CHELSEA MANNING FREED AFTER 7 YRS
Chelsea Manning, the transgender army private jailed for one of the largest leaks of classified documents in US history, has been released from a military prison after seven years behind bars. Manning says she is looking forward to putting the past behind her.
Chelsea Manning, the transgender army private jailed for giving US secrets to WikiLeaks, said on Wednesday she was looking to put the past behind her as she walked free from a maximum-security prison in Kansas.
“After another anxious four months of waiting, the day has finally arrived. I am looking forward to so much!” Manning, whose sentence was commuted by former president Barack Obama, said via her legal team.
“Whatever is ahead of me, is far more important than the past,” said the 29-year-old, who served seven of a 35-year sentence over one of the largest leaks of classified documents in US history. “I’m figuring things out right now - which is exciting, awkward, fun.”
Manning, who twice attempted to commit suicide during her incarceration at Fort Leavenworth, was the unlikely source of disclosures that rocked the US government.
While serving as an army intelligence analyst in Baghdad in 2010, Manning -- then still a male soldier known as Bradley -- smuggled more than 700,000 classified documents to the WikiLeaks whisteblower organization.
The documents ranged from embarrassing diplomatic cables that revealed how US envoys really felt about friends and foes alike, to videos showing a US air strike in Afghanistan in 2009 that left more than 100 civilians dead and footage of a US helicopter attack in Iraq that killed two Reuters journalists.