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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHypocrisy Lies at the Heart of the Trial of Bradley Manning
http://www.commondreams.org/view/2013/06/03Daniel Ellsberg speaks at Free Bradley Manning protest at Fort Meade. (Photo: Steve Rhodes/cc/flickr)
In 2009 the American ambassador to Tunisia spent the evening at the home of Mohamed Sakher el-Materi, the president's son-in-law. By any standards the dinner was lavish yogurt and ice cream were flown in from St Tropez and the home was opulent. In a cable, made public by WikiLeaks, the diplomat wrote: "The house was recently renovated and includes an infinity pool there are ancient artefacts everywhere: Roman columns, frescos and even a lion's head from which water pours into the pool. Materi insisted the pieces are real." By Tunisian standards it was particularly obscene. El-Materi owned a tiger and fed it four chickens a day.
The US diplomatic corps in Tunis understood this was a problem. In a cable the previous year, entitled What's yours is mine, they'd written: "With Tunisians facing rising inflation and high unemployment, the conspicuous displays of wealth and persistent rumours of corruption have added fuel to the fire." But the US continued to back the Tunisian president anyway, considering him a reliable ally against terrorism and preferring a dependable dictatorship to an unpredictable democracy. Until, of course, a couple months after the WikiLeaks revelations, Tunisians rose up and ejected him, unleashing a wave of revolutions in the region.
WikiLeaks did not cause these uprisings but it certainly informed them. The dispatches revealed details of corruption and kleptocracy that many Tunisians suspected, but could not prove, and would cite as they took to the streets. They also exposed the blatant discrepancy between the west's professed values and actual foreign policies. Having lectured the Arab world about democracy for years, its collusion in suppressing freedom was undeniable as protesters were met by weaponry and tear gas made in the west, employed by a military trained by westerners.
On Monday Bradley Manning, the young man who leaked those diplomatic cables, goes on trial in a military court in Maryland. He has pleaded guilty to 10 charges which would put him behind bars for 20 years. But that is not enough for the US military that has levelled 22 charges against him, including espionage and "aiding the enemy", which carries up to life in prison without parole. At the time Manning released the diplomatic cables and military reports he wrote: "I want people to see the truth regardless of who they are. Because without information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public." He hoped by releasing the cables he would spark "worldwide discussion, debates, and reforms".
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Hypocrisy Lies at the Heart of the Trial of Bradley Manning (Original Post)
xchrom
Jun 2013
OP
Mnemosyne
(21,363 posts)1. K&R nt
randome
(34,845 posts)2. Not quite sure where the hypocrisy is.
The U.S. was aware of the lavish lifestyle and stated so.
If Bradley Manning thought Tunisia would be better off after a revolution, perhaps he was correct.
But that's what Bush, Jr. thought about Saddam Hussein, too. The jury's still out on that one. It may still be out regarding Tunisia, too.
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[font color="blue"][center]Stop looking for heroes. BE one.[/center][/font]
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