| Thursday, March 3, 2011.  Chaos and violence continue, protests are planned  in Iraq for tomorrow, crackdowns go into effect, Nouri's ground appears shakier,  Bradley Manning faces new charges, and more.   This week on Raising Hope  (episode "Snip, Snip," written by Mike  Mariano, Fox, Tuesday nights, streams online), Virginia (Martha Plimpton) and  Burt (Garret Dillahunt) have a pregnancy scare.  When their adult son Jimmy  (Lucas Neff) finds out, he holds a family meeting in the living room.  Also  present is Maw Maw (Cloris Leachman ), Virginia's grandmother, who appears off in  her own little world as she examines a remote control.   Jimmy: How could you be so irresponsible?   Virginia: We're responsible. We're also passionate and  spontaneous.   Burt: Those would be our gladiator names if we were on American  Gladiator.  Which we still might do!   Virginia: Because we're spontaneous.   Jimmy: Okay, first of all, Gladiator sounds awesome.  But  no babies.  One of you has to get fixed or spayed.    Burt: No way.   Virginia: You cannot decide that, Jimmy. That is a personal  decision.   Burt: She's right. I think we should take a family vote. All those  in favor of everyone keeping their original plumbing?   Virginia and Burt raise their hands.   Virginia: Sorry, Jimmy, you're out voted two to one.   Maw Maw: I vote with Jimmy!   Jimmy: Hold on! Two to two!   Burt: Only if she's lucid! She's only allowed to vote if she's  lucid!   Virginia: Maw Maw, we are currently at war with what  country?   Maw Maw: Iraq and Afghanistan.   Jimmy: Is she right?   Burt: I think so but I'm not sure.   Maw Maw: It's right, you morons.  One more reason why you shouldn't  have another baby.     Burt and Jimmy aren't the only ones who appear to have forgotten the wars.  Yesterday the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan issued a  [PDF format warning] press release  Asking if Iraq is "a forgotten mission," the bipartisan Commission  on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan has released a special report to  Congress warning that the U.S. Department of State faces large funding and  contract-management challenges in Iraq once the U.S. military completes its  agreed-upon withdrawal by the end of 2011.  To deal with Iraq's long-standing ethnic, religious, and regional  rivalries, the State Department is working to set up two permanent and two  temporary stations remote from the U.S. embassy in Baghdad. The department is  also working with the Department of Defnse to deal with hundreds of functions  currently provided by the U.S. military in Iraq.  State's taking on security, facilities management, air transport,  and other tasks will require thousands of contractor employees.  "Yet State is  short of needed funding and program-management staff," the report says.  "Very  little time remains for State to develop requirements, conduct negotiations, and  award competititve contracts for work that must begin at once. Inadequate  support risks waste of funds and failure for U.S. policy objectives in Iraq and  the region." The report recommends that: "1. Congress ensure adequate funding to sustain State Department  operations in critical area of Iraq, including its greatly increased needs for  operational contract support." "2. The Department of State expand its organic capability to meet  heightened needs for acquistion personnel, contract management, and contractor  oversight." "3. The Secretaries of State and Defense extend and intensify their  collaborative planning for the transition, including executing an agreement to  establish a single, sneior-level coordinator and decision-maker to guide  progress and promptly address major issues whose resolution may exceed the  authorities of departmental working groups."     Nathan Hodge's article in today's  Wall St. Journal opens, "U.S.  officials are beginning to talk about the possibility of keeping some troops in  Iraq beyond 2011, complicating the Pentagon's plans to rein in military  spending." Hodge also notes the new report from the Commission on Wartime  Contracting which  Mark Bruce (ABC News) covers as  well as the hearing : The State  Department is not ready to assume leadership for the U.S. role in Iraq as the  military draws down its mission there, Commissioners Grant Green and Michael  Thibault of the Commission on Wartime Contracting in Iraq and Afghanistan argued  before lawmakers today. "Is the State  Department ready? The short answer is 'no,' and the short reason for that answer  is that establishing and sustaining an expanded U.S. diplomatic presence in Iraq  will require State to take on thousands of additional contractor employees that  it