks 2012, p. 153.
  38. ^ PFC Manning's Redacted Statement PFC Manning's Statement Redacted.pdf (MEMORANDUM THRU Civilian Defense Counsel, 2013-01-29)
  39. ^ "WikiLeaks has more US secrets, Assange says", The Age, 5 March 2013.
  40. ^ أ ب For Poulsen's relationship with Lamo, see Last, 11 January 2011.
  41. ^ For Poulsen's article about Lamo, see Poulsen, 20 May 2010.
  42. ^ Hulme, George V. "With Friends Like This", InformationWeek, 8 July 2002.
  43. ^ Greenwald, 18 June 2010.
    • Greenwald, Glenn. Email exchange between Glenn Greenwald and Kevin Poulsen, 14–17 June 2010.
    • Greenwald wrote: "Lamo told me that Manning first emailed him on May 20 and, according to highly edited chat logs released by Wired, had his first online chat with Manning on May 21; in other words, Manning first contacted Lamo the very day that Poulsen's Wired article on Lamo's involuntary commitment appeared (the Wired article is time-stamped 5:46 p.m. on May 20).

      "Lamo, however, told me that Manning found him not from the Wired article – which Manning never mentioned reading – but from searching the word 'WikiLeaks' on Twitter, which led him to a tweet Lamo had written that included the word 'WikiLeaks.' Even if Manning had really found Lamo through a Twitter search for 'WikiLeaks,' Lamo could not explain why Manning focused on him, rather than the thousands of other people who have also mentioned the word 'WikiLeaks' on Twitter, including countless people who have done so by expressing support for WikiLeaks."

