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Daphne Eviatar

Daphne Eviatar

Posted: March 14, 2011 02:14 PM

Obama Gets Pushed Out of His Comfort Zone -- and Pushes Back


The news on Sunday that State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley was forced to resign for his frank comments about the treatment of Bradley Manning is sparking lots of justifiable criticism. The question is, why would the administration do something so "ridiculous, counterproductive, and stupid"?

Those are, of course, the exact words that Crowley used to describe the treatment of Manning, the Army private suspected of leaking secret government documents to WikiLeaks, now imprisoned at the Marine Brig at Quantico. Although the Pentagon and State Department have themselves acknowledged that the leaks haven't actually endangered national security, they've been treating Manning as if he's a hardened terrorist.

That's prompted some serious questioning from influential bloggers like Marcy Wheeler, who noted last week the eerie parallels between Manning's being forcibly stripped naked every night and some of the treatment of detainees such as Abu Zubaydah at Guantanamo Bay.

Much has been made in the past week about whether Manning's treatment is yet another form of torture being instituted by the Obama administration in U.S. military custody here at home, after denouncing its use by the Bush administration in U.S. prisons abroad.

The point isn't to compare Manning's forced nudity to waterboarding or to murder at Abu Ghraib. But the critical lesson of the Bush rejection of legal provisions on humane treatment is how slippery the slope is from small indignities to great ones, and the particular and peculiar role of sexual humiliation in the path to dehumanization.

I don't know if we'll find any Defense or Justice Department memos laying that out such humiliation as an interrogation tactic, or even if it's being intentionally used that way. Still, you'd think the Obama administration would have seen the comparisons coming, and not fired the State Department spokesman who made his very human, if slightly off-the-cuff, comments on the situation, thereby fanning the flames.

(The administration did, reportedly, give Manning something to wear starting Friday night. And the Pentagon denies that he's being intentionally humiliated, or that he's being held in isolation, although he is alone in a cell for 23-hours a day, where he also eats his meals; he also "exercises" alone in an empty room for one hour a day.)

Crowley's "resignation" prompted, quite predictably, these scathing observations from Glenn Greenwald, citing other influential critics' responses on Twitter, shortly after the news broke on Sunday:

So, in Barack Obama's administration, it's perfectly acceptable to abuse an American citizen in detention who has been convicted of nothing by consigning him to 23-hour-a-day solitary confinement, barring him from exercising in his cell, punitively imposing "suicide watch" restrictions on him against the recommendations of brig psychiatrists, and subjecting him to prolonged, forced nudity designed to humiliate and degrade. But speaking out against that abuse is a firing offense. Good to know. As Matt Yglesias just put it: "Sad statement about America that P.J. Crowley is the one being forced to resign over Bradley Manning." And as David Frum added: "Crowley firing: one more demonstration of my rule: Republican pols fear their base, Dem pols despise it."


The thing is, Crowley's remarks were completely natural, logical, and human, in light of the public facts. As Wheeler notes, citing Manning's complaint:

The Brig Psychiatrist recommended at least 16 times between August 27 and January 21 that Manning be removed from Prevention of Injury watch. It shows that the day Manning was placed on suicide watch, there was a protest in support of him outside of Quantico. According to Manning, the guards harassed him, demanding he respond to every order with "Aye" rather than "Yes." And except for that day (when he said "Yes" instead of "Aye" and then asked Averhart why that was happening to him), Manning was never deemed to present disciplinary problem.


The Pentagon has even admitted that Commander Averhart declared Manning a "suicide risk" although he lacked the authority to make that call.

Maybe there was some secret, legitimate Defense Department reason to place Bradley Manning on suicide watch, despite all the recommendations to the contrary of brig psychiatrists. Or maybe it was just military bureaucracy and incompetence, where rules frequently trump reason -- something I saw frequently during my trips to Guantanamo Bay.

Whatever the reason, Crowley's observation of the apparent absurdity of Manning's treatment were hardly shocking, even if impolitic. If anything, they gave the public some sense that there are human beings somewhere over at the State Department, and that there are people in the Obama administration with an eye out for how Manning's abusive treatment is going to play in the press.

