DOD Press Office Scrambling to Explain Bradley Manning’s Treatment

Something is badly amiss in DOD’s efforts to tell its side of how it is treating Bradley Manning.

It started on Monday when NBC’s Chief Pentagon correspondent Jim Miklaszewski (that is, not a hippie) published an article with two big scoops. First, that investigators have been unable to tie Manning directly to Julian Assange.

U.S. military officials tell NBC News that investigators have been unable to make any direct connection between a jailed army private suspected with leaking secret documents and Julian Assange, founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks.

The officials say that while investigators have determined that Manning had allegedly unlawfully downloaded tens of thousands of documents onto his own computer and passed them to an unauthorized person, there is apparently no evidence he passed the files directly to Assange, or had any direct contact with the controversial WikiLeaks figure.

In the same article, Miklaszewski reports what appears to be limited hangout push-back against allegations that Manning was “tortured” (but not “abused”). While Manning was not tortured, Miklaszewski’s sources say, he was improperly put on suicide watch for two days last week.

On Monday, U.S. military officials also strongly denied allegations that Manning, being held in connection with the WikiLeaks’ release of classified documents, has been “tortured” and held in “solitary confinement” without due process.The officials told NBC News, however, that a U.S. Marine commander did violate procedure when he placed Manning on “suicide watch” last week.

Military officials said Brig Commander James Averhart did not have the authority to place Manning on suicide watch for two days last week, and that only medical personnel are allowed to make that call.

Note that both of these scoops were attributed to “US military officials,” though a later reference refers to “official,” singular. Later in the article, he cites, “U.S. Marine and Army officials” stating that Manning “is being treated like any other maximum security prisoner.” If I had to guess, I’d say Miklaszewski was protecting whatever officials gave him the scoop, while more clearly identifying those who pushed back on it.

The following day, CNN’s Chris Lawrence wrote a piece reporting that Brig Commander Averhart was being investigated.

The U.S. military is investigating why the commander of the military jail put Pfc. Bradley Manning, suspected of leaking documents to WikiLeaks, on suicide watch for a few days last week, according to Pentagon spokesman Col. David Lapan.

[snip]

An investigation has been launched into whether Brig Commander James Averhart had the authority to place Manning on suicide watch, which is usually ordered by the medical staff.

That report was sourced to David Lapan, by name. Within three hours after that story appeared, CNN pulled the story, first explaining,

The CNN Wire has killed the story slugged US-WikiLeaks-Manning-1 that moved at 2:47 p.m. due to new information. The military spokesman identified in the story says there is no investigation into the decision to put Bradley Manning on suicide watch.

That retraction now names Lapan, again by name. Lawrence was among the first to report, the following day, that Averhart (who a day before was maybe or maybe not under investigation) was being replaced–pursuant to a decision made back in October.

But the really interesting thing came before that, in yesterday’s press briefing by David Lapan’s boss, Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell (whose resemblance to the Matrix’ Agent Smith is uncanny, and who notes this was his first press briefing since November; here’s a video of the presser). In response to the third question–basically following up on Miklaszewski’s story, asking whether it is true that prosecutors have not been able to tie Manning to Assange–Morrell does not answer the question. Rather, based on his representation that “this case is being taken extremely seriously” and that “they are hard at work at [sic] on building a case,” he “admonishes” journalists to proceed with caution. After that general admonishment, he repeats it, calling out Miklaszewski directly.

But I would avail myself of this opportunity to admonish or warn you all to be extraordinarily careful about how you report on this story, because one thing I can — I do feel comfortable in telling you is that this case is being taken extremely seriously by the investigators both here in the Defense Department and, of course, at the Department of Justice. They are hard at work at on building a case here.

So any pronouncements about a connection or lack of connection, those that have been found or are yet to be found, are just premature at this point. So I’d urge everybody to proceed with caution on this, and probably most stories, for that matter.

So I’m not in a position, unfortunately, to tackle that as directly as I’d like to. But that’s my admonition to you all, including Mr. [Jim “Mik”] Miklaszewski in the front row.

It’s actually not clear how the seriousness with which investigators are approaching a case should serve as a warning to journalists. The assertion is investigators have not yet been able to make a connection; even if Miklaszewski reported tomorrow they had subsequently done so, it would not change the accuracy of his previous reporting.