has neither funds to pay nor resources to manage," Green testified before the  Oversight and Government Reform Committee.Mike Kellerman (Press TV -- link has text and video)  adds : "Another couple hundred billion is estimated to pay for  diplomats, CIA workers, para military advisors, embassy security, and tens of  thousands of contractors. AT this Congressional hearing, several lawmakers  balked at the projected price for Obama's long-term scheme to keep the American  presence strong in Iraq indicating the government can no longer afford it. The  US special inspector general for Iraq testified not only will it cost a lot at a  time when budget cutters in Congress are slashing the State Department's budget  but also the State Department is far from ready to take over the occupation of  the country from the US military." If you want to end something, you work to end  it. You don't, a few days after an election -- say, one in 2008 -- post a  pathetic message on your supposed peace website that all is well and you're off.  The Iraq War continues. Those of us who said "Out of Iraq Now!" need to figure  out whether we meant it or not -- specifically "NOW!" -- or whether we were just  lying to try to help Democrats do better in elections. I'm not sure what  conclusion most will form but I was opposed to the Iraq War and meant it which  is why I remain opposed to the Iraq War. Opposed -- not posing. There's a  difference. Non-posers will gather across the country this month on the  anniversary of the Iraq War with the biggest protest planned for DC. A.N.S.W.E.R . and  March Forward!  and others will be  taking part in this action:  
 March 19 is the 8th anniversary of  the invasion and occupation of Iraq. Iraq today remains occupied by 50,000 U.S.  soldiers and tens of thousands of foreign mercenaries.   The war in Afghanistan is raging.  The U.S. is invading and bombing Pakistan. The U.S. is financing endless  atrocities against the people of Palestine, relentlessly threatening Iran and  bringing Korea to the brink of a new war.   While the United States will spend  $1 trillion for war, occupation and weapons in 2011, 30 million people in the  United States remain unemployed or severely underemployed, and cuts in  education, housing and healthcare are imposing a huge toll on the people.   Actions of civil resistance are  spreading.   On Dec. 16, 2010, a veterans-led  civil resistance at the White House played an important role in bringing the  anti-war movement from protest to resistance. Enduring hours of heavy snow, 131  veterans and other anti-war activists lined the White House fence and were  arrested. Some of those arrested will be going to trial, which will be scheduled  soon in Washington, D.C.   Saturday, March 19, 2011, the  anniversary of the invasion of Iraq, will be an international day of action  against the war machine.   Protest and resistance actions  will take place in cities and towns across the United States. Scores of  organizations are coming together. Demonstrations are scheduled for San  Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and more.   The Iraq War isn't over. BBC News reports  that a Haditha  suicide bomber has taken his own life today and the lives of many around him. NPR 's Mike Shuster (on the hourly headlines) says that  the death toll could rise and that most of the victims are "police or army  personnel who gathered at a bank to receive their pay." Reuters counts  10 dead so far with  twenty-six injured.  In political news, the big news may be Ayad Allawi's announcement. Al Rafidayn reports  the Iraqiya  leader has given a TV interview in which he has declared he will have no part of  the National Council on Supreme Policies. He termed his decision "final" and  said Iraqiya could nominate or back someone else for that post if they want to.  Iraiqy won the most votes in the March 7th elections which should have meant  Ayad Allawi had first crack at forming a government but the Constitution wasn't  followed. To end the stalemate, the US government increased the pressure on  various parties resulting in an agreement largely brokered by the Kurds which  gave Nouri the prime minister poster and would make Allawi head of the National  Council on Supreme Polcies; however, that body has still not been created. For  those who can remember, after the agreement there was much fan fair in  Parliament the next day . . . except for Iraqiya walking out as it became  obvious that their rewards in the agreement were not priority. Among those who  walked away then was Allawi. It probably would have been smart for others in  Iraqiya to have taken a stand back then when it might have made a