Apparently, however, that could not be tolerated. As Steven Aftergood in Secrecy News writes today, Crowley "deserves credit for speaking out on a matter of principle. In an intelligent system of government, such views would be freely aired and honestly attended to. But it seems that there is not much place for such speech in the current Administration."

Greenwald pointed out in an update to his blog yesterday that during the Bush administration, Democrats pilloried the president for punishing a whole host of administration officials for making public statements that suggested internal dissent. Obama, during his campaign, insisted he'd be different: "I want people who are continually pushing me out of my comfort zone," he said.

Or not.

It's time for the Obama administration to come clean on what's going on with Bradley Manning: why he's being treated in this bizarre and seemingly punitive manner, and why U.S. officials won't tolerate even the most obvious and logical questioning of that treatment.

 

Follow Daphne Eviatar on Twitter: www.twitter.com/deviatar

The news on Sunday that State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley was forced to resign for his frank comments about the treatment of Bradley Manning is sparking lots of justifiable criticism. The quest...
The news on Sunday that State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley was forced to resign for his frank comments about the treatment of Bradley Manning is sparking lots of justifiable criticism. The quest...
 
 
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07:42 PM on 03/17/2011
Obama turned his back on his supporters long ago. My entire family voted for him, and we are beyond disappointed. He's proven his Corporatist love repeatedly. Not only doesn't he listen to his base, he's insulted us at nearly every turn--when he didn't, he sent Rahm Emmanuel to do his dirty work. If the election were tomorrow, I'd stay home. You want to tell me that "Republicans would be worse"--well, I guess you get what you pay for.
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johngary66
Accused of heresy and decided to go with that.
12:09 AM on 03/17/2011
Why is anybody surprised? Obama has followed the Bush/Cheney plan on spying and torture pretty much tit for tat with the exception of going even farther by putting American Citizens on a CIA hit list without any proof of a crime. So much for his promise to restore rule of law. I guess habeas corpus is supposed to be administered posthumously these day. I find it unbelievable how Obamabots turn a blind eye to all of this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
11:41 AM on 03/16/2011
Dear posters on this article.

I do not agree that Pfc. Manning's treatment is in anyway proper. However it is "legal", barely, but non-the less.

Pfc. Manning got HIMSELF in trouble in prison by making sarcastic comments about killing himself. The military has ZERO sense of humor. Make a foolish statement and they come down on you like a ton of bricks, as they have on Pfc. Manning.

Pfc. Manning is military personnel. The military has their own rules and laws, based on Federal statues. It's called the Uniform Code of Military Justice. (Look it up, get educated) Military personnel give up many of their "civil rights" when the join the military, to defend the constitution.

Talk back to a NCO, officer, and or warrant officer and you could go to jail. Doesn't matter if you are correct or not.

Pfc. Manning is accused, among other things, with TREASON. Treason is the worst of the worst of charges that could be leveled against anyone in the military. (If I had a choice, I would rather be charged with murder than with treason!)

Pfc. Manning had choices for how he went about blowing the whistle.
- Inspector General office
- Judge Advocate General's office
- Military whistle Blower Protection Act (Title 10, U.S.C Section 1034)

What choice did Pfc. Manning, someone from Military Intelligence, make?
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johngary66
Accused of heresy and decided to go with that.
12:15 AM on 03/17/2011
Roosterman, it sure sounds to me like your doing your best to justify the treatment. Just because the Military does it, legal or not, does not make it morally right or make the President any less complicit.
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07:52 AM on 03/16/2011
Want to know what the rest of the world thinks about America's treatment of Bradley Manning? Have a look at The Guardian: http://bit.ly/dKsjY5

