Toronto Star

Manning explains leak in first TV interview

Ex-army intelligen­ce analyst speaks out after being freed from prison by Obama

- MARK BERMAN

Chelsea Manning, the army private who spent seven years behind bars and was convicted of disclosing classified government informatio­n to WikiLeaks, said she felt compelled to leak informatio­n because of “a responsibi­lity to the public.”

Manning, 29, left prison last month after her 35-year sentence was commuted by former U.S. president Barack Obama earlier this year.

In her first televised interview since walking out of the barracks at Fort Leavenwort­h, Kan., Manning told ABC News that she takes responsibi­lity for her decisions.

“No one told me to do this, nobody directed me to do this,” Manning told the network in the interview, a portion of which aired Friday on Good Morning America. “This is me. It’s on me.”

While serving as an army intelli- gence analyst, Manning was arrested in May 2010 after sending to WikiLeaks a collection of materials that included scores of documents, video of a U.S. Apache helicopter attack in Baghdad that killed two journalist­s, about 250,000 State Department cables and other informatio­n.

In 2013, Manning was acquitted of aiding the enemy but was found guilty of espionage, resulting in the sentence of 35 years in prison.

Manning said she did not believe her leaks would threaten national security.

“You’re getting all this informatio­n and it’s just death, destructio­n, mayhem,” she told ABC News.

“And eventually you just stop, I stopped seeing just statistics and informatio­n, and I started seeing people.”

She added, “I have a responsibi­lity to the public. We all have a responsibi­lity.”

The new interview with Manning arrives days after the Trump administra­tion, which has railed against leaks, announced its first public criminal charges in a leak case, ar- resting Reality Leigh Winner, a government contractor in Georgia, and accusing her of sending classified informatio­n to a news organizati­on.

Manning entered federal custody as a male army private named Brad- ley. Not long after being sentenced, Manning — who was held at an allmale prison — announced that she was a transgende­r woman and planned to seek hormone therapy.

“I had to be who I am,” she said in the new interview. Manning said the treatment is “literally what keeps me alive, what keeps me from feeling like I’m in the wrong body.” Before the treatment began, she recalled, she felt as if she wanted to “rip my body apart.”

In January, Manning was among those granted commutatio­ns during Obama’s final days in office. A day after the commutatio­n was announced, Obama defended the decision during a White House news conference.

“Chelsea Manning has served a tough prison sentence,” he said, adding later: “It has been my view that given she went to trial, that due process was carried out, that she took responsibi­lity for her crime. . . . I feel very comfortabl­e that justice has been served.” In the ABC News interview, Manning quickly grew emotional when asked what she would say to Obama.

“Thank you,” she said. “Another chance, it’s all I wanted. . . . That’s all I asked for, was a chance. That’s it. And this is my chance.”

 ?? ABC NEWS ?? Chelsea Manning says that she takes full responsibi­lity for her actions. “I have a responsibi­lity to the public,” she told ABC News.
ABC NEWS Chelsea Manning says that she takes full responsibi­lity for her actions. “I have a responsibi­lity to the public,” she told ABC News.

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