Workers Vanguard No. 1018
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22 February 2013
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New York Times Disappears Bradley Manning
The following February 13 letter by Ray Bishop, Workers
Vanguard editor, was sent to the Public Editor of the New York Times,
Margaret Sullivan, following the publication of her article “Keeping Secrets” (9
February).
You applaud the Times’ decision to finally report the
location of a U.S. drone base in Saudi Arabia while bemoaning how long it took
the Times to approve releasing the information, which had been kept
secret at the government’s request. Maureen Dowd’s column (“I’m Begging, Don’t
Hack the Hacks”) printed the same day objects to the policy of drone attacks
while raising alarm over Chinese hackers breaking into government and media
computer systems. In neither piece was any mention made of Bradley Manning, who
has suffered enormous abuse and faces a possible life sentence if a military
court finds him guilty of releasing a trove of classified documents to
WikiLeaks. That material shed welcome light on U.S. diplomatic schemes and
wartime atrocities in Iraq and Afghanistan. The omission of his case is simply
cowardice on the part of the Times, which you had earlier taken to task
for ignoring the bulk of Manning’s pretrial hearing in December.
You acknowledge that the policy of the Times is to keep
information from the public when Washington officials make the case that such
news would threaten “national security.” The other side of that coin is that,
following the September 11, 2001 attacks, then-Times reporter Judith
Miller recounted tales of Saddam Hussein’s nonexistent “weapons of mass
destruction” (the pretext for the U.S. invasion of Iraq). By contrast, making
the documents available to WikiLeaks—which were subsequently published in part
by the Times—was an act of truth-telling. If indeed it was Bradley
Manning who released the videos, reports and cables, he provided a valuable
service to humanity and now deserves the support of all who oppose the barbarity
and machinations revealed in them.
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