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In reply to the discussion: Happy Whistleblower's Day! Today we celebrate by crucifying Bradley Manning [View all]Catherina
(35,568 posts)6. Bradley Manning: 10 major revelations from the Wikileaks documents
Bradley Manning trial: what we know from the leaked WikiLeaks documents
Revelations from the files downloaded include footage of US helicopter crews laughing at civilian deaths in Baghdad
Peter Walker
The Guardian, Tuesday 30 July 2013 12.01 EDT

Bradley Manning, a 25-year-old US private, downloaded more than 700,000 classified documents from US military servers and passed them to WikiLeaks. The Guardian was one of several news organisations to publish a series of stories based on the contents of the files. Below are 10 of the most revelatory:
The first revelation came in 2010, from a video showing a US helicopter crew laughing as they launched an air strike killing a dozen people in Baghdad in July 2007, including a photographer and driver working for the Reuters news agency. The footage was recorded on one of two Apache helicopters which were hunting for suspected insurgents. They encounter a group of men on the ground, who do not immediately appear armed, and there is no sign of gunshots. But one helicopter crew opens fire, with shouts of "Hahaha. I hit 'em," and "Oh yeah, look at those dead bastards". As the wounded are helped, one of the helicopters opens fire again, with armour-piercing shells.
The next tranche of revelations came in July 2010, from documents dating from 2004 to 2009 about the Afghan war. One set raised concerns in the US by suggesting alleged support for the Taliban from Pakistan, particularly that the country's spy agency, the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), had been collaborating with the Taliban.
The Afghanistan files also included details of an incident from 2007 in which US marines escaping an attack outside the city of Jalalabad fired their guns indiscriminately, killing 19 unarmed civilians and wounding 50 more. While the aftermath of the attack was plain to military authorities, the files suggested, the incident was referred to in an official report only as this: "The patrol returned to JAF [Jalalabad air field]."
In October 2010 came a series of revelations about events in Iraq. Chief among these was that US authorities failed to investigate hundreds of reports of abuse, torture, rape and even murder by Iraqi police and soldiers. The reports of abuse, often supported by medical evidence, describe prisoners shackled, blindfolded and hung by wrists or ankles, and subjected to whipping, punching, kicking or electric shocks.
Another Iraq-related revelation was that the US collated details of more than 100,000 people killed in Iraq following the invasion of the country, including more than 15,000 deaths that were previously unrecorded. The tally goes against previous protestations by the UK and US that there were any official statistics on the death toll connected to the war.
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http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jul/30/bradley-manning-wikileaks-revelations
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Happy Whistleblower's Day! Today we celebrate by crucifying Bradley Manning [View all]
Catherina
Jul 2013
OP
No one has been nor will be held accountable for the warcrimes in Collateral Murder except Manning
Catherina
Jul 2013
#1
We will not be allowed to live tweet the verdict. Press ability to file will be restrained
Catherina
Jul 2013
#5
If Manning is found not guilty of Aiding the Enemy and guilty of everything else, he faces 154 years
Catherina
Jul 2013
#7
If you've never listened to Manning's statement of why he leaked, you really need to
Catherina
Jul 2013
#9
And Grassley along with Pat Leahy were the two senators that Sibel Edmonds went to as well...
cascadiance
Jul 2013
#12
I'm taking up knitting. Don't want to miss a stitch if the moment ever comes n/t
Catherina
Jul 2013
#31
State Dept: We've seen the #Manning verdict, no comment, we refer you to the Dept of Defense n/t
Catherina
Jul 2013
#16
Pic: Crowd booing each guilty verdict outside US Embassy, chanting "No justice no peace"
Catherina
Jul 2013
#18
Business trusts & strains of fascism. It really is the late 1920s again. n/t
DirkGently
Jul 2013
#19
Wish they could give him the Nobel Peace Prize today to SLAP THE BASTARDS IN THE FACE!
cascadiance
Jul 2013
#20
sentencing trial begins tomorrow. No minimums required, new evidence allowed. Fight is far from over
Catherina
Jul 2013
#22
It is so wrong. The government just confirmed it's not here to serve us, just corporations & the MIC
Catherina
Jul 2013
#26
Glad to read that the first amendment is getting some support... So much attention on the second
midnight
Jul 2013
#29