The Guardian
Guardian wrote: Manning found not guilty of aiding the enemy
Manning has been found not guilty of the most serious charge of "aiding the enemy". However the private has been found guilty on five counts of violating the espionage act.
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Guardian wrote: Manning found not guilty of aiding the enemy
Manning has been found not guilty of the most serious charge of "aiding the enemy". However the private has been found guilty on five counts of violating the espionage act.
Not hard enough. It's hard to see a concession that the New York Times is not a declared enemy of the United States of America as much of a victory. John Kiriakou is still in prison because Obama thinks going public about a rogue organisation committing war crimes is worse than committing war crimes.Borgholio wrote:It seems to me that lately, the government has been having a hard time keeping secrets. First Snowden and his escape from the authorities, then the not guilty verdict of aiding the enemy for Pvt Manning.
The CM's convening authority also gets a review and can drastically alter the sentencing or even vacate some or all of the rulings if he wishes. There are rumors that the convening authority may commute some of the sentence based on time/harshness of time served if the judge doesn’t.Mr Bean wrote:First reports are that aiding the enemy is the only thing he was not found guilty of. Pretty much everything else which puts him in the over a hundred years in jail size. However if they give him more than six months he gets an appeal which they seem sure to do.
Oh please. He knew details about atrocities and lies and then went "if this is in files A-B, it stands to reason that files C-D also have similar stuff". This is exactly what Ellsberg did.Patroklos wrote:It is absolutely reasonable or you don't know what you are blowing the whistle on. If not you are just tryingt to cause damage, any damage, for some nebulous moral feeling and it may have nothing to do with what you object to.
Yeah, right. Source for this "he is leaking indiscriminately" stuff?If he was releasing the records or COBRA or the SS you might have a point as there is a reasonable expectation everything will be damning. Or even the folder "CIA Black Site." However, for all Manning knew he was releasing the SSNs or his division or their medical records or any number of things concerning legitimate activities that should be secret.
...I was under the honest impression that he had read the Pentagon Papers. Oops.Thanas wrote:Yes, we know what caused him to leak - the abuses and illegal activities of the US. It is completely illogical to expect from every whistleblower to sift through what he leaks before leaking. Heck, Ellsberg didn't read what he was leaking (Pentagon Papers) and he too leaked all he could get his hands on, based on the suspicion that there was toxic material in there. How is he different than Manning here?
Yes. What I am arguing is that your basic premise is wrong.Patroklos wrote:Your salon articles makes no claim that Manning had knowledge of what was contained in the vast majority of what was released. In fact it confirms he had no idea what he was releasing.
His quoted Salon article is presumably the original source of the rumor that Manning had no idea what he was releasing. A claim that you repeated in this thread.Patroklos wrote:Your salon articles makes no claim that Manning had knowledge of what was contained in the vast majority of what was released. In fact it confirms he had no idea what he was releasing.
Is there an existing legal definition of harm?Borgholio wrote:In an ideal world, the leaker would be punished for releasing info that causes harm, such as nuke blueprints, but lauded for uncovering government corruption or dishonesty.
But yeah, like anybody in the government would be ideal about that.
I don't think there's one that is as precise as is needed. I would say this:Gandalf wrote:Is there an existing legal definition of harm?Borgholio wrote:In an ideal world, the leaker would be punished for releasing info that causes harm, such as nuke blueprints, but lauded for uncovering government corruption or dishonesty.
But yeah, like anybody in the government would be ideal about that.
The claim that Manning didn't know what he was releasing is supported by the fact it is physically impossible for him to have even skimmed all that data let alone anyalyzed it enough to gleen what even the topic of most of it was.slebetman wrote: His quoted Salon article is presumably the original source of the rumor that Manning had no idea what he was releasing. A claim that you repeated in this thread.
Contrast that with actual court records that shows that the rumor started by the Salon article is bullshit.
I don't think you can go only by intent; if he accidently leaked nuclear weapons plans in the mass of data, would we hold him blameless for the results?Borgholio wrote:I don't think there's one that is as precise as is needed. I would say this:Gandalf wrote:Is there an existing legal definition of harm?Borgholio wrote:In an ideal world, the leaker would be punished for releasing info that causes harm, such as nuke blueprints, but lauded for uncovering government corruption or dishonesty.
But yeah, like anybody in the government would be ideal about that.
1. Releasing blueprints for a nuke - could allow someone to murder thousands of innocents, doesn't provide any benefits.
2. Leaking secret and possibly illegal government files that could cause soldiers and spies to be killed or damages the national reputation, but has the benefit of preventing said government from committing (possibly serious) crimes.
So I guess harm could be defined as the intended result. Does the leaker want a terrorist organization to have access to the bomb, or does he want to stop his own government from spying on, torturing, and possibly murdering innocent people?
The question is, what happens on some hypothetical day when that isn't the only class of thing being released?Terralthra wrote:To my mind, the issue is this: Bradley Manning's release of classified documents could conceivably be traced as the proximate cause to any number of perceived harms - increased AQ recruiting, a major hit in the US's perception as a nation which obeys rules of war, etc., but the ultimate cause of those harms are actions taken by the US government and soldiers in its service. Releasing documents which lays those actions bare for the world to see "harms" the US only because the US allowed those actions in the first place, then covered them up with secrecy. If the US (and its soldiers) hadn't done things like Collateral Murder portrayed, etc., then the release of documentation of them would have no harms associated with them.
Emphasis added. I'm just gonna say that this would likely be a different bag of snakes than what Manning was charged for. Just casually browsing Wikipedia reveals that this kind of information is classified as 'sensitive but unclassified' information. He could probably be charged for it, but it'd likely be under a different law than the Espionage Act if I had to place a bet. I'll let anybody educated in law extrapolate on that one further.Simon_Jester wrote: I have no right to punish someone for 'harming' me by releasing evidence that I've committed a crime. But what if, along with that evidence, they also release something like the personal identifying information of everyone who works for a the State Department?