A US judge has ruled that some testimony in the Bradley Manning trial will be heard behind closed doors to ensure that classified information is safeguarded.
The order comes after judges dropped one count against Manning,
but are still pushing for serious charges: Disclosing classified
data to WikiLeaks and aiding Al-Qaeda. Manning has pleaded guilty
to 10 of the 22 charges set against him, standing accused of
leaking over 700,000 documents to Wikileaks.
Twenty-four witnesses, including several US ambassadors, will
testify behind closed doors during the trial of Pfc. Bradley
Manning, which begins on June 3.
The decision was made by US Military judge Col. Denise Lind, who
heads the case. She indicated that otherwise, some sensitive
information could be revealed. A censored transcript of the hearing
will be published at a later date, the judge explained.
There has already been too much secrecy in the Manning case,
Jesselyn Radack, national security and human rights director of the
Washington-based Government Accountability Project told AP two
weeks ago.
“The more they do behind closed doors and the more they do
through secret codes or anything else that shields the public from
information, like not providing transcripts, those things are all
antithetical to the democratic idea of having a free and open
trial,” Radack stressed.
Last year, the Center for Constitutional Rights filed a petition
to order the court to grant the public and press wider access to
the trial, a request an appeals court later denied.
In April, prosecutors urged journalists to “police” each other
and inform judges if they notice other reporters taking notes or
recordings the proceedings. The move followed the leak of a snippet
of audio from the courtroom featuring Manning’s testimony about his
motives in leaking the documents.
The Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) released the audio,
marking the first time the public has heard Manning’s voice since
his 2010 arrest. Manning justified his actions by calling for the
exposure of what he saw as US government wrongdoings in order to
“spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our
foreign policy in general as it related to Iraq and
Afghanistan.”
In the recording, he goes on to accuse the US Army of “not valu[ing] human
life,” and compared other soldiers to “a child torturing
ants with a magnifying glass.”
Pfc. Bradley Manning admitted to disclosing classified
government documents and diplomatic cables to whistleblowing
website WikiLeaks, and now faces charges of aiding the enemy for
those leaks. Part of the government’s case against Manning asserts
that late Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden asked one of his deputies
to download documents leaked by Manning.
Among the witnesses set to testify was one of the Navy SEALs
that raided Osama bin Laden’s compound in Pakistan in May 2011.
Prosecutors said the “DoD operator,” whose identity was not
disclosed, would testify that terrorists had received access to
some of the WikiLeaks material through an associate.
Prosecutors said Tuesday that they had agreed not to pursue a
charge that Manning had violated the federal Computer Fraud and
Abuse Act, reducing his potential 162-year prison sentence by eight
years.
Just over a month ago, the judge ordered the prosecution to
prove that Manning intended to harm the US by leaking the
cables.
On Tuesday, judges accepted Manning’s guilty plea to one of the
charges. The offense was related to a State Department cable from
the US embassy in Reykjavik, Iceland, which Manning has admitted to
leaking.
Manning has offered to plead guilty to 10 of the less serious
charges against him, which could see him sentenced to up to 20
years. If convicted of all charges against him, he could be
imprisoned for up to 150 years.
This article originally appeared on : RT




