— -- 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
- The week in TV: Platform 7; Smothered; Louis Theroux Interviews Chelsea Manning; Seeds of Deceit: The Sperm Donor Doctor review - The Guardian - December 11th, 2023
- Louis Theroux Interviews Chelsea Manning, BBC Two, review: one of Louis's toughest gigs yet - The Telegraph - December 11th, 2023
- Louis Theroux Interviews Chelsea Manning: the best of the series - Yahoo News UK - December 11th, 2023
- Louis Theroux Interviews Chelsea Manning on BBC Two: the best episode of the series - Evening Standard - December 11th, 2023
- Louis Theroux Interviews Chelsea Manning review the awkwardness is torture - The Times - December 11th, 2023
- Louis Theroux in 'most awkward' interview ever as he sits down with whistleblower Chelsea Manning - The Mirror - December 11th, 2023
- Who is Chelsea Manning on Louis Theroux Interviews on BBC2? - Manchester Evening News - December 11th, 2023
- Obama shortens sentence of Manning, who gave secrets to WikiLeaks - November 25th, 2023
- Book Review: README.txt, by Chelsea Manning - New York Times - April 17th, 2023
- Chelsea Manning fought a complex system to transition in prison : NPR - April 17th, 2023
- Chelsea Manning Release: What to Know About Whistleblower | Time - April 8th, 2023
- Chelsea Manning - Wikipedia - March 14th, 2023
- Chelsea Manning - Life, Jail & Facts - Biography - March 14th, 2023
- WikiLeaks whistleblower Chelsea Manning says we need to rethink ... - March 14th, 2023
- The Chelsea Manning Case: A Timeline | News & Commentary | American ... - January 30th, 2023
- Chelsea Manning speaks out and says voice 'has been left out of the ... - January 22nd, 2023
- Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared ... - January 22nd, 2023
- Chelsea Manning: Why she leaked U.S. military secrets | CTV News - November 17th, 2022
- README.txt by Chelsea Manning review secrets and spies - October 31st, 2022
- Chelsea Manning shared secrets with WikiLeaks. Now she opens up in ... - October 23rd, 2022
- Chelsea Manning: I struggle with the so-called free world compared with life in prison - The Guardian US - October 23rd, 2022
- Facing the warmongers: An Assange update - newagebd.net - October 15th, 2022
- Elon Musk blames communism in schools and universities for strained relationship with daughter - indy100 - October 15th, 2022
- Elon Musk And Grimes Relationship Timeline: All About Their On-And-Off Dating - TheTealMango - October 15th, 2022
- Here Are the Favorites To Win the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize - TIME - October 7th, 2022
- CIA co-opts Harriet Tubman to boost its efforts to recruit spies and assassins - WSWS - October 7th, 2022
- October 2022 Reads for the Rest of Us - Ms. Magazine - October 7th, 2022
- Chelsea Manning to return to active duty after prison release - Army Times - September 29th, 2022
- 10 books you should read in October, including David Bowie's Moonage Daydream and William Shatner's Boldly Go - The A.V. Club - September 29th, 2022
- Excessive Secrecy and the Deep State: Is there Cause for Concern? - LA Progressive - September 21st, 2022
- Salman Rushdie and the Neoliberal Culture Wars - Boston Review - September 21st, 2022
- Come With Me As We Reflect On The Queer Celebrity Couples Who Are Still In Love And Ones Who Called It Quits - BuzzFeed - September 13th, 2022
- 21 years after 9/11 attacks, it's time to 'flip the script' on militarism in America - Columbia Missourian - September 13th, 2022
- Is Trump the Rosenbergs? - Jewish Journal - September 5th, 2022
- Mar-a-Lago and why intelligence agents matter to America - Washington Examiner - September 5th, 2022
- Grimes and Chelsea Manning break up - Page Six - August 28th, 2022
- Ex-prosecutor in Boston indicted on NYC rape charges - New York Daily News - August 20th, 2022
- What happened to Glenn Greenwald? The former trans ally now sides with right wing transphobia - Salon - August 12th, 2022
- Behind The Meaning of "Dude (Looks Like a Lady)" By Aerosmith - American Songwriter - August 4th, 2022
