Brad
Manning Has Rights!
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
Recently
by Karen Kwiatkowski: The
Proper Response to WikiLeaks
At the culminating
point of the movie A
Few Good Men, Colonel Jessup, played magnificently by Jack
Nicholson, angrily tells the truth and shockingly incriminates himself.
The interrogating lawyer LT Daniel Kaffee (Tom Cruise), in his moment
of victory, refuses to gloat. Instead, he abruptly ends his interrogation
and demands that rule of law prevail, saying, "The defendant
has rights!"
The famous
courtroom scenes from this movie are well-known and oft-quoted by
many Americans. A Few Good Men is formulaic, but it is the
formula we particularly love – proud patriots who believe in right
and wrong, in black and white, in law over lawlessness, Davids who
fight a powerful Goliath. Against all odds, eventually our heroes
win when the powerful and vindicating truth is revealed for all
to see.
In another
time, this would be the story of Bradley Manning.
A Few Good
Men dramatically exposes the deformation and distortion of right
and wrong that is the very demand of state utilitarianism, which
is to say, an action is right if is promotes the state’s happiness,
and an action is wrong if it tends to make the state unhappy. Colonel
Jessup called for the harsh physical punishment of a "substandard
Marine" and thus Corporal Santiago was killed by his comrades.
The state, represented by Jessup, explains, "…Santiago’s death,
while tragic, probably saved lives…."
Charged but
not convicted of any crime, American PFC Brad Manning is being
held largely incommunicado at Quantico, without bedding or permission
to exercise in his cell. He is purposely deprived of human contact.
His current treatment – based on unproven charges – is far harsher
than the treatment and sentences of four famous and convicted
US federal-level spies.
Former FBI
agent Robert Hanssen
was arrested in early 2001, and charged with selling secrets to
the Soviets during the preceding two decades. Upon arrest, Hanssen
confessed and was able to hire as an attorney the extremely competent
Plato Cacheris, who negotiated a plea bargain. After an entire career
spent profiting from the sale of classified information to the Soviets
and later the Russian Federation, he is held at Supermax in isolation.
Well, not exactly like Brad Manning – Hanssen has bedding, books,
and exercise.
The case of
career CIA employee and horrific spy/profiteer, Aldrich Ames, is
also instructive. After his arrest and lawyer-facilitated plea bargain,
Ames was not held forever in isolation at a Supermax-style facility.
Instead, he
resides at Allenwood Federal Prison with the general population,
and is able to receive visitors and to correspond with people outside
the prison on
issues of current interest.
Two other famous
convicted federal-level spies of the same era include Army Warrant
Officer James
Hall and Army Colonel George
Trofimoff. These military officers who sold secrets were not
tortured, nor were they deprived of their constitutional rights
to a fair defense. Even though they are convicted military spies,
they are serving less intensive punishments than either Ames or
Hanssen, and were treated far better than PFC Manning.
Manning is
not accused of selling secrets, or profiting from their release.
Washington has made
charges; it suspects Manning is partly responsible for publicly
embarrassing the federal security apparatus. But as the Pentagon
and the State Department both admit, even if Manning was the source
of some government documents, the revelations did not seriously
impact government operations.
What has changed?
Is Brad Manning thought by government to be a different kind of
criminal? Has what he is alleged to have done more evil, more dangerous,
more damaging than previous crimes, or even the
crimes he may have exposed? Or is it Americans themselves who
have changed, with a new 21st century sangfroid?
The Constitution
languishes and the state has surged since 9/11. Americans, by and
large, still accept the strawmen arguments for giving up their liberty.
The modern American is afflicted, not blessed, with an overgrown
and paranoid state, as
this timeline of the evolution of solitary confinement in the
land of the free and the home of the brave illustrates. Administrative
lockdown – torture
really – is the new black in the fashion of American governance,
and many Americans politely applaud it.
Bradley Manning’s
incarceration
has been clearly designed to punish, to threaten, and to pressure
him, and to frighten thousands of others who have access to records
of government criminality and idiocy, and may be having pangs of
conscience. To date, Manning has not confessed or plead guilty to
any crime, despite
months of pressure by his military-appointed defense team (only
recently replaced by civilian attorney David Coombs). He is deprived
of pillow and sheets as an apparent means of coercing some testimony
that would help the government create a separate case against the
Australian Julian Assange and Wikileaks.
Keeping secrets
– shutting down critics and eliminating public dissent – is the
lifeblood of the state, and a reliable marker of totalitarianism.
The mistreatment of Brad Manning while in military custody continues.
As with others
before him, Manning may be permanently physically and psychologically
damaged before it’s over. This calculated destruction of a real
human being is no accident. It is a widely practiced technique of
despotic government at any level – whether in a disturbed
family, in a
prison or mental
hospital, or by a government ostensibly put in place through
a democratic process. Despotic government is sustained by silence,
by blindness, by fear. It is destroyed by shared truth, by open
eyes, and by a few courageous souls to lead the way.
Thus, Brad
Manning is made out to be a different kind of criminal, one far
more deadly to the state than international spies, profiteers, murderers
and cheats. He angered the state when he exposed a few of its many
crimes. Instead of thanking Brad Manning for revealing weaknesses
in their secret-keeping mechanisms – the state became enraged and
violent, and now demands his moral and spiritual destruction. Inseparable
from Washington’s call for Brad Manning’s continued torture and
deprivation of rights is Washington’s public political cheerleading
for the detention and death of Australian Julian Assange.
The state believes
that Brad Manning’s death, though tragic, will save lives of those
the state deems valuable. Washington believes that Julian Assange’s
death, while unfortunate, is necessary to maintain good order and
discipline among the ruled.
The state indeed
is at fault, but at least the US government assaults on Brad Manning,
and on Julian Assange, are battles for nothing less than its own
survival. If we do not believe in the state, we cannot be ruled
by it. This is the fundamental lesson of the rise and fall of empires,
from Rome to the Soviet Union.
In
A Few Good Men, Lt Kaffee battled state-utilitarianism, in
the face of near certain public humiliation, the almost certain
end of his career, and the extreme likelihood of professional and
personal failure. When he rose to the challenge, and took a great
risk to do the right thing, the audience felt a rush of pride, cheering
his achievement, and sharing a real sense of what we like to think
it means to be an American. Brad Manning is both the hero in our
modern story, as well as the defendant. If we as Americans cannot
cheer him, because we are numb, fearful, afraid, and have forgotten
our principles, at the very least we must be able to stand up and
loudly proclaim, "The defendant has rights!"
December
20, 2010
LRC
columnist Karen Kwiatkowski, Ph.D. [send
her mail], a
retired USAF lieutenant colonel, blogs occasionally at Liberty
and Power and The
Beacon. To receive automatic announcements of new articles,
click
here or join her Facebook page.
Copyright ©
2010 Karen Kwiatkowski
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