difference. Dar Addustour reports  the assertion  that the National Council wil lbe formed. When? Iraq still doesn't have a full  Cabinet. In related news, New Sabah reports  that Iraqiya is  stating Nouri is using his '100 days' (a time of review Nouri's given himself)  not to reform, but to stall. Arab  News reports : "The Chairman of the Supreme Iraqi Islamic  Council (SIIC), Ammar al-Hakin, and the Leader of al-Iraqiya Coalition, Iyad  Allawi, have discussed on Wednesday the activiation of the agreements, reached  among different Iraqi political parties, to activiate the national partnership  to respond to the people's demands, an SIIC statement said on Thursday. In  further related news, Alsumaria TV reports ,  "Al Sadr Front threatened to stop supporting the government of Prime Minister  Nuri Al Maliki if he keeps on his weak performance and failures. The front even  hinted about allying with Iraqiya leader Iyad Allawi to form a parliamentary  majority in case the government fails to provide its people the needed services  within the six month deadline set by Sadr's referendum." UPI notes , "The party loyal to Shiite  cleric Moqtada Sadr could rally against the country's prime minister if he  doesn't address national woes."  The Econimist notes , ". . . Mr Maliki is  becoming still more authoritarian.  In January a supreme federal court ruling  allowed several independent institutions, including the central bank and various  committees that are meant to oversee elections, fight graft and uphold human  rights, to fall under the control of the executive. Mr Maliki has been trying to  place his allies in several of these outfits.  Qassim Aboudi, who heads the  electoral committee, said he feared that Mr Maliki would interfere even more in  the next election than he did in the past one.  Worst of all, reports have been  circulating that security forces loyal to Mr Maliki are again running secret  prisons where detainees are being tortured."  Mediate notes  that US House Rep Ron Paul appeared  on Judge Andrew Napolitano's Fox Business News program Freedom Watch  and noted Nouri's crackdown on protesters before  stating, "I would say that our success at providing a free society for Iraq is a  total failure and they do not have freedom.  There's less fredom of religion  there -- the Christians have all been run out.  Even under the horrible dictator  Saddam Hussein -- he was more tolerant of Christianity than the current  government is in Iraq."  Iraqi Christians remain in Iraq, many have been run out  of their homes -- some have moved to northern Iraq, some have left the country.  Protests are called for tomorrow in Iraq. Jack Healy and Michael S. Schmidt (New York  Times) report , "On Thursday night, the authorities banned all cars and  motorcycles from the streets of Baghdad, making it hard for protesters to reach  the central square. Similar bans were announced in Samarra and Kirkuk." Daniel Serwer (Washington Post) notes , "Iraqis  have been thinking about what they need to do to achieve national  reconciliation: Redefine the relationship between citizens and the state, reform  education at all levels, suppress incitement, limit foreign interference in  domestic politics. Members of parliament I spoke with wondered what it would  take to produce a 'culture of forgiveness.' There was a healthy debate." At the Council on Foreign  Relations, Raad Alkadiri offers  this take of the protests thus  far:  These protests have not reached the scale  of those witnessed in Egypt, Libya, and Tunisia, and demonstrators have not  demanded regime change per se. Nonetheless, the tight security measures taken to  contain the "day of rage" protests in Baghdad -- including blocking access to  the city and putting a tight military cordon around Tahrir Square, the focal  point of the demonstrations -- and Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki's efforts to  link the unrest to al Qaeda and Baathist provocateurs suggest that his  government is rattled. And with good cause, because if Baghdad cannot respond  effectively to popular demands, the current government's political survival is  no less at stake than those in Cairo, Tripoli, and Tunis. Although there is undoubtedly an element of contagion  influencing events in Iraq, which began with small demonstrations in Baghdad led  by intellectuals and professionals, the protests there are driven by local  grievances. Popular anger at the persistent lack of services -- especially  electricity -- has been rising steadily over the past few years. Demonstrations  protesting power shortages occurred in Basra last summer, expressing a  frustration common to Iraqis across the country; some parts of Baghdad, for  example, received around two hours of electricity per day from the national grid  in early February. Iraqis also share growing resentment toward pervasive  government corruption, a factor that has been particularly important in driving  demonstrations against the regional administration in Kurdistan. Iraq ranked 175  out of 178 countries on Transparency International's 2010 corruption index.  