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18 Jan, 2017 05:20

‘Manning paid steep price for opening Americans’ eyes to Iraq War crimes’ – former US officials

‘Manning paid steep price for opening Americans’ eyes to Iraq War crimes’ – former US officials

Chelsea Manning’s case is a classic example of the US’s double-standard approach, where people exposing true crimes are prosecuted and tortured, while the top brass gets away with controlled leaks that influence public opinion in the “right way,” former US officials and whistleblowers told RT.

US President Barack Obama did the right thing commuting the sentence of Manning, but she has already paid an enormous price for her courageous act and received a punishment way more severe than any other whistleblower, former FBI agent and whistleblower Coleen Rowley told RT.

“If you look at other people who have been charged and convicted under the Espionage Act, usually the sentences are something between one and three years. Even in the UK under a more strict law called the Official Secrets Act, whistleblowers are usually get from one to two years sentence,” Rowley said.

“She got a 35-years-sentence, this was really unprecedented and she did serve in very harsh conditions, at least initially, when she was confined at the Quantico marine base. The UN reporters said that she was being tortured. Even the State Department spokesperson resigned in protest, because he knew that Chelsea Manning was being tortured and really abused. She has really paid a steep price for her whistleblowing.”

This commutation won’t immediately change the course of US policy towards whistleblowers and won’t actually sweeten the bitter aftertaste of the Obama’s years, during which his administration waged a war on whistleblowers and persecuted them more than ever, Rowley believes.

“That law, the Espionage Act, that goes all the way back to the World War One remains out there, and has a chilling effect on anybody who witnesses fraud, waste and abuse, and wants to just do a right thing. And unfortunately this commutation won’t solve that problem,” Rowley said.

It’s not only century-old laws, which “could be even used against members of the press, journalists and reporters,” but US policy allied with the double standards at play, prevent the problem from being solved, Rowley believes.

“Recently we had a lot of “leaks” from anonymous top-level CIA officials, who were greenlighted. That means that people say ‘Ok, go ahead and leak it, and we won’t prosecute you.’ Or General Petraeus, for instance, leaking to his mistress and getting a slap on the wrist," Rowley said.

READ MORE: Leak of report on Trump’s alleged ties with Kremlin ‘totally wrong’ - McCain

“There’s always this problem of double standards, where trying to shape public opinion, top-level people who don’t serve the public good at all are allowed to do these things, but somebody who truly witnesses a crime like torture, like John Kiriakou, or other people who really see a terrible crime going on, or a cover-up or a serious risk to public safety even. Those people, if they speak out publicly, then the hammer’s thrown at them with that Espionage Act from WWI, and that is the problem.”

Chelsea Manning’s case and rather unexpected commutation will eventually change American officials and the public’s attitude towards whistleblowers, but it won’t happen immediately, former State Department official Peter Van Buren told RT.

“A lot of the Americans had their eyes opened to the Iraq war. I think every American today now knows the term ‘whistleblower’ and knows what that means in the context of war and the federal government. I think every American has had an example of extraordinary courage on the part of someone who did exactly the right thing without worrying about the consequences to her personally,” Van Buren said.

READ MORE: Body count: Judith Miller slammed on Twitter for saying Manning leaks killed people

“We all hope and pray that nothing bad will happen to her in these five months.What we would also hope is that knowing that she is going to be free in less than five months will give her even more strength to carry on. We also hope that knowing she will be released in five months will cause the American military authorities to back off from punishing her, from treating her poorly, and that knowing that she’s on the downhill slope of the very difficult struggle will give her the strength to come out in May and prove all of her detractors wrong.”

The five month delay might have something to do with Julian Assange’s earlier promise that he’d be willing to be extradited to the US should Manning be pardoned, but it’s too early to make strong assumptions, Van Buren believes.

“I suspect there may be more going on behind the scene than we know of. We’ve all seen Julian Assange had earlier this week offered to accept extradition to the United States. So that may be why Obama needs to give the United States a few months here. But nonetheless regardless of the circumstances hopefully by May Chelsea Manning will be a free person, she will no longer be in jail, she will be able to complete her transition in freedom and in a way acknowledge that she was right all along to do what she did.”

Chelsea Manning’s commutation most likely won’t please US officials who were not very eager to hear her revelations about government wrongdoings in the first place, former US diplomat Ann Wright told RT.

“The issue of classified information, and the divulging of classified information, of course, is very serious. But the distinction that I draw in my mind, after having been in US government for nearly four decades and worked on classified information: what Chelsea Manning was doing was exposing criminal acts of the US government,” Wright said.

“Only the whistleblowers have the courage to actually release classified information that shows government wrongdoing, knowing full well that they are probably going to get into big trouble for it, rather than being thanked for letting the honest people in the government know what’s going on so they can correct it. Instead, they are charged with divulging classified information, convicted, and put in jail. The Obama administration has had a war on whistleblowers. It’s not like they were overly enthusiastic about receiving information about government wrongdoing at all,” she noted.

The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

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