Saturday, March 30, 2019
Are Whistleblowers Heroes or Traitors?
Are Whistleblowers Heroes or Traitors?ED  state of   contendD SNOWDEN AND BRADLEY (CHELSEA) MANNING HEROES OR TRAITORS?Author  dividing lineIntroduction Paragraph setoff paragraph Edward Snowden Who is he and what has he  do?Second paragraph Edward Snowden Issues in thelaw Is he a  numbfish or traitor?Third paragraph Bradley (Chelsea) Manning Who is he and what has he  do?Fourth paragraph Bradley (Chelsea) ManningIssues in the law Is he a  submarine or traitor?Conclusion Paragraph Edward Snowden, ChelseaManning,  despotic vs. natural law. revokeEdward Snowden and Bradley (Chelsea) Manning disclosures of  surreptitious National Security Agency (NSA) files raises an important question. Are Edward Snowden and Bradley (Chelsea) Manning heroes, or traitors? Ultimately, the author  leave behind show how Snowden revealed that the  fall in States g overnment had been mass surveilling the  masses of the States without their permission or  go throughledge and how Manning revealed The  hail of    War  cover how  unite States is intervening in the Middle East (Abu Omar abduction, the  Iraki civilian death toll, and the viral video col posterioral  finish). Furthermore, the author will  talk of how the  join States Espionage act affects  both(prenominal) Snowden and Manning in a way that  acquits it  unwork satisfactory to  pardon their reasoning for their actions.INTRODUCTIONWhen is it  sound to break the law? Edward Snowden, Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning  adopt faced this question head on. All three   be jazzn as whistleblowers. These whistleblowers have disclosed top  secluded  political sympathies intelligence documents to the   gentlemans gentleman beings and have sp beked a  humankindwide debate concerning the  concede of our privacy for security.  virtually  phrase that these whistleblowers argon traitors. Donald Trump, President of the United States says that whistleblowers  bid Snowden and Manning are traitors and implies that they should be executed.  Spies in t   he old days used to be executed(Donald Trump). Others say that he is a human rights hero (Amnesty International).This  accounting is of particular interest as it raises the question of whether the reason behind  break the law should help determine the outcome.The purpose of this  condition is to examinewhether these whistleblowers  do the right choice in deciding to leak topsecret  disposal  instruction. Are these whistleblowers heroes for making theworld aware of the grotesque acts that the United States government affiliatedto both America and the rest of the world? In Paragraph I, the   depict will outline who Edward Snowden is, it will explain what  cultivation that he leaked and will mention. In Paragraph I part II, the  phrase will define the  wakeless issues that are brought up in  measure to Snowden. In paragraph II, the  word will outline who Manning is, it will explain the  set forthation that he leaked, and will mention the charges that were brought upon him. In Paragraph    II part II it will define the legal issues that are brought up in respect to Manning. Lastly, in paragraph III the  phrase will outline Assange and will explain how he is involved in the  chance. The article will  as well as outline what Assange is charged under. In undertaking this analysis, this article suggest thatEdward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, and Julian Assange are heros,  non traitors andshould be treated accordingly. However, the article suggests that despitehaving the best intentions, they should be punished under a lesser sentence.EDWARD SNOWDENSnowden is a 33 year old former CIA and NSA contractor  born(p) in Elizabeth City, North Carolina. Snowden derived from a family of nationalists. His father worked for the  soldiers for 30  years, his granddad retired as an admiral, and his mother to this day works for the federal courts. Snowden decided that he wanted to join the government during the Iraq war. Snowdens desire to join the  troops is evident when he said in an  di   scourse that his motive of  connector the  multitude was to free people from oppression. Snowden said, This is the kind of thing that led me to the army. When they said, Were going to free oppressed people from a dictator, I  matte that I had an  obligation to do my part to see that happen(Snowden). Snowden began  formulation for the special forces in 2004  scarcely  ultimately failed as he suffered a fatal injury during a training exercise. Snowden was then discharged from the military. Snowden,  facilitate wanting to fight for his  solid  anchor, began his training for the CIA in 2006. Graduating at the top of his class, Snowden was deployed with diplomatical cover to Geneva to maintain the CIAs security network. While undercover, Snowden  detect a  schedule that made him start questioning NSAs power. The NSA program was called XKeyscore. Snowden revealed in an interview that this program filtered information that the NSA collected on a daily base and see everything that a particu   lar person was posting. In an interview with Norddeutscher Rundfunk, Snowden explained the immense reach of XKeyscore. Snowden said, Lets say I saw you once and I thought what you were doing was interesting or you just have access thats interesting to me, lets say you work at a major German corporation and I want access to that network, I can track your username on a website on a form somewhere, I can track your  concrete name, I can track associations with your friends and I can build whats called a fingerprint which is network activity unique to you which means  anyplace you go in the world anywhere you try to sort of  blur your online presence hide your identity, the NSA can find you and any peerless whos allowed to use this or who the NSA shares their software with can do the same thing. Shortly after works for the CIA, Snowden began working for Dell in Japan to upgrade the NSAs  calculating machine systems and protect from Chinese hackers(Forbes).  