Meanwhile, there is broad resentment of the high salaries and generous benefits  that public officials have granted themselves, especially given the government's  apparent ineptitude. None of these  grievances is new; Iraqis have complained about poor services and unresponsive  government since the U.S. invasion in 2003. But in the bloody, chaotic years  that followed Hussein's fall, security was the biggest popular concern. Now that  levels of violence have diminished, Iraqis' patience with their government's  inadequacies is wearing thin.Nayla Razzouk (Bloomberg News) notes   that Saber al-Issawi, mayor of Baghdad, has tendered "his resignation [. . .]  following street protests in the country to demand better living conditions and  anti-corruption measures".  The mayor of Falluja has resigned, Babil Province  Governor Salman Nasser Hamidi has resigned and Basra Governor Shaltagh Abboud.   In addition to the planned protests for tomorrow, Reuters notes  that Moqtada al-Sadr has called for  protests "against any possible US Military intervention in Libya, saying the US  installed Gaddafi and now wants to remove him."    Late yesterday, new charges were lodged against Bradley Manning .  The rest of the  snapshot will be devoted to issues having to do with Iraq War veteran  Bradley.  Monday April  5th , WikiLeaks released US  military video  of a July 12, 2007 assault in Iraq. 12 people were  killed in the assault including two Reuters  journalists Namie Noor-Eldeen and  Saeed Chmagh. Monday June  7th , the US military announced that they had arrested Bradley Manning  and he stood accused of being the leaker of the video. Leila Fadel  (Washington Post) reported  in August that Manning had been  charged -- "two charges under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. The first  encompasses four counts of violating Army regulations by transferring classified  information to his personal computer between November and May and adding  unauthorized software to a classified computer system. The second comprises  eight counts of violating federal laws governing the handling of classified  information." Manning has been convicted in the public square despite the fact  that he's been convicted in no state and has made no public statements --  despite any claims otherwise, he has made no public statements. Manning has been  at Quantico in Virginia, under military lock and key, for months. David S. Cloud (Los Angeles Times) reports  that the  military has added 22 additional counts to the charges including one that could  be seen as "aiding the enemy" which could result in the death penalty if  convicted. David E. Coombs is Bradley's  attorney and provides a walk through on Article 104 . Like many, Sophie Elmhirst (New Statesman) emphasizes  the  possibility of the death penalty. Elmhirst notes:Last week, I met David House, the only person  allowed to visit Manning at the Marine Corps Brig in Quantico, Virginia apart  from his lawyer, David Coombs (the full article is in this  week's magazine). Manning has been held there since 29 July 2010, and  House has been visiting him since September, and has noticed his rapid  deterioration. Manning, who is held under a Prevention Of Injury (POI) order,  spends 23 hours a day alone in his cell, and is now unable to speak at any  length or with coherence. He is allowed out for an hour to walk in circles  around an empty room. For three days in January he was put on suicide watch, his  glasses were removed and he was kept in his cell for 24 hours a day, although  his psychological evaluations have stated that he is not a risk to himself. He  has also gained weight and appears exhausted.   Most recently, House told me, he has appeared  almost catatonic, barely able to communicate at all. "I can't really describe  how bizarre it is to see a 110-pound, five-foot-three individual done up in  chains from his hands to his feet, connected at the waist, so he can't really  move," he said. Pentagon officials maintain that Manning receives the same  treatment and privileges as all other prisoners held in what the military calls  'maximum custody' ". But House points out that Manning is the only  maximum-custody detainee at Quantico, "so he is being treated like himself".       