‘Responsibility to public’ behind Manning’s leaks
WASHINGTON Chelsea Manning, the United States Army private who spent seven years behind bars and was convicted of disclosing classified government information to WikiLeaks, says 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 president Barack Obama earlier this year.
In her first televised interview since walking out of the barracks at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, 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 yesterday on Good Morning America. ‘‘This is me. It’s on me.’’ While serving as an army intelligence analyst, Manning was arrested in May 2010 after sending WikiLeaks a collection of materials that included scores of documents, video of a US 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 told ABC she did not believe her leaks would threaten national security.
‘‘You’re getting all this information and it’s just death, destruction, mayhem. And eventually you just stop. I stopped seeing just statistics and information, and I started seeing people.’’
She added: ‘‘I have a respons- ibility to the public. We all have a responsibility.’’
The new interview with Manning came days after the Trump administration, which has railed against leaks, announced its first public criminal charges in a leak case, arresting Reality Leigh Winner, a government contractor in Georgia, and accusing her of sending classified information to a news organisation.
Manning entered federal custody as a male private named Bradley. Not long after being sentenced, Manning – who was held at an all-male prison – announced that she was a transgender woman and planned to seek hormone therapy.
‘‘I had to be who I am,’’ she told ABC.
Manning said the treatment was ‘‘literally what keeps me alive, what keeps me from feeling like I’m in the wrong body’’. Before the treatment began, 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. Obama’s administration was particularly tough on government leakers, but he had also advocated for overall reforms to the country’s sentencing practices.
US President Donald Trump was critical of Obama’s decision, calling Manning an ‘‘ungrateful traitor’’ in a tweet days after taking office, an apparent reference to a column Manning wrote for British newspaper The Guardian arguing for ‘‘a strong and apologetic progressive to lead us’’.
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.’’
Asked about critics, including Trump, who call her a traitor, Manning had a plain response.
‘‘I’m just me,’’ she said. ‘‘It’s as simple as that.’’ Washington Post