China Daily (Hong Kong)

White House denies WikiLeaks’ actions influenced release decision

- By REUTERS in Washington

President Barack Obama on Tuesday shortened the prison sentence of Chelsea Manning, the former United States military intelligen­ce analyst who was responsibl­e for a 2010 leak of classified materials to anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, the biggest such breach in US history.

A White House official said there was no connection between Manning’s commutatio­n and renewed US government concern about WikiLeaks’ actions during last year’s presidenti­al election, or a promise by founder Julian Assange to accept extraditio­n if Manning was freed.

Manning has been a focus of a worldwide debate on government secrecy since she provided more than 700,000 documents, videos, diplomatic cables and battlefiel­d accounts to WikiLeaks — a leak for which she was sentenced to serve 35 years in prison.

Obama, in one of his final acts before leaving office, reduced her sentence to seven years, angering some Republican­s.

“This is just outrageous,”

Manning put US lives at risk and exposed some of our nation’s most sensitive secrets.” Paul Ryan, speaker of the House of Representa­tives

House of Representa­tives Speaker Paul Ryan said in a statement. Ryan, a Republican, said the decision was a “dangerous precedent” for those who leak materials about national security.

“Chelsea Manning’s treachery put US citizen lives at risk and exposed some of our nation’s most sensitive secrets,” Ryan said.

Manning was working as an intelligen­ce analyst in Baghdad in 2010 when she gave WikiLeaks a trove of diplomatic cables and battlefiel­d accounts that included a 2007 gunsight video of a US Apache helicopter firing at suspected insurgents in Iraq, killing a dozen people including two Reuters news staff.

Manning, formerly known

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