Could he face the death penalty? He could. If found guilty, he could even  be put to death. How likely is that? It was less likely in 2005 because we had a  movement against the Iraq War. But the reality is that it's an illegal war and  that the 2002 authorization doesn't say go to war. That wouldn't be hard to  establish in court -- you have various Democrats who voted for it in 2002 --  including some who ran for the party's presidential nomination -- and insisted  after that this was not a vote for war, it was a vote for inspections and on and  on. Meaning, if it is on record by the very people who voted for the  authorization that the measure did not declare war, it would be very hard to  establish that this was a legal war. (It's an illegal war by every international  law. We're sticking to national issues due to the fact that this case, if  prosecuted, would be in military courts at the start. On appeal, it would leave  the confines of the military.) Does the military want to be arguing --  with US soldiers still on the ground in Iraq -- that Bradley allegedly aided the  enemy? No, they don't. They don't want to because that opens up two  defense avenues. The first is, where is the proof that anyone was aided --  burden of proof, even in the military court, would be on the prosecution to  prove their charge. The second is the legality issue. Reality: US troops  aren't leaving Iraq at the end of 2011. You can accept that reality or not. But  it's not happening. The US military cannot continue to hold Bradley as they have  been doing. The outcry is building. So a trial of some form (or an agreement)  had to start (or be reached) in the near future. The military does not want a  legality issue on the war. We've seen that in case after case. Think of Camilo  Mejia's case or anyone else's. The military doesn't want that but this charge  invites that. You cannot claim that someone's actions have aided the enemy and  not give them the right to respond as to "what legally defined enemy?" which is  the issue of the (domestic) legality of the Iraq War. It's a stupid  charge on their part because it actually expands the case the defense could make  -- even if the prosecution insists "We won't go for the death penalty," making  that charge expands the scope. During Vietnam, case after case had to be dropped  because of the legality issue -- I'm referring to cases which did include  charges of 'aiding the enemy.' One of the reasons Jane Fonda  was never charged with any crime was that  the Justice Dept did not want to get into a court battle over the legality of  what the US was doing in Vietnam. Charging her -- as some reactionary members of  Congress wanted at the time -- with "aiding the enemy" or "treason" would  require the Justice Dept explaining that the US was at war with what  Congressional proclamation? (Only Congress can declare war legally in the US.)  Putting the war on trial, especially when it is ongoing, is not something that  any branch of the government seeks. What may be happening is that this  may be an effort to scare Bradley. The military may have reached a dead end or a  wall and, with little to no additional options on ways to attempt to force  something out of him, they may have decided to drop a number of new charges on  him all at once in the hope that they can intimidate or scare him or his  attorney. Anything can happen, the future is not foretold. But based on  past experiences in the US, this plays more like an intimidation tactic by the  government -- and an incredibly desperate one at that. Ellen Nakashima (Washington Post) notes   the military has stated they will not seek the death penalty.  That only makes  it more likely that this was a desperation move on the part of prosecutors who  know they need to move forward on the case but apparently have little or no case  at present. Although it has allowed for some to run around like chickens with  their heads cut off and I'm sure the prosecutors are loving that.  Meanwhile  Glenn Greenwald's demonstrating yet again what a poor legal mind he has.  Link here and provided just for the purpose of  laughter .  (Heads up came from three friends who are Constitutional  lawyers.) At one point, GG's going on about military law while indicating that  he doesn't understand it.  The chief thing to remember with the military court  is that it does have civilian oversight in the appeals process.  (It was US  District Court Judge Benjamin Settle, for example, who ruled in Ehren Watada's  favor.)  Even worse than GG's alarmist attitude is what he does when he realizes  he hasn't a clue about the issues involved.  US citizen Bradley Manning will  supposedly face a (US) military court.  