Morrell’s snide attack is followed by a series of questions, most of which Morrell bats away with details that focus on Manning’s Max status rather than his protection status (much less his suicide watch). But when he is finally asked (putting aside Miklaszewski in the process) about Mannings protective status, he just starts making shit up. Perhaps as a way to save himself, he shifts the discussion from POI status to suicide watch.

Q:  The protective order is not designed to punish him for being charged with those crimes.  It’s supposed to protect him.  I guess we’re trying to —

MR. MORRELL:  The protective order — I would — I would imagine that one — when one is confined in the brig, it is not just for their protection that we are worried.  We are always worried about our protection.  He is charged with very serious crimes.  That’s why you isolate someone behind bars.  That’s why you confine someone, so that they cannot escape, cannot possibly commit the crimes that they are alleged to have done again.

So it’s not — he is — I think you have it a little backwards.  I think you have it that he is being held for his own protection in the manner which he’s being held.  That may be, that there — there are reasons that they think that it is for his own benefit that he be held so.  But it can also be that he’s being held behind bars because he is a — deemed a threat, that he has been alleged to have committed a very serious crime that potentially undermines our nation’s security, and therefore he needs to be confined during the course of a trial.

Let me interrupt here to note that, according to the WaPo, Manning is 5’2″ and 105 pounds. Morrell is suggesting that this scrawny guy whom I could probably beat up is such a threat to the trained Marines guarding him they put him on protection watch.

Morell continues:

But I would just — what I come back to time and time again, Chris, is the notion that the manner of his confinement is not in the least different from the manner in which anyone else at the brig is being held.

Q:  But not everybody’s under that protective order.

MR. MORRELL:  I’m — I — you keep coming back to this protective order.  I’m not so sure I know what you’re talking about.  I described conditions to you, the manner in which he’s being held.  And my understanding is that is consistent with how every other person in the brig is being held.

Now, the one exception to that could be this suicide-watch issue.  He was placed on suicide watch, as I understand it, for two days.  So that can be a difference between how others in the brig are being held.  But my understanding is that the manner in which he is being held is not punishment for any behavior, but this is the standard protocol for how people at the brig are held, especially people with the gravity of the charges he is facing.

After claiming that the suicide watch was standard protocol, he finally gives Miklaszewski a chance, who starts by saying that the allegation that his reporting is incorrect is, itself, incorrect.

Mik.

Q:  Well, since you mentioned me by name and, through implication, tied me to incorrect reporting, which would be incorrect, I do have a couple of questions.

Miklaszewski walks Morrell through the key scoop of his reporting–that Averhart violated protocol by putting Manning on suicide watch. And while Morrell claims that the Brig Commander–the same one whose replacement was announced this same day–has discretion to put anyone on suicide watch, when Miklaszewski asks if it was punitive, Morrell starts repeatedly answering that he doesn’t know.

MR. MORRELL:  Fire away.

Q:  Was the brig commander at Quantico in error in putting Private Manning on suicide watch for two days last week?  Did he violate protocol?

MR. MORRELL:  My understanding is that he did not and that, despite your reporting, which suggests that only doctors at the facility can make a call of that nature, what I’ve been told is that the brig commander is ultimately responsible for the well-being and confinement of everyone in his charge.  And so he has the wherewithal to make decisions based upon input from others, including doctors, about how it is best to treat people given the current circumstances.

He made a judgment call.  It sounds like that he put him under suicide watch for a period of two days.  But as I understand it, he was well within his rights to do so as the commander of the brig.

Q:  And is it within his authority to put somebody on suicide watch for a disciplinary purpose?

MR. MORRELL:  I frankly am not aware of all the regulations that he operates under.  But I would imagine that, as the brig commander, he has extraordinary discretion in terms of how best to run that facility, how best to protect the well-being of the people he — who he’s charged with safekeeping.  And I don’t know all that goes into, frankly, Mik, making a decision about one — about when one needs to be watched more carefully in the event they may be considering doing harm to themselves.

Q:  And was Manning taken off suicide watch at the urging of Army lawyers?

