The Daily Courier

‘I am not a traitor,’ says Chelsea Manning

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NANTUCKET, Mass. (AP) — Chelsea Manning told a crowd at a “creative thinkers” conference that she’s not a traitor as her critics have claimed and she did what she thought was the right thing to do.

Manning is attending the annual conference for The Nantucket Project on Sunday in Massachuse­tts. The Nantucket Project is a venture founded to bring together creative thinkers to uncover the ideas that matter most. Organizers say about 600 people are attending.

This is only Manning’s second public appearance since being released from a military prison in May.

“I believe I did the best I could in my circumstan­ces to make an ethical decision,” she told the crowd when they asked if she was a traitor.

The 29-year-old Manning is a transgende­r woman who was known as Bradley Manning when she was convicted in 2013 of leaking a trove of classified documents. She was released from a military prison in May after serving seven years of a 35-year sentence, which was commuted by President Barack Obama in his final days in office.

Tom Scott, who co-founded The Nantucket Project with Kate Brosnan, said they invited Manning for “clarity of understand­ing.”

“My brother and father are Marines. They would respectful­ly challenge some of her decisions,” he said. “Barack Obama commuted her sentence. My instinct is that he’s a good and trustful man. How do those two things mix? Seeing her in person offers, perhaps, the best way to decipher that.”

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