Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Manning was mentally unstable: report
From The Hindu
Bradley Manning, U.S. military intelligence officer charged with leaking confidential government documents to WikiLeaks, the online whistleblower website, was deployed in Iraq despite warnings from evaluators that he was not mentally stable and a risk to himself and others, an investigation has revealed.
A detailed report and video published by The Guardian newspaper showed that Mr. Manning was not only given a negative report by his commanding officers here, but was also noted by his colleagues as displaying signs buckling under enormous stress. Yet, in October 2009, Mr. Manning was sent to Forward Operating Base Hammer, near Baghdad.
The extensive investigation by The Guardian suggested that even by that point Mr. Manning had faced much bullying within the army and was also possibly distressed owing to his partner, Tyler Watkins, ending their relationship in late 2009. It was clear that he had been under much pressure when one officer said to The Guardian, “He was harassed so much that he once [urinated] in his sweatpants.”
Mr. Manning's demotion and ultimate discharge from the military came after May 7, 2010, when, according to a soldier who had been deployed to FOB Hammer alongside Mr. Manning said Mr. Manning started “blowing up and punching this chick in the face.”
It was shortly after this point, while he was still awaiting discharge for “adjustment disorder,” that he communicated with former hacker-turned-informant, Adrian Lamo. Within 24 hours of revealing to Mr. Lamo that he had possibly copied and transmitted to “WL” a vast tranche of confidential government data when he was at FOB Hammer, Mr. Lamo reported him to U.S. authorities.
Since his arrest in May 2010 evaluators have continued to assess Mr. Manning's mental health, officials confirmed, and earlier reports suggested that he might be considered to be at risk of self-harm.
However the controversial conditions of Mr. Manning's incarceration also threatened to become a major embarrassment to the administration when it became evident that he was being forced to strip down to a smock every night and was being held in solitary confinement.
While he was transferred to a lower-security prison in April 2011, his prior time in the military brig in Quantico, Virginia, saw top officials and civil society groups voicing strong protest to the treatment meted out to him by jail officers there.
In particular, U.S. State Department spokesman Philip Crowley had to resign after he described Mr. Manning's treatment as “ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid.” Further
A group of 250 legal experts including a former professor of President Barack Obama wrote a letter condemning the U.S.' describing the harsh conditions of Mr. Manning's time in jail as “illegal and immoral.”
Labels: Bradley Manning, cablegate, Philip Crowley, U.S. State Department spokesman, whistleblower, Wikileaks
Manning ruled fit for trial
From The Hindu
An army intelligence analyst jailed on charges of leaking United States government data to Wikileaks has been found competent to stand trial despite earlier being categorised as a suicide risk, according to official sources. Bradley Manning, who was held in solitary confinement for 11 months following allegations that he gave the online whistleblower website sensitive information on U.S. military and diplomatic engagements, was cleared to stand trial by a “panel of experts.”
Despite protests from his legal team, the Pentagon earlier ruled that Mr. Manning was in danger of harming himself and consequently stripped him down to a smock every night and held him in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day. However last week Mr. Manning was transferred from the military facility in Quantico, Virginia, where he was being held under these restrictive conditions, to a prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where he was said to be considered “medium-security” detenu. In Fort Leavenworth, authorities said he would be permitted to interact with other inmates.
While the treatment meted out to Mr. Manning in Quantico was described as “degrading and inhumane” by a group of 250 legal experts, including a former professor of President Barack Obama, Pentagon officials said there was a lot of “misinformation” about Mr. Manning and insisted he was neither in solitary confinement nor stripped naked every night.
With Mr. Manning being suddenly moved to Fort Leavenwoth the focus of his case is likely to shift to military court martial proceedings, the date for which has not yet been set.
In a concurrent development, Mr. Obama was recently caught on camera saying to an attendee at a fundraising event in San Francisco last week that Mr. Manning “broke the law,” prompting some legal experts to argue that in saying so Mr. Obama has “destroyed the chance of a fair trial” for Mr. Manning.
The White House subsequently withdrew the privileges of the journalist, Carla Marinucci, who posted online the video of Mr. Obama commenting on Mr. Manning's guilt.
An army intelligence analyst jailed on charges of leaking United States government data to Wikileaks has been found competent to stand trial despite earlier being categorised as a suicide risk, according to official sources. Bradley Manning, who was held in solitary confinement for 11 months following allegations that he gave the online whistleblower website sensitive information on U.S. military and diplomatic engagements, was cleared to stand trial by a “panel of experts.”