MR. MORRELL:  I don’t know.  I don’t know.  But even if it were at the urging of Army lawyers, it would ultimately have to be a — the judgment of the brig commander that that was the appropriate course of action.  And he would not have done it unless he thought that was the best way to proceed, both for his facility and the well-being of people there and, of course, for Private Manning’s well-being.

That is, though Morrell was clear in asserting that Averhart had the authority to put Manning on suicide watch (which even Morrell concedes would be treatment different from that of others) for whatever reason, he admits he doesn’t know what regulations guide Averhart’s decisions and whether it was done punitively.

All of which doesn’t offer much clarity on Manning’s treatment. It’s clear–with Lapan’s flip-flop and Morrell’s inability to answer key questions–that DOD’s press shop is struggling to craft a party line about Manning’s treatment that both appears coherent and that somehow refutes Miklaszewski’s reporting.

But nowhere in Morrell’s briefing does he actually get around to refuting the two main assertions in Miklaszewski’s reporting.

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  1. PhilPerspective says:

    But nowhere in Morrell’s briefing does he actually get around to refuting the two main assertions in Miklaszewski’s reporting.

    And what does that mean? That Miklaszewski is right, of course. Or pretty darn close.

  2. pdaly says:

    I just left this comment at the end of Jane’s Wednesday post

    I agree. I like Miklaszewski’s two questions that start at 15:16 in the video. Morrell has been smirking with each bullet point successfully uttered into the microphone. Morrell has all the answers some of which he cannot share with us. Morrell warns the reporters that they don’t know what he does and therefore don’t know what they are talking/writing about. Morrell eventually states that ‘suicide watch’ might be one exception where Manning was treated differently than the others in the brig. When Miklaszewski starts questioning Morrell, the smirk disappears and suddenly Morrell ‘doesn’t know’ anything about the brig and how it is run.

    MR. MORRELL: [snip]
    Now, the one exception to that could be this suicide-watch issue. He was placed on suicide watch, as I understand it, for two days. So that can be a difference between how others in the brig are being held. But my understanding is that the manner in which he is being held is not punishment for any behavior, but this is the standard protocol for how people at the brig are held, especially people with the gravity of the charges he is facing.

    Mik.
    [snip]

    15:16 Q [Miklaszewski]: And is it within his [the brig commander’s] authority to put somebody on suicide watch for disciplinary purposes?

    MR. MORRELL: Uhh, I frankly I’m not aware of all the regulations that he operates under. But I would imagine that, as the brig commander, he has extraordinary discretion in terms of how best to run that facility, how best to protect the well-being of the people he — who he’s charged with safekeeping. And I don’t know all that goes into, frankly, Mik, making a decision about one — about when one needs to be watched more carefully in the event they may be considering doing harm to themselves.

    Q: And was Manning taken off suicide watch at the urging of Army lawyers?

    MR. MORRELL: I don’t know. I don’t know. But even if it were at the urging of Army lawyers, it would ultimately have to be a — the judgment of the brig commander that that was the appropriate course of action.

    and this comment:
    note the official transcript contains a mistake:
    The transcript has Miklaszewski state “is it within his authority to put somebody on suicide watch for a disciplinary purpose?” (singular). Not sure why the error in transcription was made. Miklaszewski was clearly heard using the plural. And Morrell was clearly heard stammering Uhh (also missing from the transcript).

  3. pdaly says:

    And after uttering ‘I don’t know’ several times, Morrell doesn’t offer (not that I heard anyway) to find out the answers.

  4. tejanarusa says:

    I suspect this stammering about, and even the sudden presser by Morell mean that DOD, Army, brig, etc. all thought nobody cared about Bradley Manning.
    And now they have to scramble, trying to spin something they really don’t know about because they haven’t been paying attention, either, not expecting to hear questions about him.

    • KrisAinCA says:

      I agree.

      And I think it’s nice to see some real journalism by the people that sit in these pressers. They’re finally asking the REAL questions that EW, Jane, Glenn Greenwald, et al have been asking in the blogosphere for months. Hope this continues to pick up speed in the MSM.