- Elon Musk confirms he gave himself and son X matching haircuts - Page Six - August 4th, 2022
- Nominations Open for the 2022 EFF Awards - EFF - July 26th, 2022
- Famous whistleblowers who shocked the world - msnNOW - July 26th, 2022
- Grimes and Chelsea Manning Have Reportedly Broken Up - The Cut - July 18th, 2022
- Epstein was murdered Chelsea Manning RT World News - July 9th, 2022
- Epstein was 'murdered' says US whistleblower Chelsea Manning - July 9th, 2022
- Chelsea Manning dodges question about rumoured relationship with Grimes - June 19th, 2022
- Chelsea Manning dodges Grimes relationship questions - June 19th, 2022
- Will Julian Assange be extradited to the U.S.? Where his case stands now - NPR - June 19th, 2022
- Spain's High Court Demands Pompeo Testify on Alleged Plot to Kidnap or Kill Assange - Common Dreams - June 10th, 2022
- Dogwoof Acquires Tribeca-Bound Documentary 'XY Chelsea' - Variety - June 10th, 2022
- Review: 'Breaking The News' The press, politics, and profit - Socialist Appeal - May 25th, 2022
- Grimes Will Donate Dune-Inspired Met Gala Accessories To Ukraine Relief - The Blast - May 25th, 2022
- On Censorship and Disinformation - LA Progressive - May 11th, 2022
- Chelsea (Bradley) Manning | Americans Who Tell The Truth - April 28th, 2022
- Grimes dating leaker Chelsea Manning after Elon Musk breakup - April 28th, 2022
- Grimes and hacker Chelsea Manning are reportedly dating - April 28th, 2022
- Is Grimes dating whistleblower Chelsea Manning after ... - April 28th, 2022
- The Socialist Equality Party candidates for the May 21 election - WSWS - April 28th, 2022
- Glenn Greenwald Sorry for Gross Remark About Chelsea Manning - April 28th, 2022
- Inside Elon Musks bizarre life from fluid relationship with Grimes to dumping worldly goods & living i... - The US Sun - April 28th, 2022
- Rights Activist Nandita Haksar on Seeing India through the Eyes of its Refugees - NewsClick - April 28th, 2022
- This week in Oakland: Black music fest at the Continental, Alena Museum, more - The Oaklandside - April 13th, 2022
- NY Public Radio Appoints Kristina Newman-Scott as Executive Director of The Jerome L. Greene Performance Space - Broadway World - January 15th, 2022
- Talon Anvil, Task Force 9 and the terrible cost of the air offensive in Syria - NationofChange - December 30th, 2021
- Anthony Broadwater Was Convicted of Raping Alice Sebold. Then the Case Unraveled. - The New York Times - December 19th, 2021
- The Study That Convinced the CDC To Support Mask Mandates in Schools Is Junk Science - Reason - December 19th, 2021
- A day in the death of British justice - newagebd.net - December 19th, 2021
- Andreessen Horowitz Leads Investment In Privacy Startup Integrating With Bitcoin - Forbes - November 19th, 2021
- 'Trans Awareness Week' Sounds Nice, but We Need Action - The Daily Beast - November 19th, 2021
- M.I.A. Shares Previously Unreleased Song and Video Babylon, Which Is Being Auctioned as NFT - Complex - November 19th, 2021
- US Peace Prize Awarded To World BEYOND War | Scoop News - Scoop.co.nz - November 5th, 2021
- Refusing to go with the current - manilastandard.net - October 23rd, 2021
- Stella Moris on her secret family with Julian Assange: Hes unlike anyone I have ever met - The Irish Times - October 23rd, 2021
- Canada invited Chelsea Manning to country just so she could be thrown out - The Guardian - October 12th, 2021
- Ottawa wanted U.S. whistleblower Chelsea Manning to come to Canada so she could be kicked out in person - National Post - October 12th, 2021
- Julian Assange and the CIA-USA Daily Wars Against Humanity - LA Progressive - October 12th, 2021
- Chain reaction: Corey Johnson finally talks with East River Park activists - The Village Sun - October 12th, 2021
- US appeal on Assange extradition to be heard on 27 and 28 Oct - iTWire - October 5th, 2021
- The US Considered Kidnapping and Even Assassinating Julian Assange - Jacobin magazine - October 5th, 2021
- ACLU Advocate Reining in Government Use of Face Surveillance, Champion of Privacy Rights Research, and Data Security Trainer Protecting Black... - August 27th, 2021