Not sure of the issues (but too scared  to admit it), GG looking for an expert and thinks he found one in an  "international law professor."  No, GG, no.  That espeically is producing howls  of laughter in the legal community.  I know the small, online world tends to  think GG's a brilliant legal mind up there with Atticus Finch but he repeatedly  demonstrates that he's just not that smart -- neither when it comes to thinking  on his feet or strategizing.  (Which is how the White House managed to Rick-roll  him on ObamaCare all those months.)  The charges against Bradley are not  "international law" charges.  They are domestic military charges.  He should  have called any number of attorneys familiar with domestic law, especially  military law, such as Eugene Fidell.  Fidell's always popular with the press  and, in fact, Charlie Savage (New York Times) has already  spoken to him about the new charges :  Eugene Fidell, who teaches military law at Yale Law School, noted  that several of the charges seemed to be describing the same basic act, but in  different ways. He said that it was "typical for military prosecutors to draft  charges in as many ways as possible," and he predicted that the defense would  challenge the redundancies later in the process. "We're potentially entering a new chapter with this set of  charges," Mr. Fidell said.   That's one opinion.  There are others.  AP's David Disneau finds some -- unlike GG, to find  out what could happen, Dishneau goes to military law experts . If you're  presenting someone as an expert on a sujbect, they need to be not just an expert  but an expert whose expertise applies to the issue at hand.  Again, GG's a  laugh-laugh.  It's only the online world that thinks he's all that.  If he  hadn't tossed his lot in online with Democrats (he's not a Democrat), he  wouldn't have his fame -- such as it is -- but if you tell blind partisans (of  either party) just what they want to hear often enough, they'll hail you as a  genuis.  Of course, most of the praise comes from people who have never sat foot  in courtroom, let alone taken even one legal course. You'd think even the  mindless, reading today's column, would realize there's some sort of cognitive  problem with GG -- presenting Bradley as guilty and then, in his final  paragraph, noting Bradley's been convicted of nothing. Which is it?  And we bring it up not just because of GG -- we rarely mention him, he has  no use to us.  But we note him today because GG's part of the problem.  'What  will sway the public!!!!!'  Time and again, that's what GG's inflated nonsense  is about.  Now you can make an argument that attempts to persuade and is still  coherent and factual.  When you are unable to do that, you just keep upping the  ante -- lying -- and end up like John Nichols , who, Bob Somerby points out today , helped start (another) huge lie  on the left, it spread like wildfire and people had egg on their face. We don't  need that.  We all make enough mistakes on our own (and I'm sure I make more  than anyone else) without relying on people who have record of stretching,  bending, distorting and molesting the truth.  GG makes some idiotic claims -- and he's far from alone today -- how does  that hurt anyone?  I don't care about Glenn Greenwald and his cult will continue  to fawn over him.  But the reason we have screamed and pissed people off on the  Bradley Manning issue is because I do give a damn about Bradley.  I do care when  Bill Quigley -- at the Center for Constitutional Rights website -- is calling  Bradley the leaker.  I do care that Bradley be able to enter a plea and not have  one assigned to him -- either by the government stooges or by my fellow idiots  on the left.  The charges have always been serious ones against Bradley in terms  of punishment.  It is no one's business -- that includes Daniel Ellsberg who has  pissed off the Manning family with some of his public statements -- but  Bradley's to make a claim or assertion.  He can -- and will -- do that through  his attorney.  He may be innocent.  He may be guilty and want to plead  innocent.  He may want to plead guilty.  But that's his plea.  And that CCR  would feature Quigley's crazy -- an attorney at a website for attorneys --  calling Bradley the leaker when Bradley's never identified himself as that is  beyond crazy.   As is upping the ante.  What Bradley's experiencing does qualify as  torture.  You don't have to add to it, you don't have to inflate it.  What's  going on is already bad enough.  His attorney David E. Coombs notes  the military felt the need  to strip Bradley of all his clothing for over seven hours.  