bin Laden had at least a few of those documents downloaded and on hard drives in his possession when he was killed.
An argument is being made that Manning shouldn't be charged with aiding the enemy primarily because it would make whistle blowers reluctant to expose wrong doings of government out of fear of prosecution.
First of all, I reject the argument that giving the data to WikiLeaks is an 'indirect act' of publishing data to the Internet....unless he can prove he didn't know what WikiLeaks does with data they receive...Manning is accused of "aiding the enemy", in violation of Article 104 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. By indirectly unleashing a torrent of secrets onto the internet, the prosecution alleges, he in effect made it available to Osama bin Laden and his cohorts, for them to inflict injury on the US.
Laurence Tribe, a Harvard professor who is considered to be the foremost liberal authority on constitutional law in the US and who taught the subject to President Barack Obama, told the Guardian that the charge could set a worrying precedent. He said: "Charging any individual with the extremely grave offense of 'aiding the enemy' on the basis of nothing beyond the fact that the individual posted leaked information on the web and thereby 'knowingly gave intelligence information' to whoever could gain access to it there, does indeed seem to break dangerous new ground."
It seems Laurence Tribe is implying that Manning has no responsibility for what happens as a result of his actions.
My take is there is a difference between leaking data on a specific illegal event to a reporter so they can investigate and expose the crime...and leaking volumes of classified information that is harmfully to government and government employees and native personnel who are cooperative with our government but that information does not contain evidence of a crime.
If I was prosecuting the case I'd have defendant establish his overall reason for leaking data. Presumably he would say it was to expose criminality or corruption etc. then I would produce multiple examples of data he leaked that did not expose that which he claims to have attempted to expose but his leak did cause people to be at risk from the enemy or instances where the government had to abandon operations due to the exposure etc, and ask Manning why he leaked those portions of the data...
In my 'perfect world' a whistleblower would have to know the difference between those two scenarios and Manning would stand trial as charged.
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