And The Guardian isn't a left wing radical rag, and they have ended their love affair with Julian Assange.
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bccmeteorites
Don't believe everything NASA says.
06:50 AM on 03/16/2011
The Obama administration has slowly, carefully, in small steps been poisoning the well so the public doesn't complain, or becomes accustomed to the degrading treatment in small spoon fed steps so as not to complain. It all started with the slick campaign used to get elected and slowly but surely Eric Holder began turning the dial to the reich one small degree every couple of weeks. The administration caved in to republicans and the banking industry one small step at a time, the insurance industry, the oil industry, corporate giants and business......and the list goes on and on.
04:53 AM on 03/16/2011
Really great article, thanks! Glad there are some people who still have moral integrety in this country.
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johngary66
Accused of heresy and decided to go with that.
12:17 AM on 03/17/2011
Unfortunately none of them live in the White House. Fanned
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Manx
03:03 AM on 03/16/2011
It is hard to believe that Obama is a constitutional scholar after his defense of the abuse and mistreatment of Pvt. Manning. Whatever happened to the presumption of innocence? George W. Bush and Dick Cheney would be proud.
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TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
11:11 AM on 03/16/2011
How the military treats accused wrong doers and how civilians treat the accused are way different. Civilians have the right to bail. Military people do not. (in most cases and depending on what and where a crime(s) took place).

P.J. Crowley said it correctly, Manning is where he belongs and his treatment is stupid. BUT P.J. never said it was illegal.
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Manx
04:18 PM on 03/16/2011
Even military personnel accused of transgressions are assumed innocent until proven guilty. That's why we have court martials. As the NY Times says: "Private Manniing is not an enemy combantant, and there is no indication that the military is trying to extract information from him. Many military and government officials remain furious at the huge dump of classified materials to WikiLeaks. But if this treatment is someone's way of expressing that emotion, it would be useful to revisit the presumption of innocence and the Constitutional protection against cruel and unusual punishment."
01:23 AM on 03/16/2011
And the Red Queen said, "Off with Crowley's head!"

If memory serves, didn't one of Obama's first speaches contain the extolling of the sanitizing effects of sunshine laws?
11:16 PM on 03/15/2011
Shows yet again that Obama is Bush-Lite.
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johngary66
Accused of heresy and decided to go with that.
12:26 AM on 03/17/2011
timebon, I'm not so sure he's even Bush-lite anymore. Trojan Horse comes to mind for me. Sent to us by Corporate America and their bankers in particular.
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09:49 PM on 03/15/2011
Obama was elected to undo nearly a decade of disastrous policy - did he ever show up for the job?
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Texas Aggie
01:44 AM on 03/16/2011
No!
09:10 PM on 03/15/2011
After watching this MO for a decade now, it's clear that America intimidates, degrades, humiliates and/or t0rtures its prisoners for one of two reasons: (1) to coerce information (factual or not makes no matter), which can be used as evidence against others or as justification for whatever invasions, proxy wars or crimes our government is currently involved in, and/or (2) to set an example.

In Bradley Manning's case, it appears that both reasons are a factor, the hope being that (1) the U.S. can extract the necessary information to build a credible case for conspiracy against Assange, and (2) to ensure that no civilian or soldier ever, ever dare to provide documentary evidence on any wrongdoing or criminal activity by the U.S. government.
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doneflyin
my micro-bio isn't
09:51 PM on 03/15/2011
Yep, you're right.

Fav.
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colourful
To Change or Make a Difference
02:12 AM on 03/16/2011
What if this is not about building a case against Assange? What if this is about finding out whom, if anyone, in our military or government conspired, orchestrated or aided him?
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07:56 AM on 03/16/2011
This is just to dissuade anyone who thinks they should be a whistleblower.

Hang on a sec - didn't Obama say they were needed for democracy?