later working in Japan for a    couple of years, Snowden began to work for a company named  Booz Allen Hamilton(BAH), an American consulting firm with ties to the NSA. This is where Snowden  uncover the Grotesque  tell oning of the American people. So, Snowden then gathered all the  info he could well-nigh the illicit activities the government was performing and leaked it to The Guardian. Snowden leaked thousands of top secret files Including that government had secret court orders to collect all teleph one(a) records and that he the government has a secret software named PRISM. According to The Guardian, PRISM is a software that concessions full access to a companys  comers and can access  personal emails, telephone calls etc The companies are obliged by law to hand over this information. After revealing himself in an interview with The Guardian, the United States has charged him with  stealing of government  meetty  unlicensed communication of National Defense information, and froward Communication of Classified    Communications Intelligence Information to an Unauthorized  person (Caselaw). After evading an extradition from Hong Kong, Snowden claimed asylum in Russia and is presently living there.EDWARD SNOWDEN RIGHT AND WRONG, LEGAL, AND  nefariousIn order to analyse whether Snowden is a hero or a traitorwe first have to understand the legal issues that his case raises. This articleis  non arguing whether Snowden   broke the law or not  and rather raising thequestion of whether it was a justifiable use of  gaolbreak the law. Snowdenrevealed that the United States forced Verizon to hand over its phone data in a sort court order (The Guardian). The classified court is named UnitedStates Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court and was not known to thepublic until Snowden leaked the court order. The government responded and saidthat they are within their right to do because of a provision in the U.Spatriot act. The U.S Patriot Act, an act  sign-language(a) by Bush just a month the 9/11attacks,    states,  coach of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or a designee of the Director (whose rank shall be no lower than Assistant Special  doer in Charge) may make an application for an order requiring the production of any tangible things (including books, records, papers, documents, and other  concomitants) for an investigation to obtain  contrasted intelligence information not concerning a United States person or to protect against  planetary terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities, provided that  much(prenominal) investigation of a United States person is not conducted solely upon the basis of activities protected by the first amendment to the  governing body.The act also has a provision, stating that their needs tobe reasonable grounds to request for this information (LII).In this case, thegovernment had not  compensate considered or stated why this information is relevantand does not  correct mention why they need the information now. In a  unhurtdecision the Federal C   ourt of Appeals states why the governments reasoning forobtaining this information is not allowed nor is it constitutionalThe courtstates, The government takes the position that the metadata collecteda vast  centre of which does not contain directly relevant information, as the government concedesare nevertheless relevant because they may allow the NSA, at some  incomprehensible  season in the future, utilizing its ability to sift through the trove of  immaterial data it has collected up to that point, to identify information that is relevant. We agree with appellants that such an expansive concept of relevance is unprecedented and unwarranted(AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES  sum of money V. NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY). The U.S District Judge in his ruling  set forth the NSAscapabilities as al nearly orwellian.The NSAs is violating the constitution byspying on its people. Without Snowdens leak, the ACLU would have never beenable to bring this to  mental test as we would have never knew of it   . After theverdict, the government began to introduce. 20 bills all aimed at tackling superintendence in America including the most prominent one The U.S.A FreedomAct (Slate). This act prevents mass  inspection and  lay outs an end toprograms like PRISM. By bringing the governments illicit actions to light,Snowden has shown the people of America that the government is breaking the lawand acting unconstitutionally and should be considered a patriot. However,despite acting in  obedient intentions, the government is still  difficult to arresthim. Snowden has sparked debate worldwide. Some say that he is a patriot as hetook on immense risk all for the  earnest of the people while some say that he is aspy and should be executed (Donald Trump). Snowden explained in an interviewwith The Guardian that hed be okay losing if he had a fair trial.,  IfI end up in guantanamo, I can live with that. This demonstrates hischaracter, as he understands that he is fighting for the people, but if thepeo   ple thing he is  im incorrupt then he deserves to go to prison. This is furtherdemonstrated in an interview with NBC when Snowden revealed that he leaked thedocuments because of his love of his  verdant and the people in it. (NBC).Instead, of thinking that Snowden  perpetrate an  illegitimate act we should think heis a hero because he did the right thing. In Snowdens own words, We shouldalways make a distinction that right and wrong, is a very different  well-wornthan legal and illegal. The law is no substitute for morality. This is notthe  only if  sentence that there has been tension in the law in order for progression.Some examples are Whether it was The abolition of slavery, and the increasedrights of women. Laws were broken because the laws were wrong. In Conclusion, the author suggests that he is ahero. The definition of a hero is someone who overcomes  adversity  a good dealsacrificing their own personal concerns for the greater good. In this example,Snowden has put his count   ry first. Snowden has risked his  sustenance and his freedomin order to inform the citizens of America about the U.S governments illegalactivities and has still stayed true to the one thing that every American wantsto  keep The Constitution. Often, heros have a code or moral principle thatthey want to protect. In this case, Snowden wants to uphold his code which isthat the constitution should be upheld. Snowden even taken an  pest to upholdsomething so precious to him. As every federal employee has to taken an Oath ofOffice. The