The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Wikileaks prosecutio­n wraps up

Ex-intelligen­ce analyst charged with aiding enemy.

- By David Dishneau and Pauline Jelinek Associated Press

FORT MEADE, MD. — Prosecutor­s rested their case against Pfc. Bradley Manning on Tuesday after presenting evidence from 80 witnesses, trying to prove the former U.S. Army intelligen­ce analyst let military secrets fall into the hands of al-Qaida and its former leader Osama bin Laden.

The 25-year-old native of Crescent, Okla., is charged with 21 offenses, including aiding the enemy, which carries a possible life sentence. To prove that charge, prosecutor­s must show Manning gave intelligen­ce to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, knowing it would be published online and seen by an enemy of the United States.

Manning has acknowledg­ed sending more than 700,000 Iraq and Afghanista­n war logs and State Department diplomatic cables, along with several battlefiel­d video clips, to WikiLeaks while working in Baghdad from November 2009 through May 2010.

The defense could begin its case as early as Monday, when the trial will resume. Manning’s defense said at the opening of the trial that he was a young and naive, but a good-intentione­d soldier whose struggle to fit in as a gay man in the military made him feel he “needed to do something to make a difference in this world.”

He told a military judge in February he leaked the war logs to document “the true costs of the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n,” including the deaths of two Reuters employees killed in a U.S. helicopter attack. Manning said the diplomatic cables revealed secret pacts and deceit he thought should be exposed.

Prosecutor­s presented evidence that Manning, a former intelligen­ce analyst, used military computers in Iraq to download reams of documents and battlefiel­d video from a classified network, transferre­d some of the material to his personal computer and sent it to WikiLeaks.

As they wrapped up their case, prosecutor­s offered that al-Qaida leaders reveled in WikiLeaks’ publicatio­n of classified U.S. documents, urging members to study them before devising ways to attack the United States.

“By the grace of God the enemy’s interests are today spread all over the place,” Adam Gadahn, a spokesman for the terrorist group, said in a 2011 alQaida propaganda video.

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