Austin American-Statesman

Army GI testifies he thought he’d die in custody

Bradley Manning contends pretrial detention was harsh.

- PATRICK SEMANSKY / ASSOCIATED PRESS By David Dishneau

FORT MEADE, MD. — An Army private charged in the biggest security breach in U.S. history testified Thursday that he felt like a doomed, caged animal after he was arrested in Baghdad for allegedly sending classified informatio­n to the secret-spilling website WikiLeaks.

Speaking publicly for the first time about his May 2010 arrest and subsequent confinemen­t, Pfc. Bradley Manning testified about his time in a cell in a segregatio­n tent at Camp Arifjan, an Army installati­on in Kuwait.

“I remember thinking I’m going to die. I’m stuck inside this cage,” Manning said in response to questions from defense attorney David Coombs. “I just thought I was going to die in that cage. And that’s how I saw it — an animal cage.”

Manning was later sent to a Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Va., in July 2010. His lawyers are seeking dismissal of all charges, contending his pretrial confinemen­t at Quantico was needlessly harsh.

Manning’s testimony came on the third day of a pretrial hearing at Fort Meade, the sprawling Army post between Washington and Baltimore.

The compact, 24-yearold intelligen­ce analyst looked youthful in his dark-blue dress uniform, close-cropped hair and rimless eyeglasses. He was animated, often swiveling in the witness chair and gesturing with his hands.

Speaking in emphatic bursts, sometimes stumbling over his words, Manning said that at Quantico, where he was held for nine months in highly restrictiv­e maximum custody, “I started to feel like I was mentally going back to Kuwait mode, in that lonely, dark, black hole place, mentally.”

Manning said he never sank that low but grew frustrated after five months of spending up to 23 hours a day in a windowless, 6-by-8-foot cell.

“It was pretty draining. Tiring,” Manning said.

He described it as “boredom. Complete, out-of-my-mind boredom.”

Manning is trying to avoid trial in the WikiLeaks case. He argues he was punished enough when he was locked up alone in a small cell for nearly nine months at Quantico, where he also had to sleep naked for several nights.

The military contends the treatment was proper, given Manning’s classifica­tion then as a maximumsec­urity detainee who posed a risk of injury to himself or others.

Earlier Thursday, a military judge accepted the terms under which Manning was willing to plead guilty to eight charges for sending classified documents to the WikiLeaks website.

Col. Denise Lind’s ruling doesn’t mean the pleas have been formally accepted. That could happen in December.

But Lind approved the language of the offenses to which Manning would admit.

She said those offenses carry a total maximum prison term of 16 years.

Manning made the offer as a way of accepting responsibi­lity for the leak. Government officials have not said whether they would continue prosecutin­g him for the other 14 counts he faces, including aiding the enemy. That offense carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.

Under the proposal, Manning would admit to willfully sending the following material: a battlefiel­d video file, some classified memos, more than 20 Iraq war logs, more than 20 Afghanista­n war logs and other classified materials. He would also plead guilty to wrongfully storing classified informatio­n.

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