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WikiLeaks Editor Julian Assange Calls Media Coverage Of Bradley Manning 'Appalling'

Julian Assange Bradley Manning

First Posted: 05/25/11 07:29 PM ET Updated: 07/25/11 06:12 AM ET

NEW YORK -- WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange called out the Obama administration for its aggressive pursuit of leakers and criticized media coverage of suspected WikiLeaks source Pfc. Bradley Manning during a conference call Wednesday about the soldier's legal situation.

"A little over four-and-a-half years ago, we embarked on a mission to bring the 1st Amendment to the world," Assange said, adding that by 2007 both China and Iraq had banned the anti-secrecy organization. "Little did we realize that our greatest struggle would come in 2010 as we tried to bring the 1st Amendment to the United States."

Assange has never said that Manning leaked his organization hundreds of thousands of classified documents on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the prisoners held at Guantanamo Bay, and international diplomacy carried out by the State Department. Still, Assange describes Manning, who's currently being held at Leavenworth penitentiary, as a hero.

The WikiLeaks founder also described how the prosecution of Manning -- and potentially his own organization -- under the Espionage Act of 1917 could have a chilling effect on investigative journalism. Such a prosecution, Assange argues, would create a situation where the relationship "between a source and journalist is interpreted as a conspiracy to commit crimes."

Under the Espionage Act, anyone who publishes or even discusses classified information could be punished. For that reason, prosecuting Assange for publishing the War Logs or Cablegate documents is a challenge for the government, which has nevertheless convened a grand jury to look into the matter. Countless news organizations similarly published entire WikiLeaks documents or relied on their contents for reports. So the federal government may instead try and prove that Assange worked with Manning in leaking the documents. So far, no such link has been proven -- and, indeed, efforts to imply such a link have been discredited.

Assange, responding to a question from The Huffington Post, described much of the media coverage of Manning's situation as "appalling." He continued:

There have been some good journalists that are starting to break through that. I see that the Washington Post has been improving its coverage. Glenn Greenwald, from Salon, has always been on this issue, dealing with it in a comprehensive and robust manner.

That we saw, for example, with Frontline last night -- once again a concentration on salacious and really quite irrelevant personal factors. There are many, indeed, perhaps most, people in the United States from divorced parents. But how many have spent the last year without conviction in a military prison. The answer is one.

It's not the first time Assange has criticized news organizations for delving into Manning's personal problems, including how he grappled under "Don't Ask Don't Tell." In November, Assange blasted the New York Times for a Manning profile that "removed all higher-level political motivations from him and psychoanalyzed him down to problems in his childhood and a demand for attention."

WikiLeaks was pushing back on the PBS Frontline documentary before it even ran Tuesday night. During a live-chat Wednesday on Frontline's website, producers Marcela Gaviria and Martin Smith responded to WikiLeaks' claim the day before that the film would be hostile to the whistleblower organization.

"WikiLeaks had determined that our intentions were hostile before they even saw the program. The fact that we asked hard questions of Assange was to give him the opportunity to respond to his critics. Assange had more on-air time than any other interviewee. We are pleased that Assange agreed to participate in our hour and applaud the transparency that WikiLeaks claims to support. Ultimately we think our documentary is fair to Assange."
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NEW YORK -- WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange called out the Obama administration for its aggressive pursuit of leakers and criticized media coverage of suspected WikiLeaks source Pfc. Bradley ...
NEW YORK -- WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange called out the Obama administration for its aggressive pursuit of leakers and criticized media coverage of suspected WikiLeaks source Pfc. Bradley ...
 
 
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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behindEnemyLines 07:37 PM on 05/25/2011
Releasing state secrets is not protected by the first amendment. Manning committed treason when he stole those documents and released them to Wikileaks. He should go to jail for the rest of his life.

Did many of you even know that those released documents showed that the US was on the trail of Bin Ladens courier. The documents also released showed that Al-Libi moved his family to the town we found  Read More...
Boopsie2008
Obama 2012. Says it all.
04:26 PM on 05/30/2011
It never ceases to amaze me how Assange comes up with new theories about how everybody else is wrong and he is right. He's facing prosecution from two different directions, and there is no end to his creativity in explaining how he's being persecuted for all manner of bad reasons.

I'm beginning to wish he would just shut up. Stand up and take it like a man. Go to Sweden and just answer the questions the police have for you. Quit being a baby and blaming everybody else for your troubles.
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12:49 PM on 05/30/2011
Assange would have a stronger position if he didn't call the social and military issue-ladden Manning his hero.
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:33 PM on 05/29/2011
Look at this way Julian, if it's not fluff the MSM will not cover it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Hatcher
I'm Spartacus!
03:50 PM on 05/29/2011
I wonder how many who defend Manning were also calling for scalps in the Valerie Plame affair?
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:34 PM on 05/29/2011
A lot.
HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
rfshunt
08:48 AM on 05/31/2011
You know when the two would be comparabile?