Now if we wanted to  live in Speculation City, I could rip them apart over that and what they may  have been trying to do in terms of humiliation.  But Bradley's never spoken of  his sexuality to the press and we've left that out of the snapshots because  Adrian Llamo is a liar and a convicted felon.  We're not interested in the many  lies that sewage mouth repeatedly spouts.  (And as we noted long ago, a real  prosecution does not let Llamo leak the way he has.  Llamo's leaking long ago  indicated he wasn't a witness in a future trial, he was part of the  prosecution.)  7 hours without clothing.  In his cold cell.  For what reason? We  don't know but we know that's not right.  But some today will overlook that  grave injustice -- which is a violation of military policy.  Even if Bradley  were to be put on suicide watch, he would be placed in scrubs.  He would not be  forced to be naked for hours.  The military has violated their own guidelines.   But, again, some today will overlook it.  They'll hear about it and think, "Oh,  well, that's minor! The US military wants to execute him!!!!"   What is being done to Bradley now is already outrageous.  When your way of  'helping' him is to focus on what might happen as you let your horses run free  (nod to Prince) all over Crazy Town, you make the outrageous actions of the US  military seem far less than what they are.  That's one reason why we don't  docu-drama an ongoing legal case.  Another reason is that once you start lying,  there is the risk that your lie will be exposed.  If and when that happens, that  one lie goes to your entire presentation.  "They lied about __ and if they would  lie about ___, who knows what else they would lie about." So when Coombs responds to Pentagon flack Geoff Morrell's  assertions , you're undercutting him (and Bradley) if you're forever  'improving' on the story.    Let's deal with another way some of the 'helpers' are harming.  The Cult of  St. Julian  tries to tie Assange with Bradley.   There's no reason to do that.  Despite claims by Julian Assange that they would  support Bradley (whom Assange has always stated may or may not be the whistle  blower because WikiLeaks does not know the person who lead the data) and his  legal defense, they didn't.  Shamed on the national stage, WikiLeaks finally  ponied up a small amount -- $15,000.  From  a review by Marcus Baram (Huffington  Post) of Daniel Domscheit-Berg's  Inside WikiLeaks: My Time With  Julian Assange at the World's Most Dangerous Website :  The arrest of U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning for allegedly  copying and leaking classified information represented the worst moment in the  history of WikiLeaks, writes Domscheit-Berg. The arrest prompted the group to  debate the effectiveness of its mechanism for protecting sources -- could a  document be so dangerous for a source that WikiLeaks should not publish it?  Domscheit-Berg also reveals that the organization let down Manning after  promising to hire lawyers and raise $100,000 for his defense. By the end of  2010, only $15,000 had been transferred to Manning's support network. "I have to  admit that we at WL, myself included, utterly failed on this score," he  writes.    That's despicable.  And there are reasons not to link them beyond that.   While Julie plays martyr, Bradley's facing real hardships.  And has been for  months now.  If Bradley is the leaker, he's the one who risked by leaking.  He  should be the focus.  (If he's not the leaker, his being held is even more  outrageous.)    And  according to Julian Assange, the US government is trying to link him  to Bradley.  So why the cult of  St. Julian  wants to equate the two over and over is beyond me -- because  they like doing the prosecutor's work or are they just that stupid?  If he's the leaker -- big if at this point -- the public record still would  only (thus far) reflect a connection between Bradley and WikiLeaks -- no  connection between him and Julian Assange would be established.  If you really  live in fear that St. Julie's going to be tried in the US, stop poisoning a  potential jury pool by doing the government's work for them.   Equally true is Bradley's never received the support or attention his case  warrants.  Even World Can't Wait -- one of the few to truly work the Collateral  Murder video -- refuses to treat him as his own important story and lumps him in  with Julian Assange.  As Assange grows more toxic, that's not a smart strategy  for Bradley.  It's not necessary to feel a damn thing towards non-reporter  Julian Assange in order to support Bradley.  But, as usual, the ego maniac Julie  eats up all the left's attention.           |