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WikiLeak's Assange condemns Manning verdict, Obama
LONDON |
LONDON (Reuters) - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange accused President Barack Obama of "national security extremism" on Tuesday after an American military judge convicted Bradley Manning over the biggest leak of classified documents in U.S. history.
Praising Manning as "the most important journalistic source that the world has ever seen", Assange said the U.S. soldier, who prosecutors said had supplied WikiLeaks with hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. documents, did not receive a fair trial and called for the verdict to be overturned.
"The government kept Bradley Manning in a cage, stripped him naked and isolated him in order to break him, an act formally condemned by the United Nations Special Rapporteur for torture. This was never a fair trial," Assange said from inside the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, his home for more than a year.
Assange said WikiLeaks and Manning's own legal team would not rest until the judgment was overturned.
"It is a dangerous precedent and an example of national security extremism. It is a short-sighted judgment that cannot be tolerated and it must be reversed."
Assange did not confirm or deny whether Manning had in fact supplied WikiLeaks with classified documents, always using the word "alleged" when talking about the leak. WikiLeaks did not reveal its sources, he said, and always protected them.
Manning's conviction on five espionage and 14 other charges poses a potential problem for Assange since the severity of the judgment, which carries a jail sentence of up to 136 years, might deter would-be whistleblowers, the lifeblood of Assange's organization.
It is also a reminder of his own fate. Wanted in Sweden on sexual abuse allegations he denies, Assange has sought sanctuary in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London because he fears he would be extradited to the United States to face trial over his own alleged role in the leak case if he agreed to go to Sweden.
Manning's is one of two high-profile leak cases involving Americans. Former U.S. intelligence contractor Edward Snowden has been holed up at a Moscow airport for more than a month, despite U.S. calls for Russian authorities to turn him over.
Dressed in a dark suit, Assange said Obama had initiated more espionage proceedings cases against whistleblowers and publishers than all previous U.S. presidents combined and had made a mockery of his own words in the process.
"In 2008, the then presidential candidate Barack Obama ran on a platform that praised whistleblowing as an act of courage and patriotism. That platform has by Barack Obama's actions been comprehensively betrayed," said Assange.
Assange had nothing but praise for Manning, holding up his behavior as a model of how to be a whistleblower.
"His actions as alleged are unquestionably heroic. He in that sense is an example for others to follow."
(Editing by Doina Chiacu)
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Rather than take collective information/data and give it to legitimate media agencies to warn the public, insiders who want to stop the rot now have no choice but to leave assorted little doors open to hackers to crack open, and even leave subtle little hints as to how. That means more and more enemies of the state, so to speak, will also be sneaking around looking for these little doors — doors that are always there no matter how tight security is but in this case, thanks to whistle blower laws, may comparatively seem like freeways and highways.
This muzzling will backfire like nobody ever dreamed: Nobody except people with conscience who will risk a lot to save a lot of us. And it’s largely the vicious Obama administration’s fault because they value secrecy over American peoples’ rights and freedoms; government and NSA busterds no matter what party is in power: Busterds.




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