If Scooter Libby had been imprisoned for a year without trial in solitary confinement without even being allowed clothing.

Then, you could compare the two.

I don't know if Manning is guilty or innocent. That's the point, nobody does, not without a fair trial.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Patrick Hatcher
I'm Spartacus!
09:05 AM on 05/31/2011
It isn't comparable in the sense that Manning let go vast amounts more classfied info than in the Plame issue where the "cover" was blown of one cia officer in Washington DC. There is no telling how many people who helped the USA had their idenity comprimised by what Manning is said to have done. I am just enjoying the irony of all those leftist who want Manning free but were ready to throw away the key with Libby. It has taken so long because of delays his lawyers have asked for and he was in solitary because he had threatened to hurt himself and for his protection from the other prisioners. The magnitude of the allegations are also vastly different letting out the name and oh by the way Libby didn't leak anybody’s name it turns out it was Richard Armitage all the time.
09:30 PM on 05/28/2011
Repeatedly down loading highly classified information while working as an Army intelligence analyst in a war zone will not be defensible in a military court (or any other US court for that matter). Forget his issues personally, DADT stance, etc. He broke the law numerous times.
When he saw the chopper crew murdering civilians wantonly he should have gone up the chain of command. That is what he agreed to do when he signed up.

Having said that some of the information revealed indicates a military command that is out of control and which will make prosecution of those who published the material difficult if not very difficult to prosecute (the 1st, whistleblower info). The people who gave the command to murder the civilians as well as those all to eager to follow the command should be prosecuted.
04:22 PM on 05/28/2011
so, what happened to all the forthcoming charges by the US government and others? was it all just bluster and no substance as many thought?
11:26 AM on 05/28/2011
I confess that when I saw Assange's picture the other day I thought that John Inman (Are You Being Served?) must have died and they were trotting out a young picture of him to make us all nostalgic. There are so many things more important than governments running rough-shod and clandestine over the rights and safety of their citizenries. Elections, shootings, deranged governors, woman hating legislators, not to mention Charlie Sheen and Palin's bosoms. This is the horror of modern life in interesting times: too much pinch-me and not enough skin.
06:54 PM on 05/27/2011
Yeah, I am sure that fanatical Right Wing Nut organization, PBS, has it all wrong...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
gurukalehuru
cwtc7
06:17 PM on 05/27/2011
What does Bradley Manning have to do with Robert Heinlein? www.gurukalehuru.com
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JBS
Part time misanthrope & full time curmudgeon
05:32 PM on 05/27/2011
Hey Julie! Who's your sugar daddy?
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:36 PM on 05/29/2011
Tell him yours and then I'm sure he'll tell you his.
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lookintomyeye
what do you see?
03:02 PM on 05/27/2011
I totally agree with Julian Assange...it's DEPLORABLE!

OH and BTW the pop up ads on HuffPo suck!
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:37 PM on 05/29/2011
Leave IE.
02:17 PM on 05/27/2011
These people broke the Federal Law. Period. They should be prosecuted to the fullest extent possible. I am tired of the poor Assange / Manning talk track.
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:38 PM on 05/29/2011
Explain it so those of us that think you're wrong will know better.
Boopsie2008
Obama 2012. Says it all.
04:30 PM on 05/30/2011
It's for the Grand Jury to decide initially.
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dbw53022
Mostly optimistic. Sometimes sarcastic.
08:07 AM on 05/27/2011
Bradley Manning held in solitary for over a year for allegedly leaking government information, while Dick Cheney is free after exposing the identity of a US spy.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wendoxia
think!
10:22 AM on 05/27/2011
Thank you! I couldn't agree more.
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02:27 AM on 05/28/2011
Karl Rove was the culprit. Cheney may deserve blame for being a guilty bystander though.
02:18 PM on 05/27/2011
and what did Cheney personally do exactly?
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jimmygeewhiz
is it 4/20 yet?
07:40 PM on 05/29/2011
Be born?
04:11 AM on 05/27/2011
The Frontline piece by PBS was appalling really...It brought to mind scenes from the film Casablanca of 'rounding up the usual suspects' and having little interest in the truth

Of course, this issue has, sadly, been lacking in the truth department from the outset...Casually swept under the rug are all the murder, lies
02:27 AM on 05/27/2011
mad respect for both of these men.
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02:28 AM on 05/28/2011
"mad" works.