    • rosalind says:

      “…that DOD, Army, brig, etc. all thought nobody cared about Bradley Manning.”

      by the number of people commenting yesterday about calling their reps only to be met with “whose Bradley Manning?” replies, it was a good bet on the Miltary’s side…until David & Jane threw off their game.

  5. KrisAinCA says:

    (whose resemblance to the Matrix’ Agent Smith is uncanny, and who notes this was his first press briefing since November; here’s a video of the presser).

    I was really into this intense recounting of the facts, then this smacked me in the face and I laughed out loud. Wonderful wit! And it is uncanny, isn’t it?

  6. jo6pac says:

    WOW this is news the real press has finally woke up to the news that the dirty, living in the parents basement, in pajamas have been on since he went to jail. Well except for Jane and Glen that is. If there is no connection then why isn’t he free?

  7. yellowsnapdragon says:

    It’s like no one at the brig expected a question about Manning’s treatment.

    One has to wonder how often this kind of harassment and intimidation happens with no questions being asked.

  8. onitgoes says:

    Couldn’t agree more that I hope this gets more widespread attention. Certainly I believe that the PTB hoped that no one would pay attention and/or care about Bradley Manning and his fate… and/or that they would stone cold *agree* with his treatment.

    Thanks to Jane, Glenn Greenwald, EW, etc, for pushing this info out there.

    Free Bradley Manning!!

  9. bluewombat says:

    It appears that we’re having some impact. I’ve been doing tons of stuff, and have even gotten a friend of mine who’s been apolitical for the last 12 years interested in this one. Forward!

    • Frank33 says:

      Thanks, EW, for paying such close attention. Morell is obviously a liar.

      Yes a liar and a Chickenhawk. But he reveals the real narrative against Manning. It is punishment against Manning. Manning is a “threat” to “National Security” which is a threat to Morrell’s present and future war profiteering.

      Manning “undermines” National Security, assuming Manning revealed Wikileaks. But we know from Wikileaks that every government “official” such as Morrell, are protecting corporate criminality. That is because the corporations support the Oil Wars. Morrell must conceal the actual war monger plans for more wars and support of dictators all around the world.

      Morrell is Bushie Mole who became an Obama Bully.

      That may be, that there — there are reasons that they think that it is for his own benefit that he be held so. But it can also be that he’s being held behind bars because he is a — deemed a threat, that he has been alleged to have committed a very serious crime that potentially undermines our nation’s security, and therefore he needs to be confined during the course of a trial.

  10. KrisAinCA says:

    Just watched the video (I read the transcript yesterday). What a self-indulgent prick! Smirking all the way. Especially when threatening the press. He looks like he can hardly hold back the giggles.

  11. Peterr says:

    “Marcy, Marcy, Marcy. You’re supposed to be watching the bright shiny objects that I’m throwing around, not swatting them down.”

    /Morrell

  12. myshadow says:

    It sounds like all they really have on Manning is the Apache video and some sundry documents. That ‘person of interest crap’ is more likely they are squeezing him to rat out someone.

    • powwow says:

      It sounds like all they really have on Manning is the Apache video and some sundry documents.

      Bingo…

      P.S. Good going, greenharper @ 35

  13. cbl says:

    apropos of nothing – they never go to these lengths to refute something on a ‘liberal blog’ – ever !

    who are they talking to here ? did some major donor read something icky in an Amnesty Intl mailing ? seriously, smart kids – who are they tap dancing for here ?

  14. Bobster33 says:

    Morrell is full of shit. He reminds me of Bagdad Bob, and the royal press secretary from Nepal a few years back. The Nepalese press secretary stated the the third cousin to the king accidentally set off his AK-47 at dinner and killed all 11 of the people ahead of him in the line of succession. When the secretary was berated by the press, he finally broke down and said, “I was not there, but this is what they told me happened.”

    Everyone in that room knows that Morrell does not know what he is talking about. Every article about this incident should start with Pentagon press secretary demonstrating a complete lack of knowledge about the situation gives contradictory and misleading information about the treatment of Manning.

    • greenwarrior says:

      Excellent suggestion.

      Or, thinking it over so more, maybe it’d be better to keep Morrell so they don’t find someone more adept at lying to replace him.

    • Faith says:

      He reminds me of a Russian half-wit despotic king of days gone by. Sorry. I just had to say it. I hope they don’t put me in the cell next to Manning, in maximum security and on suicide watch.

  15. lakeeffectsnow says:

    He is slight, 5-foot-2 and 105 pounds.

    man, that is really small / tiny.

    since i was in, the us army must have lowered all of its you must be this tall to go on this ride type of requirements.

    or his IT skills are outtasight and that got him a waiver.

    wonder if he was a failure to thrive / preeemie ….

  16. Auduboner says:

    In an administration full of bad liars, Morell is really making a run at the title or Worst Liar. The prosecutors (JAGs) are quite worried that this mistreatment will result in Manning being released pending trial, and don’t want Morell or Laban admitting ANYTHING against interest. And some of his rationalizations are just laughable – serious threat? Take away his access to computers and you have defused the “serious threat” completely. Typical Pentagon Schmuck.

    • Acharn says:

      I think it’s something from a Dale Carnegie course. It’s supposed to demonstrate how engaged he is, how interested in the questioner, how trustworthy, how admirable.

  17. oyvey says:

    one good result from this twirp: by confirming what was already assumed (duh)that the investigation of Manning is entailing many resources at the “highest levels” (which circle of hellis that?) he has laid the groundwork for proper reporters not to be put-off when questioning those at the “highest levels.” In short: Obama, Gates, Holder are in charge of this shit.

  18. mattcarmody says:

    If this guy Morell gave answers like that during an NYPD Comstat meeting, he’d be relieved of his command and since he isn’t a sworn military officer nor is he an elected official, he should be fired.

    How on earth do you go to a presser knowing that controversial issues are going to be covered without knowing to a tee what the responsibilities of the commander are? And everyone else in the brig is being treated the same way? Really? The ICRC, ACLU, and Human Rights Watch need to start making some noise on a regular basis until something rattles Obama’s cage and people become more accountable for Manning’s treatment.

  19. john in sacramento says:

    Talking head pr hack:

    … admonition …

    Admonition? Admonition?!? Who the fuck is he to admonish anyone?

    They’ve spent hundreds of billions of dollars spying on innocent Americans. Passed draconian laws straight of the dark ages. Obliterated 800 years of Habeas Corpus. Tortured and killed people with inquisition-like techniques. Kidnapped innocent people. Destroyed lives. Set up and run American style gulags. Claimed the right to kill American citizens with exactly zero due process

    And he has the gall to use the word admonition?

  20. deep harm says:

    Manning “is being treated like any other maximum security prisoner.”

    Has anyone in the commercial press ever asked the official(s) who made that statement how Manning came to be a “maximum security” prisoner in the first place? Because, I would want to know what standards they used to classify Manning as a “maximum” security prisoner versus a lower level of security. I’d also want to know who classified him and when.

    From what I have read, in civilian prisons, “maximum security” is reserved for physically violent prisoners. The only threat Manning ever posed was via the information he handled, and he’s not going to be handling any more of that in prison, no matter how they classify him.

    • waynec says:

      Reading between the official lines, I think they want us to believe PFC Manning felt so bad about passing along the information he had, that he’d rather kill himself that go to trial. I think that’s what they’ll say about the suicide watches.

      • rgreen says:

        Recently saw a rerun of Alice’s Restaurant, where Guthrie asked if the police thought he might hang himself over the guilt of being a litterbug. “Kid, we ain’t takin’ no chances”.

  21. lareineblanche says:

    I love this guy, he’s slick. He could sell refrigerators to a penguin. He must come out of a good PR firm, wonder where they found him.

  22. greenharper says:

    FWIW, I called John Kerry’s D.C. office yesterday about Kerry’s constituent, David House, and Bradley Manning. The staffer had heard of the matter & OKd my sending an email to the D.C. office for forwarding to the Boston office staffer most likely to want my message about this.

    Followed up with a call — voicemail — to said Boston office staffer. He returned it about an hour ago. He knew about last weekend’s Quantico visit SNAFU – said that something was apparently wrong with House’s car, a point that I corrected (not House’s car; scanned insurance card/info was apparently OK on previous visits; car had zip to do with House’s intended visit to Manning; House never got to see Manning).

    Boston staffer hasn’t yet received my to-be-forwarded email. I asked that Kerry get Quantico brig officials who know what’s actually being done to Manning to report this, on oath.

    Anyway, a somewhat encouraging interchange.

    Robert Meerpol is speaking at the Thomas Paine Birthday celebration of our local Thos. Paine Society chapter this weekend, co-sponsored by the Amherst Democratic Town Committee.

    The Thos. Paine organizers plan to have a copy of my email for others to sign on & send to Kerry. They also plan to have materials for writing notes to Manning. If it’s accurate that Manning must sign a rejection form for every piece of mail from someone not on his approved list, simply having to sign to reject mail will tell him that someone cared enough to write to him.

    Ah – PFC Bradley Manning; Quantico Marine Brig; Marine Corps Base Quantico; 3247 Elrod Ave.; QUANTICO, VA 22134.

    And if this thing posts, hallelujah! No techie I. For some reason my password had stopped working.

    Anyway, thanks, Jane & Glenn Greenwald & Juan Cole for everything you’ve done and are doing for Manning. First they came for a 5’2″ young guy who weighs 105#…. Well, alas, not first.

  23. arcadesproject says:

    I’m glad Miklaszewski is dealing with this subject. I’d like to see a lot more people working on it and on other critical but under-reported stories. We have too many fake heroes running around and not enough of the genuine article. Where are the Edward R. Murrows of Yesteryear?

  24. waynec says:

    MSM is only picking up on the PFC Manning story because it’s getting larger and they don’t want to be last in line.

  25. MadDog says:

    There is a new article from Nancy A. Youssef of McClatchy Newspapers about Bradley Manning:

    Probe: Army was warned not to deploy WikiLeaks suspect

    Investigators have concluded that Army commanders ignored advice not to send to Iraq an Army private who’s now accused of downloading hundreds of thousands of sensitive reports and diplomatic cables that ended up on the WikiLeaks website in the largest single security breach in American history, McClatchy has learned.

    Pfc. Bradley Manning’s direct supervisor warned that Manning had thrown chairs at colleagues and shouted at higher ranking soldiers in the year he was stationed at Fort Drum, N.Y., and advised that Manning shouldn’t be sent to Iraq, where his job would entail accessing classified documents through the Defense Department’s computer system.

    But superior officers decided to ignore the advice because the unit was short of intelligence analysts and needed Manning’s skills, two military officials familiar with the investigation told McClatchy…

    Before you read the entire article, I think it is worthwhile to keep in mind that the article is framed entirely from the viewpoint of the anonymous military sources who are investigating (and invested) in finding fault or wrongdoing on Manning’s part.

    These are not folks who are sympathetic to Bradley Manning nor are they interested in fairness.

    Nowhere in the article do you read anything about Manning’s side of the story, nor is there any attempt made by the journalist to balance the anonymous military sources with his defense attorneys, his supporters, his family or his friends.

    As one who has served in the military, I can tell you that the bullying each of us has witnessed in grade school and highschool, is many times worse in the military.

    Particularly within the enlisted ranks. In many cases, promotion within the enlisted ranks occurs due to seniority rather than simply accomplishment or knowledge.

    Relatively uneducated folks with only highschool or GED educations that are put in the position of literally life and death power over other less experienced personnel.

    Now put in someone like Manning who is 5’2″ and 105 pounds. A recipe for bullying in the military if I ever saw one. And I bet he was bullied from his very first day in boot camp, and it probably continued throughout his Army experience.

  26. danw5 says:

    “813. ART. 13 PUNISHMENT PROHIBITED BEFORE TRIAL

    No person, while being held for trial, may be subjected to punishment or penalty other than arrest or confinement upon the charges pending against him, nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his presence, but he may be subjected to minor punishment during that period for infractions of discipline.” UCMJ

    His arrest “nor shall the arrest or confinement imposed upon him be any more rigorous than the circumstances required to insure his presence” pretty much assures his presence without the 23 hour lock-down. We didn’t treat POW’s like this in Vietnam.

    He has a charge sheet, but all these months later “we are building a case”! Either you have a case or you don’t. You don’t arrest someone for some reason you assume and then try and build a case. That does not sound constitutional to me. You have the evidence or you don’t. But heck, what do I know.

    I don’t get it.

  27. Larue says:

    Another great catch Mz. Wheeler! Thanks.

    Here’s hoping the heat makes them ALL squirm and changes their behaviors . .

  28. sterling150 says:

    There have been insinuations that Manning is gay. Being gay (if he is, and that’s no one’s business but his), being 5’2″, and weighing 105 pounds would make him a target for generalized bullying and punishment. If that is going on, it does not reflect well on the Department of Defense, which is well-known for tolerating all kinds of sexual and homophobic harassment. Add religious intolerance, weak cross-cultural understanding, successful enemy formation conditioning (patriotism), and you have a recipe for Inquisition-like behavior toward the identified inside Enemy of National Security. Notice it is so-called National Security, not the nation, that he is accused of betraying. Morrell even mentions the attack helicopter revelations as being part of Manning’s betrayal. I think the nation saw war crimes being committed in that clip. The National Security apparatus does not like being made accountable for war crimes committed. Who will bring charges against the war criminals? One could equally well admonish Morrell and those he speaks for that the Nuremberg Rules protect the reporting of war crimes and require the punishment of war criminals. Un-prosecuted war crimes make the nation less secure.

  29. Garrett says:

    Déjà vu all over again

    Morrell to Miklaszewski, don’t get too far out on Manning, is like Rove to Cooper, don’t get too far out on Wilson.

    Do they have a playbook for this stuff?

  30. orionATL says:

    the key event, i’d warrant, was jake tapper’s question for gibbs.

    as always, grab the obama machine by the balls

    and they will yell and relent.

    and this is as it should be,

    prez obama is the commander-in-chief of the u. s. armed forces.

    he is personally responsible for actions military commanders take.

    glenn greenwald, emptywheel, jane hamsher, amnesty international, and jake tapper have all played their major and minor roles in trying to protect manning from the ruthlessness of the obama white house, the doj, and the dod.

    what i want to know is who ordered averhart to act as he did,

    specifically, did the u.s. dept of justice collude with the u.s. dod to torture an american soldier

    MERELY to get a false confession from him re charging assange?

    • dopeyo says:

      what i want to know is who ordered averhart to act as he did,

      specifically, did the u.s. dept of justice collude with the u.s. dod to torture an american soldier

      MERELY to get a false confession from him re charging assange?

      do you have information that leads you to think they wouldn’t? after 24 months of this administration, why do they deserve any benefit of a doubt?

  31. orionATL says:

    mad dog @38
    good reporting! thanks.

    “throwing chairs and yelling” sounds like dod psy ops at work to me.

    look at manning’s gentle face and then tell me he was want (which is clearly the desired implication) to throw chairs and yell at superiors.

    this sounds like more of dod’s usual amateur psy ops.

  32. bobschacht says:

    This just in from the Bradley Manning Support Network:

    From: “Mike Gogulski”
    Date: January 28, 2011 5:35:55 AM PST
    To:
    Subject: RELEASE: Military statements regarding Bradley Manning “patently false”

    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

    MEDIA:
    Jeff Paterson
    Bradley Manning Support Network
    [email protected]
    +1-202-640-4388

    Military statements regarding Bradley Manning “patently false”

    Replacement of Quantico brig commander provides military opportunity to end mistreatment of alleged WikiLeaks whistle-blower

    By the Bradley Manning Support Network

    For the substance of the article, follow the link in the headline.

    Bob in AZ

  33. Faith says:

    How does the Pentagon get away with such outrageous lying? This guy is soooooo insulting to one’s intelligence. I have a name for this guy, but I’m not going to use it, because my comment would be kicked off this site. (It’s also not very Christian-like; I’d have to repent afterwards.)

  34. danw5 says:

    I haven’t heard a peep out of FDL or anyone else after that threatening press conference. Did they get to you?

    • bmaz says:

      Nobody has “gotten to us”. There have been some other things going on in the world too. There will be more Manning coverage soon on FDL.

      • danw5 says:

        Great. I understand that there is a lot going on in the world and a cause celeb private has caused the ire of the Pentagon, including some not so veiled threats which I thought were outragious and unconstitutional. Moreover they are lying. Wasn’t only talking about FDL?