  44. ^ Hansen, 13 July 2011.
  45. ^ Nicks 2012, p. 179.
  46. ^ Caesar, 19 December 2010.
  47. ^ Nicks 2012, p. 232.
  48. ^ For the first Wired story, see Poulsen and Zetter, 6 June 2010.
  49. ^ Hansen and Poulsen, 28 December 2010.
  50. ^ Poulsen and Zetter, 16 June 2010.
  51. ^ Nicks 2012, p. 247.
  52. ^ Pilkington, Ed. "Bradley Manning: how keeping himself sane was taken as proof of madness", The Guardian, 30 November 2012.
  53. ^ أ ب For a description of the jail, see Nakashima, Ellen. "In brig, WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning ordered to sleep without clothing", The Washington Post, March 5, 2011.
    • For Manning's lawyer's description, see "A Typical Day for PFC Bradley Manning", The Law Offices of David E. Coombs, 18 December 2010; archived from the original on 6 April 2012.
    • For Manning's description, see Manning, 10 March 2011, particularly pp. 10–11.
    • For the books she requested, see Nicks, Denver. "Bradley Manning's Life Behind Bars", The Daily Beast, 17 December 2010. The list was: Decision Points by George W. Bush; Critique of Practical Reason by Immanuel Kant; Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant; Propaganda by Edward Bernayse; The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins; A People's History of the United States by Howard Zinn; The Art of War by Sun Tzu; The Good Soldiers by David Finke; and On War by Gen. Carl von Clausewitz.
  54. ^ Manning, 10 March 2011, p. 7.
  55. ^ Marshall, Serena. "Court Martial for Bradley Manning in Wikileaks Case?", ABC News, December 22, 2011, p. 2.
  56. ^ Nicks 2012, pp. 240–242.
  57. ^ Manning, 10 March 2011, p. 9ff.
  58. ^ Pilkington, Ed. "Bradley Manning's treatment was cruel and inhuman, UN torture chief rules", The Guardian, March 12, 2012.
  59. ^ Pilkington, Ed; Chris McGreal & Steven Morris. "Bradley Manning is UK citizen and needs protection, government told", The Guardian, 1 February 2011.
    • For Manning's view of her nationality, see Coombs, David E. "Clarification Regarding PFC Manning's Citizenship", Law Offices of David E. Coombs, 2 February 2011: "There has been some discussion regarding PFC Bradley Manning's citizenship. PFC Manning does not hold a British passport, nor does he consider himself a British citizen. He is an American, and is proud to be serving in the United States Army. His current confinement conditions are troubling to many both here in the United States and abroad. This concern, however, is not a citizenship issue."
  60. ^ Nakashima, Ellen. "WikiLeaks suspect's treatment 'stupid,' U.S. official says", The Washington Post, 12 March 2011.
  61. ^ They argued that it was a violation of the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of cruel and unusual punishment, and the Fifth Amendment's guarantee against punishment without trial. See Ackerman, Bruce and Benkler, Yochai. "Private Manning’s Humiliation", The New York Review of Books, retrieved 10 April 2011.
  62. ^ Pilkington, Ed. "Bradley Manning's jail conditions improve dramatically after protest campaign", The Guardian, 4 May 2011.
  63. ^ "Panel Says WikiLeaks Suspect Is Competent to Stand Trial", Associated Press, 29 April 2011.
  64. ^ Rizzo, Jennifer "Bradley Manning charged", CNN, 23 February 2012.
  65. ^ Rath, Arun. "What Happened At Bradley Manning’s Hearing This Week?", PBS Frontline, 22 December 2011.
  66. ^ أ ب ت For the army investigators' testimony, see Zetter, December 19, 2011.
  67. ^ Nicks 2012, pp. 137–138; also see Zetter, 19 December 2011.
  68. ^ For the government overcharging Manning, see Zetter, Kim. "Army Piles on Evidence in Final Arguments in WikiLeaks Hearing", Wired, December 22, 2011.
  69. ^ Pone, Alyssa. "Bradley Manning Offers Guilty Pleas", ABC News, 8 November 2012.
  70. ^ Tate, Julie and Nakashima, Ellen. "Judge refuses to dismiss charges against WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning", The Washington Post, 8 January 2013.
  71. ^ خطأ استشهاد: وسم <ref> غير صحيح؛ لا نص تم توفيره للمراجع المسماة CBS28Feb2013
  72. ^ O'Brien, Alexa. "Bradley Manning's full statement", Salon, 1 March 2013.
  73. ^ Kube, Courtney; DeLuca, Matthew; McClam, Erin. "I'm sorry that I hurt the United States': Bradley Manning apologizes in court", NBC News, 14 August 2013.
  74. ^ "Bradley Manning: I want to live as a woman named Chelsea". Reuters. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  75. ^ "'I am Chelsea': Read Manning's full statement". Today Show. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  76. ^ Brooke 2011, p. 223.
  77. ^ For the quote from Nicks, see Nicks 2012, pp. 3, 196–197.
  78. ^ "Video Of Obama On Bradley Manning: 'He Broke The Law'", Forbes, 22 April 2011.
  79. ^ Horne, Nigel. "Tunisia: WikiLeaks had a part in Ben Ali's downfall", The Week, 15 January 2011.
  80. ^ For the ice-cream from Saint-Tropez, see Brooke 2011, p. 225.
  81. ^ For the Washington Post editorial, see "The right response to WikiLeaks", The Washington Post, editorial, 30 November 2010.
    • For Denver Nicks and his discussion of gays in the military, see Nicks 2012, pp. 3, 196–197.

المصادر

كتب
  • Brooke, Heather. The Revolution Will Be Digitised. William Heinemann, 2011.
  • Domscheit-Berg, Daniel. Inside WikiLeaks. Doubleday, 2011.
  • Fowler, Andrew. The Most Dangerous Man in the World. Skyhorse Publishing, 2011.
  • Leigh, David and Harding, Luke. WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy. Guardian Books, 2011.
  • Nicks, Denver. Private: Bradley Manning, WikiLeaks, and the Biggest Exposure of Official Secrets in American History. Chicago Review Press, 2012.
مقالات رئيسية
Key articles regarding the Lamo-Manning chat log, in order of publication
تسجيلات

قراءات إضافية

مقالات
كتب
  • Assange, Julian and O'Hagan, Andrew. Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Autobiography. Canongate, 2011.
  • Madar, Chase. The Passion of Bradley Manning. OR Books, 2012.
  • Mitchell, Greg and Gosztola, Kevin. Truth and Consequences: The U.S. vs. Bradley Manning. Sinclair Books, 2012.
تسجيلات
وثائق قانونية

وصلات خارجية

الكلمات الدالة: