The Chelsea Manning Case: A Timeline | News & Commentary | American …

On May 17, Chelsea Manning will be released from military prison after her sentence was commuted by former President Obama in his last week in office. She has been incarcerated for seven years far less than the 35 years to which she was sentenced, but longer than any whistleblower in U.S. history.

Chelseas story raises numerous issues of interest to the ACLU, including the governments treatment of whistleblowers, the struggle of transgender people to survive and be treated with dignity, and prisoners rights. Below is a timeline covering some of the basics of her case.

May 2010 Chelsea Manning is arrested in Iraq for disclosing information to Wikileaks that was ultimately published by The New York Times, The Guardian, and Der Spiegel. The information, largely comprised of military and diplomatic documents, included evidence of civilian deaths in Iraq and Afghanistan, U.S. attempts to cover up the CIA torture program, and other matters of public interest. Shortly after her arrest, she is transferred to a U.S. military base in Kuwait, and then to the Quantico Marine base in Virginia.

April 2011 After being held for almost a year in solitary confinement in Kuwait and Quantico, Chelsea is transferred to a medium-security military prison in Kansas. Shortly before her transfer, the ACLU sends then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates a letter objecting to her treatment as cruel and unusual. She had been regularly stripped naked, subjected to prolonged isolated confinement and sleep deprivation, deprived of any meaningful opportunity to exercise, and stripped of her reading glasses so she could not read. Almost 300 academics, most of them legal scholars, sign a letter objecting to her treatment.

March 2012 The United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture Juan Mendez formally rules that the U.S. governments treatment of Chelsea was cruel, inhuman, and degrading. The Pentagon refuses to allow Mendez to meet with Chelsea.

June 2013 Chelseas court martial trial begins. She is initially charged with aiding the enemy, despite the fact that the government never claimed she directly provided military adversaries with information. The charge is akin to treason and punishable by death.

July 2013 Chelsea is convicted of 17 of the 22 charges against her but acquitted of aiding the enemy. The following month, she is sentenced to 35 years in prison. When a soldier who shared information with the press and public is punished far more harshly than others who tortured prisoners and killed civilians, something is seriously wrong with our justice system, the ACLU says. This is the heaviest sentence handed down to a whistleblower or leaker in U.S. history, almost 20 times the pre-Obama record.

August 2013 Chelsea publicly announces she is transgender and will be seeking hormone therapy as part of her transition during incarceration. The military, despite its own diagnosis of Chelseas gender dysphoria, responds by stating that it does not provide hormone therapy or sex-reassignment surgery for gender identity disorder.

September 2014 The ACLU sues the Department of Defense over its refusal to provide Chelsea medical treatment for gender dysphoria.

February 2015 Prompted by over a year of litigation, the army begins to treat Chelsea with hormone therapy. She becomes the first person to receive health care related to gender transition while in military prison. The military continues to refuse to permit her to follow female grooming standards despite recommendations from its own medical providers that such treatment is a necessary part of her health care.

May 2016 Chelsea appeals her conviction. The ACLU files an amicus brief in support of the appeal. We argue that her prosecution under the Espionage Act of 1917, which does not allow defendants to argue that their disclosures were in the public interest, violated the Constitution and should be overturned.

September 2016 Chelsea ends a hunger strike she launched in protest of the armys refusal to provide her with medical treatment related to her gender dysphoria, after receiving assurances from the military that it would grant her request for gender transition surgery a first for a transgender inmate.

January 2017 Following a sustained, high-profile advocacy campaign including a WhiteHouse.gov petition, videos from former whistleblowers and celebrities, and letters of support from every major LGBTQ organization President Barack Obama announces he is commuting all but four months of Chelseas sentence. She will be released on May 17, 2017.

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The Chelsea Manning Case: A Timeline | News & Commentary | American ...

Chelsea Manning speaks out and says voice ‘has been left out of the …

Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence officer who was sentenced to 35 years in prison because of the trove of classified documents she released in 2010, has felt that she hasn't yet been able to tell her side of the story.

Manning, whose sentence was commuted after seven years by former President Barack Obama in 2017, has recently published a memoir called 'README.txt.'

She spoke with ABC News' Linsey Davis about her experience as a whistleblower, her childhood, decision to transition and message to trans kids.

PRIME: A number of people are going to say, you know, I already know who Chelsea Manning is and, you know, she leaked classified documents and they feel some kind of way about that.

MANNING: Right.

PRIME: And so what would you say to those critics? Why should they take the time and money to actually read your story?

MANNING: I think that my voice and my, sort of, experience taken as a whole has been left out of the story. Everybody's been sort of treating me as an enigma, but I'm here, right? And so, I'm just trying to tell my story. I'm a little late to the show, but I wanted to do this. So, I mean, because this book has been, I've been working on this book since I was in prison.

In this Sept. 8, 2017, file photo, Chelsea Manning and Larissa MacFarquhar attend The 2017 New Yorker Festival in New York.

Thos Robinson/Getty Images for The New Yorker, FILE

PRIME: And you're only 34, so you've made it clear this is not a memoir, but really a coming of age story. You describe a really tumultuous childhood... your mom trying to commit suicide, the divorce, you facing homelessness at a really early age. How did that all shape who you have become?

MANNING: It shaped all of me. Any one of those experiences would have been different, it wouldn't be me.

PRIME: Right.

MANNING: So, you know, I did have a difficult upbringing. I mean, there were good times as well. But yeah, I felt and I still feel to this day, like I was, I always felt under-appreciated by my father, and I always wanted to just get my father to say, you know, I appreciate you. I love you. I am proud of you cause it always felt like nothing was good enough for him.

PRIME: You talk about, though, in the book how your dad seemed to be proud of you when you joined the military.

MANNING: Yes.

PRIME: And your sister, conversely, she said, you write, she told me I was a dumb--ss, making a stupid, impulsive move, and that no matter how talented I was, there was no way I'd fit into the culture of the Army. How did you make that decision? Going from just kind of starting to explore gay clubs at the time and then joining the military during the height of the Iraq war during 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell.'

MANNING: I wanted to rekindle the relationship with my father. You know, he kicked me out of the house in 2006 and he had remarried. I felt like there was unfinished business. I was genuinely looking for some way of fitting into the world, of having stability. And my father kept pitching stability and structure. But in all of this, I wanted to feel like I could make a mark on the world and not just be struggling to stay afloat.

PRIME: Some people are going to hear you say that and say that's what this is about, you wanted to make your mark on the world. What would you say that this is really what led you that day, to decide to upload more than 700,000 classified documents?

MANNING: Right. By the time I got into Iraq in 2010, or 2009, we deployed and by 2010, that was when I started to make these decisions. I had become very professional, I had this sense of purpose and this sense of I can do something and I can be a part of something bigger. And then have that, you know, having this cognitive dissonance between something that I believe in and really have invested an enormous amount of time and energy into, be contradicted by the realities on the ground.

You know, everything that I had learned about what was going on at that point, you know, turned out to be much more complicated and much bleaker and much more, I would say, from the perspective of the military and the government and the political establishment, much more self-destructive than I ever could have imagined.

In this March 13, 2018, file photo, network security expert Chelsea Manning talks onstage during the SXSW Interactive session "Free Radical: Chelsea Manning with Vogue's Sally Singer" in Austin, Texas.

Jim Bennett/WireImage via Getty Images, FILE

PRIME: What is the truth that you wanted Americans to know?

MANNING: That the sanitized version of the Iraq War up to this point, this discourse had started to be sanitized again and started to be glossed over again. And I was still seeing all of the same problems and all of the same feedback loops that were happening on the ground in terms of, you know, these cycles of retribution of death and destruction, of brutality, and the public not having any full understanding of this. I wanted to make that available. I wanted that discussion to happen.

PRIME: Well, you write, it's not possible to work in Intelligence and not to imagine disclosing the many secrets you bear.

MANNING: I would agree with that.

PRIME: On the flip side, there are thousands of people who've had a similar occupation and they didn't disclose classified information.

MANNING: But they thought about it.

PRIME: You think so?

MANNING: I know so.

PRIME: What kept them from doing that?

MANNING: Well, probably the same reason why I hesitated, which is, you know, an opportunity, a career. Being in the military and being an intelligence in itself, is a lifestyle, it's not just a career. There really is this entire worldview of, I work in this field and this becomes part of your identity and part of who you are. And that's much deeper than just being a job.

In this May 16, 2019, file photo, former military intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning speaks to the press ahead of a Grand Jury appearance about WikiLeaks, in Alexandria, Va.

Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images, FILE

PRIME: So in addition to losing your career, you get court-martialed and sentenced to 35 years, actually the harshest sentence for anyone who'd ever leaked classified documents, during all of this time, you're also struggling with your your gender identity, your sexual identity. And so even on that day, in the bookstore, when you're uploading the documents, you take a picture of yourself with a wig and makeup.

MANNING: Right.

PRIME: And you write about gender dysphoria and you say that it was like a toothache that never goes away. You're not always consciously thinking about it, but it's this persistent thing that you can't totally shake that keeps holding you back. When was the first time that you thought about changing your gender?

MANNING: Yeah. I didn't realize it was an option until my twenties, right? I didn't realize that you could seek access to care, that you could get hormone treatment, that you could get therapy, that you know, surgical options were available. I just didn't realize that, even though I knew I was different at a very young age.

It wasn't until I was in the military, and I'd been in the military for a few years. By the time I was deployed to Iraq, I knew for certain that this was the path that I knew that I need to take in order to survive.

PRIME: And I'd like to read the book dedication. It says, this book is dedicated to the brave trans kids who struggle to live as themselves in a hostile world. You make me proud.

MANNING: Yes.

PRIME: What is your message, beyond that, to trans kids right now who are struggling and feeling uncomfortable, perhaps, in their own skin?

MANNING: I went through that experience as a kid, I know what you're going through very deeply. And I'm thankful that kids are able to even know this kind of information because I didnt when I was that age. I just needed someone to tell me that I was loved and appreciated for who I am. And that's all I want to say. You are loved, you are appreciated, and that there is a community.

We had a progressive moment in the last decade where we've been able to make advances, and find ourselves and find our community. We may lose some of that in the next few years, and that's unfortunate but also we're survivors and we can make it through.

I've seen resiliency, and survivability, and solidarity. Many of these laws that have popped up and these quote unquote debates that have popped up are going to roll back some of the progress of the last decade, that's not the end of the story.

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Chelsea Manning speaks out and says voice 'has been left out of the ...

Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared …

Chelsea Mannings memoir opens like a Jason Bourne novel with a scene in which the then 22-year-old, on the last day of two weeks military leave, tries to leak an enormous amount of classified data via a sketchy wifi connection in a Barnes & Noble in Maryland. Outside, a snowstorm rages. Inside, Manning, a junior intelligence analyst for the US army, freaks out as the clock ticks down. In 12 hours, her flight leaves for Iraq. Meanwhile she has half a million incident reports on US military activity to upload from a memory stick to an obscure website called WikiLeaks. The military would later argue she didnt have the clearance even to access these files exceeded authorised as Manning puts it, in army parlance but the fact is, she says, It was encouraged. I was told, Go look! The way you do analysis is you collect a shit-ton of data, a huge amount, in order to do the work on it.

Everything about Manning on that afternoon of 8 February 2010 her name, her gender, her anonymity, her freedom is provisional and shortly to change. Three months later, shell be in a cage in Kuwait. Three years after that, shell be starting a 35-year prison sentence at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. Meanwhile, the wider consequences of her actions that day will, depending on your view, topple governments; endanger lives; protect lives; uphold democracy; compromise global diplomacy; change the world in no measurable way whatsoever; or Mannings least favourite interpretation boil down to a cry for help from a troubled young transperson seeking the care she required. Today, sitting across the table from me in an office in Brooklyn, Manning is tiny, fierce, dressed all in black with long blond hair, and vibrating with enough nervous energy to power the lights. Are we recording? she says as her eyes skim the room. For the space of our 90-minute encounter, she will seem only partially present, each question yanking her back to some unseen site of contest where she must defend herself against endless and wide-ranging charges.

The memoir is called README.txt, a misleadingly clunky title (it refers to the file name she used for the leaks) for a highly entertaining book that, while telling the story of why and how Manning leaked the data, gives equal space to her origins in Oklahoma, a complex and traumatic family story creating the conditions for all her subsequent decisions. Its a terrific read, full of unexpected turns and details that counter many of the assumptions made about Manning at the time. In the wake of her arrest, she was characterised by the US government as, variously, a nihilist, an anarchist, an idealist and an ideologue. Three days into her trial in 2013, Edward Snowden leaked classified National Security Agency (NSA) documents revealing how the US government spied on its own citizens, something, Manning notes drily in the book, that only damaged her image further. I support Ed generally, but on a personal level, the timing was difficult for me, she writes. Snowden emerged as the grownup, the credible whistleblower to Mannings loose cannon, hero to her bad leaker. Compared with Snowden, Manning was young, inexperienced and, because she was in prison, unable to defend herself in interviews. When, at the end of the trial, a photo surfaced of Manning wearing a blond wig and eye makeup, it delivered to her critics a further made-for-TV narrative: she had a secret she couldnt tell, so she told a nations secrets.

Manning, now 34, snorts mirthlessly at this interpretation. People tried to say, Oh, this all happened because you were trans. Its like, no; its because I was a data scientist who had way too much information and was actually trying to do my job, and realised that continuing on like this is not sustainable. We cant keep doing the same thing and expecting different results.

She is talking about the raw data it was her job to harvest and analyse in Iraq, and that, within weeks of arrival, she came to feel was being dishonestly reported to the American people by the military. Manning speaks quickly, in a way that seems linked both to her talent for processing large amounts of complex information and to a more basic need to scuttle past black spots of memory. She was in prison for seven years before President Obama commuted her sentence in 2017, a chunk of that time spent in Quantico military prison, in solitary confinement. She tried to kill herself twice during that jail term and a third time, in 2019, when she returned to prison, this time for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating Julian Assange. That refusal was an incredible piece of self-sacrifice, blowing a final hole in the idea that she was driven by mental turbulence, not principle. Im very frustrated by that even to this day, she says, adding that there are a number of diagnoses on her Wikipedia page that are misidentified PTSD. Gender dysphorias not on the radar any more; its been treated, or some would go so far as to say cured. All the other diagnoses were just untreated, unidentified, complex post traumatic stress syndrome. That is my sole diagnosis.

Manning wrote the book to restore a sense of nuance to a story that, over the years, she feels has been seized on by one pressure group or another seeking to use her to fortify their cause. It has left her with a tendency to find a hidden agenda in even the blandest statement, which gives rise to occasionally comic misunderstandings. When I say the book is very good, she looks concerned and says, Ive spoken a lot about commodification in the digital age, and everythings a product now, and everything has to be sponsored, from people on TikTok and Instagram, to the entirety of society where it feels like every single interaction you have has a monetary transaction or value to it.

Theres a short pause. No, I I just meant that I thought it was a good read. Entertaining. Manning looks fleetingly blank. OK.

The irony of making journalists sign NDAs to read the manuscript (it is watermarked on every page to discourage leaks) isnt lost on her. She gives a whaddya-gonna-do shrug. Ownership of something you can copy still seems absurd to me, especially in the NFT era. My publishers not happy with me for saying that. Which I understand. But I do find it a little silly.

It is hard to imagine what Mannings life consists of these days. Before the pandemic, she was doing speaking events mainly at the invitation of students, but lockdown put paid to that. She has some consulting gigs with tech and security firms, on the AI side nuanced and complex opinions on crypto-applications and post-crypto currency, she says. She lives alone, in Brooklyn, where her social life revolves around the music scene she has always been a big music person; as a teenager, Napster was her gateway to online culture.

Last August, she popped up as a guest DJ at Elsewhere, a huge club in Brooklyn where she wore light-up cat ears and played a set including Britney Spears remixes and the theme from Succession. She has, perhaps, the worst form of celebrity, one that guarantees intrusion and wild gossip earlier this year, she was rumoured to be dating Canadian musician (and Elon Musks ex) Grimes, something she wont dignify with comment but one that doesnt deliver any perks or income. Im not an actor or a movie star, she says. Even YouTubers make more money than me.

Still, two years after her release from Fort Leavenworth, she had won some kind of equilibrium and was starting to rebuild a life. All that ended in 2019, when she was subpoenaed to testify in front of a grand jury about her interactions with Assange. She refused, and was sent back to prison. Given everything shed been through, this was, surely, a very difficult decision to make? Manning looks indignant to the point of outrage. Not hard at all.

Im amazed, I say, not least because in the book, she appears to be no fan of Assanges, characterising his faction within WikiLeaks as the less responsible of the original cohort of hackers. (She wont be drawn on her personal dealings with Assange, nor on the legal fight he currently faces.) No, she says. The grand jury process is a screwed-up process and regardless of whether its activists on the frontline or if its journalists, Im not going to participate in that.

But the cost to you personally

Oh, when youve already spent seven years in prison, 18 months is just ...

She fades out. Surely, I suggest, having already served time makes the prospect of a return to jail even worse, particularly in light of your PTSD? No. I Her voice trembles and her eyes fill with tears. OK, Im going to get real intense here. Mannings voice lowers, loudens and becomes very harsh, as if she is forcing out an unbearable truth. I struggle every day with the world out here, she says. There is a long pause. I have a lot of trouble with this world, this so-called free world, compared with the life that I had in prison.

Why? I struggle with the fact that ... I dont know what tomorrow brings out here. I feel less supported than I did in both the military and in prison. In prison I know that I have housing; I know that I have healthcare; I know that I have food. I dont feel as secure here. And people are so detached. There is no community. People dont talk to each other. People dont say hi to you. People are suspicious of each other. Her voice rises to a peak. Theres more community in a prison than there is out here! And that says a lot about how fucked-up our world is right now. I struggle with it every day.

Manning was released from a detention centre in Virginia in March 2020, a year after she was imprisoned, when the grand jurys investigation expired and her testimony was no longer required. To have that much fight in her, to remain true to her principles in the face of such cost, is admirable to the point of baffling. It stems from optimism, she says, and I believe her. I know that community is possible, because Ive seen it, and Ive seen it in the worst places that you can possibly imagine. Whenever humanity is pushed to the edge, I see the best, so I know its there.

If there is a strand unifying all the contrasts that have governed Chelsea Mannings life, it is her dislike consistent and to the point of perversity of orthodoxies of any kind. She wont be owned by a single group, no matter how sympathetic to her cause. During her trial, the old lefties and free-speech campaigners who turned up to support her pissed her off when they disrupted the courtroom and annoyed the judge. In the book, she calls out elements of the radical transparency crowd at WikiLeaks, including Assange, for being troll-y and nihilist. She breaks rank with elements of the trans community at the time of her arrest, she was still living as a gay man by deadnaming herself in the memoir. There is, she believes, too much emphasis placed on identity at the expense of other considerations. Thats not how I think. I have things that I care about, I have positions that I hold, and I feel like especially in the online era, you find an identity and you fit your beliefs to your identity, which is not how I work at all.

The fact is, she writes, she didnt join the military to advance an ideological agenda, or to help the enemy, or to cause chaos for its own sake. She joined for the reasons so many people do: because she was lost, unemployed, directionless and wanted to impress her father, a US navy veteran who she claims bullied her relentlessly as a child for being a sissy. Essentially: trying to get my father to respect me again. That was the largest part, I think.

She also hoped the rigours of military life would quell her gender dysphoria; thinking its better to try to tamp down on that, which is basically what most trans people did in the early 2000s. And it did die down, under the weight of the crushing physical demands of basic training. Then training ended and I was like, oh, crap. Its still there.

After acing the aptitude tests, Manning was posted to army intelligence and, at 22, found herself deployed in Iraq as part of the graduating class of the 2007 recruitment surge. The shock was immense. Along with other analysts, she was housed in a converted basketball court in the green zone, providing direct support to frontline troops by anticipating enemy movement. She was very good at her job. She was also horrified and depressed, fielding graphic raw images from the battlefield. One night, a clerical error made by a special operations unit they used an old address for a target resulted in the death of a group of Iraqi civilians. I blamed myself in part because I left my desk to go eat. I shouldnt have left. If she hadnt been absent, she says, I couldve solved this. She felt powerless, and angry, and guilty. She wondered if there was anything she could do.

The assumption about whistleblowers is that the bravery it takes and the self-sacrifice it entails require a confidence bordering on narcissism. To call out systems as large as the US military, there has to be, surely, something wrong with you. The fact that Chelsea Manning was so young when she uploaded the incident reports and significant activity logs to WikiLeaks isnt irrelevant; risk assessment at that age isnt what it is a decade later. To Manning, analysing the data, precedent suggested that the consequences might not be too dire. Forty years earlier, when Daniel Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers, exposing the US governments lies about Vietnam, he escaped a jail term. More recently, Thomas Drake, a whistleblower who in 2006 communicated with journalists about inefficiency and fraud at the NSA, had been sanctioned but not imprisoned. Mannings assumption was that shed face dishonourable discharge. She believed it was worth it. As she writes in the book, when she left Barnes & Noble that day after uploading the files, it made her feel like Id done something, that Id relieved my conscience a little. I felt a duty to my fellow humans to do this, to make the world understand more about what I knew was happening in Iraq and Afghanistan every day, to understand what the true casualty numbers were.

Manning wanted to apprise the American public of several things: how badly the Iraq war was going; and that the secrecy around it was designed to save face, not a security measure to protect the national interest. A year later, similar concerns propelled her to leak a huge cache of diplomatic cables from the US Department of State. (That leak would reveal nothing so starkly as how porous and pathetic US government cybersecurity was that a low-ranking 22-year-old analyst could access and disseminate the data.) The question remains less one of whether or not Manning was justified in her actions as why, of the hundreds of intelligence and other officers with access to the same information, she was the one to break rank. There was in her background a kernel of belief in the theory of radical transparency, but it was very specific to music. It was very Napster-era. It was around pirating music, or films. Before joining the military, shed engaged in some internet activism, targeting evangelical churches by trolling their discussion groups, but this was largely recreational at a time when early internet culture was, as she says, a playground, rather than the toxic cesspools of extreme rightwing ideologies it became.

She has vaguely anti-authoritarian roots on both sides of her family. Her mother, Susan, was Welsh, from a large, working-class family in Haverfordwest. Her father, Brian, is from a Catholic family from the midwest, with a strong libertarian streak. Mannings parents met in a pub in Wales in the mid-1970s, where her father was stationed with the US Navy. They married and moved back to the US, winding up in Oklahoma where her father found a job as an electronic data processor for the Hertz Corporation.

It was a comfortable, middle-class home. It was also violent. Both Mannings parents were alcoholics; her father frequently beat the crap out of her, she writes, sometimes for no apparent reason, but often triggered, Manning believes, by what he perceived to be his sons effeminate behaviour. Her mother was gentler, but also zoned out on alcohol and incapable of behaving like an adult. She never learned to drive or to balance a chequebook, and her alcoholism eventually made it even more difficult for her to function in the world. There was at least one suicide attempt, when Manning found her mother passed out half-naked in the hallway. After her parents split up in her early teens, she followed her mother to Wales for a short, unhappy period before returning to the US. If there is a scorched-earth mentality in her thinking, it has been born of necessity. Less apparent is how she built and maintained her considerable confidence. At school, she was an academic high performer who felt cleverer than her classmates. After being introduced to computers aged six, she almost immediately started doing basic-level programming. Still, looking at the whole picture, I suggest, it wasnt exactly a background to foster self-esteem.

Well, it was very advantageous, Manning says. I was a middle-class white boy in Oklahoma.

Right, but your memoir describes you as a child of alcoholics growing up in a violent home. Very typical, though, in that region. But yeah, being trans in particular ... She tapers off. But for being trans, I wouldve been on the path to going to Harvard.

Manning is resistant to narratives that dead-end in victimhood. She spent years in therapy fighting to recover from the guilt of abandoning her mother when she returned to the US from Wales. Ive come to recognise that I was in a co-dependent relationship and had to do something different. Her mother died in 2020. She has no idea where her father is. We tried to track him down for the book, but hes very mercurial. In her late teens, Manning says, her father kicked her out of the house and she lived in her car for a while, selling bootleg Adobe software out of a parking lot. It wasnt long after that she joined the military. When youve been through the things Ive been through, most things dont seem that insurmountable, she says.

Politically, several important things happened in Mannings childhood. In 1993, when she was five, the US government sent troops into a hostage situation in Waco, Texas, bungling the mission and killing 76 people, including 25 children. Mannings father jumped instantly into the governments-going-to-take-your-guns mentality, she says, a position she despises. Its an excuse, a rallying call for something deeper and much more sinister. A significant amount of the libertarian strain of American politics is deeply connected to this air of superiority among upper-middle-class white men. Nonetheless, from a young age Manning learned to maintain a measure of scepticism in relation to the US government, one that she never entirely lost.

The other political influence during her formative years was the gay rights movement. As a 10-year-old, Manning kissed a boy called Sid. Sid kissed back, before calling Manning a faggot. I didnt even know what gay meant at that point, she writes, and I bet the kids calling me that didnt really, either. It was just a bad thing, we all thought, the worst insult you could use. I just wanted the whole thing to go away. Her gender dysphoria was so deeply suppressed at that point that she simply assumed, with a sinking heart, that she was gay in a state where homosexual sex would be a criminal offence until 2003. Five years later, while Manning was learning to be an intelligence analyst at Fort Drum, New York, the voters of California passed Proposition 8, a ballot initiative to outlaw gay marriage.

This was a huge moment for Manning in terms of both her mental health and her belief in systems of government. My whole life, Id been told that things were always going to get better, she writes, that the system was set up with checks and balances, that liberal society meant slow but steady progress toward democratic inclusion. The passing of Proposition 8 blew that vision apart. It wasnt just a repudiation of that promise. It wasnt even just a national tragedy. It was a personal rejection of me, and millions of other queer people, as human beings.

To Mannings detractors, her leaking of the Iraq reports, and later the Afghan war logs and diplomatic cables, was an expression of monstrous arrogance; at best an overreaction to the normal chaos of war by a naive young recruit, at worst a bad-faith action designed to aid the enemy. After uploading the files, nothing happened for a long time, then everything happened at once. WikiLeaks released the reports to the Guardian, the New York Times, Der Spiegel and other media partners. The military began an inquiry. As Manning felt the net closing in, she worried about her fellow analysts coming under suspicion she had acted entirely alone and effectively confessed to an anonymous contact online, whom she suspected had links to the FBI and she imagined, correctly, would turn her in. Less than a week later, two agents from the Army Criminal Investigation Division turned up to question Manning, accompanied by civilians from the state department and the FBI. She was immediately arrested and transported from Iraq to Kuwait, where she was imprisoned, under canvas, in a makeshift jail made entirely of metal bars. In other words a cage, where she would spend several months. A tyre cage, we called it. Built in Fort Wayne, Indiana. I remember because that was the only piece of writing on it. It was a brain-melting experience. She was stripped down to the most basic shadow of humanity. Food. Water. Cool. My reptilian needs were the primary driver. Meanwhile the guards goaded her about her next move. Maybe theyll send you to Cuba, or Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti, she recalls them saying. We do bad things there.

Instead, Manning was conveyed to Quantico, a military prison in Virginia that at first struck her as an improvement. Its funny because people say, Your time in Quantico was very bad. But the initial thoughts I was having in Quantico were: Im in the United States! Hot and cold running water! Air-conditioning! The relief didnt last long. Manning was held in solitary confinement, harassed constantly with rules she wasnt permitted to lie down during the day and any attempt to do so would result in barked orders to sit up again. She was on suicide watch, and as a result was denied pillows or bedding she might use to harm herself. She was not permitted to exercise in her cell or to meet other prisoners. She was entirely isolated in Quantico for nine months, an experience the UN later ruled was cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in violation of article 16 of the convention against torture. Meanwhile, military doctors diagnosed her with depression, anxiety and gender dysphoria, all of which were used by her defence team when, three years later, she finally came to military trial.

Of the 22 counts with which Manning was charged, she pleaded guilty to 10 and was found guilty on a further seven, among them six counts of espionage. She was sentenced to 35 years imprisonment, escaping life without parole only because the judge rejected the governments most serious accusation that Manning had given information to the enemy. In the event, she was found not guilty of treason. The single note of relief for Manning was that, with the trial over, she could finally come out as trans without compromising her case. She could also start legal proceedings to compel prison authorities to permit her to have hormone treatment in jail. Pretrial, she had started signing some letters Breanna Manning. Now, in Fort Leavenworth, she decidedChelsea was the right name. It was a neighbourhood in Manhattan full of dance clubs where queer people could feel totally at home and normal and welcome, she writes. She put out a statement via her lawyer. Then she knuckled down to spend what she assumed would be the next 30 years in military prison.

In fact, when President Obama commuted Mannings sentence in 2017 he pointed to the apology shed read out in court as evidence of her contrition with time served she would end up spending another four years inside before release. Her experiences at Fort Leavenworth had been a combination of deep depression and suicidal thoughts exacerbated, according to Manning, by the destabilising effect of the hormones the government allowed her to start taking in 2015 and what she characterises as a surprisingly peaceable existence. An individual as birdlike as Manning taking female hormones in a male prison would, one imagines, have been at risk of attack. In fact, she says, she had almost no problems; a couple of fights, thats it. You have to remember I was pretty sociable in prison. People knew me and I got to know people. She helped other prisoners with their legal problems. She became a popular inmate. People stopped seeing me as a trans person; they saw me. I could hear it sometimes oh, well, youre different. These days, Manning says, the fact of being trans feels like such a minor thing in my life. Like: I went through this transition period and it was very difficult and I needed access to care, and once I got care Ive been able to function as an adult and not really think about this stuff. It very rarely comes up.

And so she tries, again, to rebuild a life for herself. The speaking income hasnt really recovered post-Covid, but she is about to embark on a multi-city book tour and relishes the prospect of meeting and debating with people. She receives hundreds of letters a year, occasionally hateful, mainly admiring. Reading her book put me in mind of Regeneration, Pat Barkers novel of the first world war and the best encapsulation of PTSD Ive read. I ask if she has read it and she looks bemused, eyes skimming the room, before going off on a diatribe about the US militarys psychology of lethality.

I try once more to discover a shred of hesitation, doubt or regret at any of the events of the last 12 years. In your place, I say, given the extremes of your circumstance, a different personality would have gone into retreat. Manning looks taken aback that, analysing the data, anyone could reach this conclusion. Thats not me!

Chelsea Mannings README.txt is published by Vintage at 20. To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply.

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Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared ...

Everything you need to know about Chelsea Manning – ABC News

— -- Chelsea Manning, the Army private and intelligence analyst whose release of classified information to WikiLeaks sparked worldwide controversy over transparency in the military and whistleblower protections, will be released from prison on Wednesday. The majority of her 35-year prison sentence was commuted by President Barack Obama in January.

The debate over Mannings reasons for leaking the data, and the attention she received as a transgender military servicemember, have made her perhaps the most notable person to have her sentence commuted by the former president during his time in office. Manning, who was assigned male at birth and previously known as Bradley, joined the Army at the age of 19.

Ahead, heres what you need to know about Chelsea Manning.

In October 2007, Manning joined the Army. According to information later provided as part of her court martial, Manning explained that earning benefits under the GI Bill for college opportunities was one of the motivators behind her enlistment.

She performed well on the Armed Services Aptitude Battery but struggled with Basic Combat Training, at one point injuring both her shoulder and foot. At one point, Manning was told she was in danger of being out-processed or dismissed from training, but she returned after recovering from her injuries. Ultimately, Manning needed six months to finish the training that typically takes six weeks.

Drawing on an expertise with and long interest in computers, Manning received training to be an intelligence analyst at Fort Huachuca in Arizona, then joined the 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division at Fort Drum in New York. A New York Magazine profile of Manning in 2011 claimed that Manning struggled emotionally while at Fort Drum, lashing out at fellow soldiers, and was seeing a mental-health counselor.

Despite hesitation from superiors who were reportedly uncertain she would be able to handle deployment, Manning was sent to Forward Operating Base Hammer, located to the east of Baghdad, in October 2009. She worked there until her arrest in May 2010.

Manning reported that she first learned of WikiLeaks while at Fort Huachuca and that she was regularly visiting the website while stationed in Iraq, utilizing some of the leaked information to inform her work. As part of her role as an analyst, Manning frequently utilized records of notable incidents and events termed Significant Activities (SIGACTs).

While back in the U.S. on leave in January 2010, Manning said she began to become depressed by the U.S. military situation in Iraq and Afghanistan and felt that if the public had access to the information she possessed, that it could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and ... foreign policy.

At first, Manning reached out to The Washington Post and The New York Times in an attempt to release SIGACT tables, but she was rebuffed. From there, she utilized an anonymizing network to submit the information to WikiLeaks, according to court documents. She would later submit additional materials, including diplomatic cables and a video of a July 2007 airstrike in Baghdad in which two Reuters photographers were killed and two children were wounded.

The video, which WikiLeaks renamed Collateral Murder, received widespread attention and Manning noted she was encouraged by the response in the media and the general public.

In May 2010, Manning began an online friendship with a hacker named Adrian Lamo. In their internet exchanges, Manning discussed her troubles with the military and disclosed that she was responsible for providing hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks.

Lamo contacted the Department of Defense about the leak, and Manning was arrested in May 2010 and placed in a detention camp in Kuwait. In July, the military transferred Manning to a Marine Corps prison in Quantico, Virginia, where she stayed in solitary confinement and claimed she was stripped of all clothing with the exception of my underwear and that her eyeglasses were taken away, according to a statement from Manning released by her lawyers.

In 2011, Obama said that Manning broke the law, noting: We are a nation of laws. We dont let individuals make decisions about how the law operates."

In 2013, Manning deferred a plea bargain and was arraigned on 22 charges, including espionage, theft of military records or property, and aiding the enemy -- a capital offense under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Mannings lawyer, David Coombs, claimed she was emotionally distraught and said her clearance privileges should have been removed by superiors in the military who were aware of her struggles. Coombs said Manning wrote a letter to a supervisor in which she came out as a transgender woman and attached a photo of herself wearing a blonde wig. Manning maintained that her decision to release the government documents was a way to reveal war crimes.

"I understand that my actions violate the law. It was never my intent to hurt anyone. I only wanted to help people," Manning said in a statement delivered by her lawyers. When I chose to disclose classified information, I did so out of a love for my country and a sense of duty for others."

During her court martial in Fort Meade, Maryland, Manning was acquitted of the charge of aiding the enemy, but was sentenced to 35 years in prison. In the military justice system, prison sentences longer than 30 years are eligible for parole review after 10 years. Manning, however, was credited 1,294 days towards her sentence and told that she was eligible to request a parole review after seven years.

One day after her sentencing, Manning revealed in a statement delivered by defense counsel that she wanted to transition from male to female, and asked to be called Chelsea.

During an appearance on NBCs Today, Mannings lawyer read a statement in which Manning wrote: 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, she said. 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).

In 2014, the American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit against then-Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel and Department of Defense officials for denying Manning access to medically necessary treatment for her gender dysphoria. The ACLU claimed that if left untreated, Manning could become suicidal. In February 2015, the Army allowed Manning to receive hormone treatment for her transition from male to female.

During her time in prison, Manning has struggled with mental health issues. After a reported suicide attempt in July 2016, Manning was placed in solitary confinement, an environment her lawyers said exacerbated her mental stress. In September, Manning went on a hunger strike in protest of the Armys refusal to give her access to hormone therapy. She ended her strike after five days when the Army informed her that they would allow her to move forward with her plans to undergo gender reassignment surgery.

In October 2016, Mannings lawyers reported that she had attempted suicide again.

She has repeatedly been punished for trying to survive and now is being repeatedly punished for trying to die, her attorney, Chase Strangio, said in a statement. I worry about the sustainability of her current conditions and her ability to keep fighting under these relentless abuses.

Concerned about Mannings well-being, her attorneys filed an application for clemency. The application was filed in time to be considered by President Obama before he was set to leave office.

I have no confirmation that Chelsea's request is on a short list, Strangio, Mannings attorney, said at the time of the filing. But I encourage the president to act on Chelsea's request for a commutation of her sentence. Her life depends on it and she has already served almost 7 years of her sentence -- longer than any whistleblower in United States history.

A White House petition asking for President Obama to commute Mannings sentence to time served received 117,000 signatures. Manning, who corresponds with supporters online, tweeted about the potential for her clemency request.

Obama ultimately granted her request on January 17, just three days before President Trump took office.

Manning will be released on May 17.

Originally posted here:
Everything you need to know about Chelsea Manning - ABC News

Chelsea Manning: Why she leaked U.S. military secrets | CTV News

At 34 years old, Chelsea Manning, famed for leaking confidential U.S military documents, has released a 'tell-all' book on the incident.

"It's a coming-of-age story," Manning told CTV's Your Morning on Monday. "The trials and tribulations of really a young person these sort of the events that transpired and my childhood and my upbringing."

Manning, who was a U.S army intelligence analyst during the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, leaked thousands of military and diplomatic records to WikiLeaks in 2010. This is regarded as the largest classified records breach in American history.

One of the documents included a battlefield video showcasing soldiers mistaking civilians and a journalist for insurgents.

"This was obviously something that I had thought about doing and really wanted," Manning said. "I'd spent basically the previous two weeks trying to reach out to the Washington Post and The New York Times."

Her book, "README.txt" starts with the moments leading up to the leak.

"There was this blizzard, and I had to dig a car out of the snow," Manning said.

Without power at her aunt's house, she made the treacherous journey to a Starbucks where she uploaded the documents online.

"I just thought about just giving up right then and there, and abandoning the entire thing and just saying, 'You know this is just not meant to be,'" Manning said.

In August 2013, she was sentenced for six Espionage Act violations and 14 other offences for leaking more than 700,000 documents. She was initially sentenced to 35 years.

Manning's book details her time in prison where she came out as a transgender woman. In 2017 then-U.S. President Barack Obama used his clemency powers to cut Manning's sentence 30 years ahead of schedule.

Since being released, Manning explains in her book how she navigates the world.

"They (people in prison) treated me as a human being but now I needed to navigate a larger world with this new identity," she said. It's a struggle, to sort of live and to learn, because I'm essentially learning how to be an adult in my 30s, as opposed to my 20s."

Watch the full interview with Chelsea Manning by clicking the video at the top of this article.

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Chelsea Manning: Why she leaked U.S. military secrets | CTV News

README.txt by Chelsea Manning review secrets and spies

In February 2010 Chelsea Manning, a 22-year-old intelligence analyst in the US Army, sat down with a large mocha and accessed the free internet at a Barnes & Noble bookshop in Rockville, Maryland. She began to upload every incident report filed by the US military during the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan close to three-quarters of a million documents in total. Manning had downloaded the files several weeks earlier, while serving in Iraq, and burned them on to a series of rewritable DVDs disguised to look like albums by Taylor Swift, Katy Perry and Lady Gaga. Then she transferred the files to the memory card in her digital camera. When she left the country, military customs did not blink.

Manning had spent months sifting vast quantities of classified information, email updates and video feeds of live conflict in Baghdad. She likens the intelligence operations centre where she worked to a trauma ward. The United States formal promise to the Iraqi government about how our troops would treat the country and its citizens didnt mean a thing, she writes. Among the files was video evidence that appeared to show the deaths of civilians during US airstrikes, as well as attempts to cover up a CIA torture programme.

The files took all day to upload, since the connection often dropped. Manning considered hurling the memory card into a bin instead. Then, half an hour before the bookstore closed, the final tranche went through. The information spread, first through the then obscure website WikiLeaks, then via national newspapers including the Guardian (for which Manning later became a columnist). To some Manning was a hero; to others a treasonous spy. After she was caught, the government began, as she puts it, a campaign to fully destroy her. She was convicted of 19 charges, including six counts of espionage, and sentenced to 35 years imprisonment almost 20 times the previous record for any American whistleblower.

As well as these critical events, README.txt also covers Mannings early life and how the army appeared to offer an escape from a traumatising upbringing. But once there she was targeted by drill sergeants for her slight, childish appearance and subjected to homophobic insults. In this turbo-charged masculine environment, her struggles with gender identity (she would later come out as trans) became more pronounced: [It was] less about being a woman trapped in a mans body than about the innate incoherence between the person I felt myself to be and the one the world wanted me to be, she writes.

In Iraq the bullying continued. After she witnessed the death of a colleague, Manning felt how with enough grief, adrenaline and fear, war can turn anyone amoral, even malevolent. She began to wrestle with two life-changing secrets: who she was, and what she saw.

At times, README.txt is vague; some sections have been blacked out, presumably on legal advice. Manning claims to have seen more than she ever disclosed, things she will never reveal. I know this is annoying, she writes. But I have already faced serious consequences for sharing information I believe to be in the public interest; I am uninterested in facing them again. Even so, what remains is a compelling, taut account of what she has experienced, and a persuasive justification of how she behaved.

At her trial, lawyers convinced Manning to issue a mea culpa: I look back at my decisions and wonder how on earth could I believe I could change the world for better over the decisions of those with the proper authority? Today, her view has changed. What I did, she concludes, was an act of forcing progress. In an age of digital communication, it is likely that todays politicians and military leaders lose far more information than is ever logged in our national archives for future study. Mannings efforts preserved a trove of evidence that one hopes will prompt corrective measures. Five years after President Obama commuted Mannings sentence, history continues to vindicate her actions.

README.txt by Chelsea Manning is published by Vintage (20). To support the Guardian and Observer, order your copy at guardianbookshop.com. Delivery charges may apply

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README.txt by Chelsea Manning review secrets and spies

Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in …

Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning addresses reporters outside a U.S federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va., in 2019. Win McNamee/Getty Images hide caption

Former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning addresses reporters outside a U.S federal courthouse in Alexandria, Va., in 2019.

In 2010, while working in Iraq, army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning provided hundreds of thousands of military and diplomatic records about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan to WikiLeaks in what's regarded as the largest leak of classified records in U.S. history. To some, Manning is a heroic whistleblower; others, including the U.S. military, consider her a traitor.

Manning says that when she joined the military, she was committed to the Army's mission. But she became disillusioned while serving in Iraq, and regards her decision to leak classified documents as a matter of principle.

"What was bothering me was I [had] years of training and years of believing in something and then hitting the ground and then seeing it and feeling completely unprepared for how different [it was]," Manning says. "I wanted that discrepancy to be addressed somehow."

The leaked documents included a 2007 video in which a U.S. military crew aboard an Army Apache helicopter is shown shooting at Iraqi civilians and a Reuters journalist, after allegedly mistaking them for insurgents.

Manning expected to lose her job and maybe her career because of the leaks. Instead, in 2013, she was sentenced to 35 years in prison in a military court-martial a sentence President Obama later commuted to about seven years. She was imprisoned again in 2019 on a civil contempt charge for refusing to testify in a grand jury investigation of WikiLeaks, but was released the following year.

Manning chronicles her difficult childhood, her long struggle with gender dysphoria, her entry into the Army and the events that landed her in prison in the memoir, README.txt. She sees the book as a way to assume control over her own story.

"I really came to want to write my version of events, write my story, tell things from my perspective, because I think it's kind of gotten lost in a lot of people projecting their ideals or their fears or their anxieties onto me or whatever it is, whereas I'm just kind of me," she says.

On questioning her gender identity from an early age

I always figured that I was trans. I didn't have the language to describe my experience. I certainly knew something was different about me. In a very strict gender construct that exists in a place like central Oklahoma in the 1990s, there really wasn't an alternative. But I always knew that there was something different about me. My family noticed it too. It was just a very marked difference about me and my personality and my interests that was something that made me stand out. ...

[Gender dysphoria] is very similar to having a toothache that doesn't go away. If you don't do anything about it, if you don't go see a dentist, it just gets worse and worse and worse.

On her job as an analyst in Iraq

We would just be spinning our wheels more and more, like if you're stuck in a ditch and you run the engine and you try to go faster, but you end up digging deeper. ... It was very clear that the approaches of counterinsurgency warfare were extremely self-destructive.

Chelsea Manning

My job essentially ... was to do something called "predictive analysis." And one of the most troubling things that I encountered was this notion that it wasn't just the enemy that was predictable. Our actions, if you fed the data into the machine, you could predict our behavior. And then the reaction, the secondary reaction, the second and third order effects of that, and it painted this picture of a feedback loop where it was pretty clear that our reactions to the actions were causing things to get progressively worse. So we would just be spinning our wheels more and more, like if you're stuck in a ditch and you run the engine and you try to go faster, but you end up digging deeper. That was what was happening. And I kept seeing this again and again. And it was very clear that the approaches of counterinsurgency warfare were extremely self-destructive.

On being kept in solitary confinement in a cage in Kuwait for 59 days in 2010

It was a metal mesh box, a stainless steel container in a tent with very little lighting. There were two air conditioners, one was always broken. I remember very distinctly that there was this little sign inside of it that said, "built in Fort Wayne, Indiana." I'll never forget that. It was the only thing I could see every day.

I deteriorated very quickly. I don't actually remember a whole lot. I definitely don't remember a full 59 days. It's very vague. It's very fuzzy. I just remember it being hot, being sweaty, being very confused and really start[ing] to feel like I had lost touch with the rest of the world and that I had truly been forgotten about. At different points in that time period, I remember having the feeling like, "I am dead. I have already died."

On her frustrations with the plea agreement process

One of the most frustrating things of the plea agreement process was that they essentially wanted me to perjure myself. So the government kept on trying to get me to plead to things that I didn't do. Or more specifically, things that never happened. They wanted me to add these things that they call a "stipulation of facts," which is essentially a document that says that both parties agree that these are factual, that these were facts, and they wanted me to lie. And I just couldn't do that. I obviously did the disclosures and I wanted to take responsibility. And we wanted to narrow the scope of the damage, because I definitely never imagined I'd be facing life without parole as a possibility, and trying to negotiate with them is very difficult because they just would not give up on trying to get me to perjure myself.

On so much of the court-martial being closed to the media

The government wanted the entire court-martial to be behind closed doors. They repeatedly argued that this needed to be an entirely secret court-martial. ... It was always funny because the things that ended up being brought up in court were always favorable to the government. And all of the things that were favorable to the defense were in closed court-martial. "You're only getting one side of a story here," essentially is how I felt. And yeah, I think that the world would greatly benefit from having access to the closed testimony. That's my opinion.

On her attorney urging her to read a statement apologizing for the damage she had done

I had wanted to write my own statement, which was a little bit more defiant because our entire argument was that we hadn't caused damage, which I feel was borne out in the evidence and in the testimony presented. It was a very strange thing. But my lawyers kept on reassuring me and they kept on saying, "Oh, well, this is pro forma. This is how it's supposed to be." It was a very strange part of the process because that was like the one point in which my lawyers and I had a very strong disagreement about the presentation of this. They told me that the judge would view me very harshly if I didn't go through this process and that it would risk me getting a longer sentence. And I didn't necessarily care all that much about the length of the sentence at that point, since it didn't seem to matter all that much. So it was a very uncomfortable and very frustrating part of the court-martial process.

I think [the statement] hurt our court-martial. I think it wasn't beneficial to us because it wasn't very human. It wasn't very passionate. It wasn't the way I felt.

Sam Briger and Seth Kelley produced and edited this interview for broadcast. Bridget Bentz, Molly Seavy-Nesper and Maureen Pao adapted it for the web.

Read the original here:
Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in ...

Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison – The Guardian US

  1. Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison  The Guardian US
  2. Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in 'README.txt'  NPR
  3. Review of "README.txt: A Memoir" by Chelsea Manning  The Washington Post
  4. Book Review: README.txt, by Chelsea Manning  The New York Times
  5. Chelsea Manning on new book, decision to leak classified information and the "fight" to transition while in military jail  CBS News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison - The Guardian US

Elon Musk blames communism in schools and universities for strained relationship with daughter – indy100

Elon Musk has blamed "full-on communism" in schools and universities for his estranged relationship with his daughter.

Speaking with the Financial Times as part of its "Lunch with the FT" series published on Friday (October 7), the Tesla and Space X CEO discussed politics and described his political views as moderate.

The publication noted he is "considering setting up 'the Super Moderate Super Pac' to support candidates with moderate views."

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After this, the political discussion then moved on as the publication noted Musk's belief that his strained relationship with his teenage daughter is down to the left-wing elite schools and universities in the US (though didn't specify which ones).

Its full-on communism . . . and a general sentiment that if youre rich, youre evil, Musk told the FT. It [the relationship] may change, but I have very good relationships with all the others [children].

"Cant win them all," he concluded on the matter.

In April, Musk's 18-year-old daughter Vivian filed for a name change in Los Angeles and also requested for her gender to be changed on her birth certificate.

The reason his daughter gave behind her name change was that she didn't want "to be related to my biological father in any way, shape or form."

Ahead of publishing a story on his daughter's name change, The Daily Beast approached Musk for comment where he responded: "Please dont out someone against their will its not right.

"She does not want to be a public figure. I think it is important to defend her right to privacy."

Meanwhile, Musk has previously been criticised for previously tweeting that "pronouns suck and added they are an "aesthetic nightmare," which many slammed as transphobic.

In June, Chelsea Manning slammed Musk for a tweet that "seemed transphobic."

Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.

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Elon Musk blames communism in schools and universities for strained relationship with daughter - indy100

Facing the warmongers: An Assange update – newagebd.net

CounterPunch

ON THE latest slimed path Julian Assange has been made to trod, a few things have presented themselves. The rusty sword of Damocles may be suspended above him (he, we are informed, has contracted Covid-19), but there are those, in the meantime, willing to defend him with decent conviction against his dispatch to the United States, where he is certain to perish.

From the side of decent conviction and steadfastness came the October 8 protests across a number of cities, attended by thousands. A human chain numbering some 7,000 persons formed around the Houses of Parliament in London demanding the release of the WikiLeaks publisher from Belmarsh Prison.

Then there was the Boadicea-like performance that his wife is becoming famous for. On the ideologically dry-cured medium of Piers Morgans Uncensored Program, a taster of that vengeance US justice is famous for could be gathered from an encounter between Stella, and the trumpeting warmonger and failed Trump advisor, John Bolton.

Bolton, it should be remembered, was the only evidence that president George W Bush, dyslexic and reformed drunk, had a mild sense of humour. Sending that man to the United Nations as US ambassador was the equivalent of appointing a randy, murderous fox to guard unsuspecting chickens. That appointment had it all: resentment, masochism and disgust for that concept known as international law.

There is much to say that former president Donald Trump, for all his insufferable foibles, insoluble perversions and naggingly vicious pettiness, never embarked on the eschatological murderous destiny that Bolton believes the US is destined for. The messianic types always find some higher meaning for death and sacrifice, as long they are not the ones doing it. The difference between the suicide bomber and the deskbound scribbler keen on killing is one of practice, not conviction. Both believe that there is a higher meaning written in blood, inscribed in the babble of post-life relevance and invisible virtue. For us humble folk, life is good enough, and should be preserved.

According to Bolton, the 175 years Assange might receive for exposing the abundant dirty laundry known as US foreign policy and imperial violence was hardly sufficient. He would, naturally, get a fair trial in the United States (never explain the ideologically self-evident), though absolute fairness was dependent on him receiving 176 years. Well, I think thats a small amount of the sentence he deserves. With such a fabulous nose for justice, Bolton shares common ground with the commissars and gauleiters.

Unsurprisingly, Stella Assange had a view markedly at odds with such an assessment. Her husband was being pursued, For receiving information from a source and publishing it, and it was in the public interest. It was US war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, and he revealed tens of thousands of civilian deaths that had not been acknowledged before.

Morgan, an incarnation of that guttersnipe, sewerage swilling demon virtually unsurpassed in modern British media, tried to sound cerebral and moral at points. Did WikiLeaks redact the material from Chelsea Manning, one of the key sources for the disclosures? Or had WikiLeaks been drunkenly cavalier in exposing all and sundry to the world? Best ignore reading trial transcripts, Piers. Knowledge drawn upon the cobblestones of truth is bound to be rough.

To those familiar with WikiLeaks, its practices and, indeed, the trial at the Old Bailey regarding Assanges extradition, such claims could only be seen as decidedly weak. Stella explained that WikiLeaks did redact all of those documents that Manning gave to WikiLeaks, and in fact it was in cooperation with those newspapers. The trial itself made it clear that the secret spiller, as Assange has often been accused of being, was none other than the Guardian itself, whose journalists had left, with tantalising promise, the decryption key in their book WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assanges war on secrecy.

Stella, aflame with purpose and aware of her brief, also reminded the audience who she was talking to. Bolton, she shot with acid fury, sought to undermine the international legal system, sought to ensure that the US is not under the International Criminal Courts jurisdiction.

Then came the well fashioned grenade, pin removed. And if it was, Mr Bolton might in fact be prosecuted under the ICC [International Criminal Court]. He was one of the chief cheerleaders of the Iraq war, which Julian then exposed through these leaks, so he has a conflict of interest.

There have been other befouling episodes that can only be of concern to Assange and his family. It has now come to light that security officials, in Australias Parliament, were under significant pressure to seize books from the Assange delegation during their August visit to Canberra. A letter to Greens Senator David Shoebridge by the Department of Parliamentary Services explained that it was all linked to a protest.

The nature of the bureaucrats tone is to mock the valuable and diminish the relevant. In the considered view of the secretary of the department of parliamentary services, Rob Stefanic, I appreciate that Assanges family may not have viewed the screening procedure in a positive light, but having reviewed the processes followed by security staff, I am confident they performed their duties with respect and due diligence. Such reasoning would suffice for most police states, where bureaucrats sup at the same table with the security wonks.

The department, it transpired, had tripped up. The claim about the protest was inaccurate, as neither Assanges father, John Shipton, nor his brother, Gabriel, had attended any protests. It is apparent that there are factual inaccuracies in the letter to Senator Shoebridge and the secretary will be writing to correct the record.

The world has turned full circle. Those opening the cabinet of secrets are considered the nasty tittle-tattles, who simply revealed the fact that daddy fiddled and mummy drank. In this world, homicidally excited types like Bolton revel in expressing unsavoury views in the open; those who expose the bankruptcy of such views are to be punished. We await the next grotesquery with resigned disgust.

CounterPunch.org, October 13. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.

Link:
Facing the warmongers: An Assange update - newagebd.net