Despite protests from his legal team, the Pentagon earlier ruled that Mr. Manning was in danger of harming himself and consequently stripped him down to a smock every night and held him in solitary confinement for 23 hours a day. However last week Mr. Manning was transferred from the military facility in Quantico, Virginia, where he was being held under these restrictive conditions, to a prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where he was said to be considered “medium-security” detenu. In Fort Leavenworth, authorities said he would be permitted to interact with other inmates.
While the treatment meted out to Mr. Manning in Quantico was described as “degrading and inhumane” by a group of 250 legal experts, including a former professor of President Barack Obama, Pentagon officials said there was a lot of “misinformation” about Mr. Manning and insisted he was neither in solitary confinement nor stripped naked every night.
With Mr. Manning being suddenly moved to Fort Leavenwoth the focus of his case is likely to shift to military court martial proceedings, the date for which has not yet been set.
In a concurrent development, Mr. Obama was recently caught on camera saying to an attendee at a fundraising event in San Francisco last week that Mr. Manning “broke the law,” prompting some legal experts to argue that in saying so Mr. Obama has “destroyed the chance of a fair trial” for Mr. Manning.
The White House subsequently withdrew the privileges of the journalist, Carla Marinucci, who posted online the video of Mr. Obama commenting on Mr. Manning's guilt.
Labels: Bradley Manning, whistleblower, Wikileaks
Thursday, December 02, 2010
Not expecting anything good from India: Pak Ambassador
From The Hindu
India was responsible for training and funding extremist groups that were waging a war against the state of Pakistan, Umar Khan Alisherzai, Pakistani Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said during a meeting with his American counterpart least year.
The comments by Mr. Alisherzai were made publicly available by WikiLeaks, the whistleblower website that rocked the United States State Department this week since it began publishing some 250,000 private cables between U.S. diplomats in Washington and across the world.
The cable, dated October 26 2009 and sent from the U.S. embassy in Riyadh to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the U.S. embassy in New Delhi, quoted the Pakistani Ambassador as saying that India had also supported the Taliban in Pakistan, “They (India) will never let a chance to harm Pakistan go.”
The U.S. official recording the conversation went on to note that Mr. Alisherzai summed up his feelings about India by saying, “We are not expecting anything good from them.”
The official also stated in the cable that Mr. Alisherzai had offered some valuable insights into the relationship between intelligence and support provided by the local population in the Federally Administered Tribal Area region and the success of Pakistani military operations.
The U.S. official said that while Mr. Alisherzai’s suggestions on FATA and U.S. strategies to counter the growth of extremism in the region were “worth noting,” his insights on “larger regional issues (such as) Iran, India, and Saudi Arabia appear to be much more limited.”
Elaborating further on what the troubled border region of FATA needed to emerge from its current state of instability Mr. Alisherzai said that investment in education and development was the only way to help the tribal areas, and said that years of “bad luck” had redirected development funds from the tribal areas to the urban population centres.
India was responsible for training and funding extremist groups that were waging a war against the state of Pakistan, Umar Khan Alisherzai, Pakistani Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, said during a meeting with his American counterpart least year.
The comments by Mr. Alisherzai were made publicly available by WikiLeaks, the whistleblower website that rocked the United States State Department this week since it began publishing some 250,000 private cables between U.S. diplomats in Washington and across the world.
The cable, dated October 26 2009 and sent from the U.S. embassy in Riyadh to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and the U.S. embassy in New Delhi, quoted the Pakistani Ambassador as saying that India had also supported the Taliban in Pakistan, “They (India) will never let a chance to harm Pakistan go.”
The U.S. official recording the conversation went on to note that Mr. Alisherzai summed up his feelings about India by saying, “We are not expecting anything good from them.”
The official also stated in the cable that Mr. Alisherzai had offered some valuable insights into the relationship between intelligence and support provided by the local population in the Federally Administered Tribal Area region and the success of Pakistani military operations.
The U.S. official said that while Mr. Alisherzai’s suggestions on FATA and U.S. strategies to counter the growth of extremism in the region were “worth noting,” his insights on “larger regional issues (such as) Iran, India, and Saudi Arabia appear to be much more limited.”
Elaborating further on what the troubled border region of FATA needed to emerge from its current state of instability Mr. Alisherzai said that investment in education and development was the only way to help the tribal areas, and said that years of “bad luck” had redirected development funds from the tribal areas to the urban population centres.
Labels: bilateral ties, cablegate, India-Pak relations, whistleblower, Wikileaks
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