I am confused. Isn't Obama a constitutional lawyer? Oh, that's right. He USED to be one of them. Now he's merely a bloody politician.
06:38 PM on 03/15/2011
What is with the President? why has he become the poster child of a reprobate? What in the world kind of benefit does he think he is going to receive from continuing torture, poor treatment and barbaric practices? I mean, I really want to know whether this President, elected by the good people of the US as a man dedicated to change for the better, has lied his way into office? did he fool the voters into electing him? Is he just another kinder and gentler Bush? Yuch!
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TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
07:23 PM on 03/15/2011
Most voters "expectations" are generally out of touch with reality. Did you really think he would fly into office and change the world over night?
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Jim bob
Be the change you wish to see.
07:37 PM on 03/15/2011
Do you really think he can't stop Manning's mistreatment? Some commander in chief.
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jerryengelbach
Working class heritage
07:38 PM on 03/15/2011
It's not fair to blame the voters for taking Obama at his word.
05:39 PM on 03/15/2011
Greetings, Ms. Daphne.

Some of the details seem to have flown past some folks. Crowley does not have an opinion, and his personal and frank opinions cannot be unloaded whenever he is on duty. He was authorized to speak solely on behalf of our administration and government as a helper of my Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Everybody may not have heard, and although I am not one to gossip, it seems the word is that said resignee had not quite played the correct tune somehow. Somebody said a diary had to be consulted to find out when was the last time the resignee had been on a plane with his boss. Problem as the Lady flies off all the time. How could he really be her spokesperson if he never was on a...

Aaaanyway. The President and the Secretary agree. The only thing the Secretary of State of the United States of America can ever do is agree with the President. Their sole duty is to carry out the President's foreign policy. So when an underling, especially one that travels on different planes, says something making people feel there is a difference of opinion, who do you think ought be in a rush to go before they get the heave ho? This is not a new play, or even an enthusiastic revival.

Love the way peoplemake believe that one who knows State secrets and speaks for the State suddenly has loose lips when they get de-planed.
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jerryengelbach
Working class heritage
07:02 PM on 03/15/2011
"State secrets" are usually things the government has to hide from its own people.

Exposing them is the responsible thing to do. The opposite is to put oneself in thrall to the greedy tyrants who presume to know what is best for the rest of us, but really care only about themselves.
08:05 PM on 03/15/2011
Good gracious. The government is the people, and the people select who they wish to operate the government. We empower the government to handle things like these State secrets for us. We cannot have any and everybody who is in a snit deciding what is best for us, can we? We won't.

You will have to go somewhere else to live that tyrant thing out. You might still be able to catch a good rate on any flight to Libya or Bahrain.

In any event, there are established protocols and appropriate ways to do any and every thing. But when you think you know best and violate the espionage guidelines for citizens, we have no choice to protect the rest of us from the consequences of your all knowing actions.

Works best when citizens don't act out omnipotent fantasies. Being a man of the people like Mr. President Obama is hard enough.
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sanityisneeded
No one said it was going to be easy.
04:59 PM on 03/15/2011
Obama is just like Bush and becomes more so each day with the exception that when Bush made a statement against someone he was willing to act. Obama said he supported the rebels cause, but then he doesn't do anything to help. Maybe he should have just kept quiet if he was not willing to support his comments with action. PFC Manning had no care for the people he put in harms way and yet, there are those who want him treated as a hero and given special treatment. Send him to Sheriff Joe Arpiao and he will be taken care of with the same respect he showed towards his own country.
07:02 PM on 03/15/2011
"Sanity is needed" is a good name for you, since it is quite clearly lacking in the statement above. PFC Manning put no one in harm's way. There is not one scintilla of evidence in this regard. It has even been denied by Gates.

If you are in favor of the war crimes that Private Manning exposed, as you seem to be, then you need to spend some time with Joe Arpaio. In fact, I'd be for putting him in the cage with you.

Private Manning is an American Hero. You are not.
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jerryengelbach
Working class heritage
07:04 PM on 03/15/2011
If you equate the country with its rulers you have no respect for the rest of us.

In exposing the malfeasance of the government, Manning showed true respect — to his fellow Americans.
04:39 PM on 03/15/2011
You are right. PFC Manning should be released into the general prison population where his rights will be evaluated by other jailed soldiers.
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TheRoosterman
Crazy Texan
06:29 PM on 03/15/2011
Now that would be cruel and inhumane treatment.
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jerryengelbach
Working class heritage
07:39 PM on 03/15/2011
That's a pretty clear condemnation of the military mind.