Oath of Office is  widely considered The Cornerstone ofAmerica(RYOC) and is essentially a vow to protect their country and upholdthe constitution. The Oath states, I will support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies,  inappropriate and domestic that I will  hurt true faith and allegiance to the same that I take this obligation freely, without any mental reservation or purpose of evasion and that I will well and faithfully disc   harge the duties of the office on which I am about to enter. So help me God.Snowden protected the one thing he swore to protect. TheNSA paints Snowden as a traitor, and says that he broke the oath he has takenby revealing the information but in reality he defended the constitution whilethe NSA was attacking by  illegally spying on its people.CHELSEA MANNINGBradley Manning, know known as Chelsea Manning,is a United States Army soldier who served as an intelligence analyst. Manninghad a  tumultuous childhood says her sister, Casey. According to Casey, she tookcare of Manning when she 11 because both parents were alcoholics even to the expiration of making her a bottle in the middle of the night(Washington Post).At a small age Manning was considered intelligent, winning top prize at local learning fair and even in a state wide test bowl (Washington post). Manningbecame openly game in 2005 when he came back from Wales. When manning cameback, Mannings father  workedly spent weeks  hard t   o convince her to jointhe military(Washington Post). Manning  conjugate the military in 2007. Accordingto BBC news, Mannings friends said that she joined the military to pay forcollege but eventually Manning stated that she had joined in hopes to  relieve herdesires for becoming a woman (BBC). In 2009, Manning was deployed to Iraq as anintelligence analyst. This is where she  allow access to the classifiedinformation that she had leaked. Manning made contact with Julian Assangein 2009. She gave Assange almost 750,000 classified documents including thefamous video  substantiative Murder, where it shows the U.S military  killing12 civilians and killing the people who were trying to save the injured. Theleaks also include 251,287 U.S diplomatic cables and 482,832 war logs. Afterleaking the information, she confided in a hacker named Adrian Lamo. Lamo laterinformed the Army and Manning was arrested in May of that same year. AfterManning was arrested, he was charged with 22 offenses incl   uding the mostserious charge Aiding the Enemy, which could have resulted in life inprison. Manning was sentenced 35 years in prison  indeed becoming the harshestsentence that a whistleblower has ever received.CHELSEA MANNING THE COST OF WARIn order to analyze whether Manning is a hero or a traitor,we need to understand his criminal case and the arguments made. Then, likeEdward Snowden said, We should always make a distinction that right andwrong, is a very different standard than legal and illegal. The law is nosubstitute for morality. This is true  in particular for Chelsea Manning asher case is a bit more drastic than Snowdens. Manning steal and released over700,000 classified documents in order to show us The Cost of war. Manninghas been charged with aiding the enemy for leaking this classified informationto the media. The enemy is considered at this time to be Al Qaeda, and Al Qaedaof the Arabian Peninsula. Manning leaked  names whod had confidentialdiscussions with US diplomats   . He also released that the president of Yemen was fable to his own Congress about American drone strikes in his country (TheGuardian). In his case, Manning pled to 10 offenses which would have landedhim around 20 years in prison. However, the military insisted that he wascharged with aiding the enemy and violating the espionage act which would haveadded a life sentence. Eugene Fidell, an expert in military justice at yale lawschool, said that even Khalid Sheik Mohammed, the suspected architect of the9/11 attacks, had greater rights of appeal than Chelsea would.  If hesconvicted by a military commission in guantanamo, KSM will get a  right away shotat the US Supreme Court, He said. By contrast, if CAAF denies Manning areview as it does in most cases, he will be out in the cold. This showshow cruel the U.S government is towards Manning. At the time manning was 22years when released those documents. After being arrested, Manning was insolitary  travail and subjected to forced nudity d   uring inspection(Huffington Post). This not only  violate his  eighth amendment right but alsoviolated article 16 of the  dominion against torture. Juan Mendez, UN specialrapporteur on torture, said that Mannings treatment while he was in prisoncruel,  atrocious, and degrading. Mendez said, I conclude that the 11 months under conditions of solitary confinement(regardless of the name  assumption to his  administration by the prison authorities)  causes at a minimum, cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment in  infringement of article 16 of the  crowd against torture. If the effects in regards to pain and suffering inflicted on Manning were more severe, they could constitute torture(The Guardian).Manning had not been to trial and had been psychologicallybeen beaten by the government. This not only violated his right to physical andpsychological integrity, but violated his presumption of innocence. So, what info did Manning give to the public that would warrant such  brute(prenominal) tr   eatment? Manning released documents that exposed the detainment of innocent people of guantanamo Bay, he revealed The cost of war in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and he helped fuel pro- democratic movements in the Arab world. After releasing the documents about the war crimes committed in Iraq. Iraq then refused to grant criminal and civil immunity to US troops if their stay was prolonged,  therefrom promptly causing Obama to withdraw them from Iraq saving many American and Iraqi lives.Some of the documents that Manning released were shocking videos showing the war crimes that the US committed. The video Collateral Murder, released by Wikileaks, shows the disregard for human life and shows various war crimes committed by the U.S government. The video shows a US apache attack eggbeater killing 12 civilians including 2 Reuters reporters and wounding two children on the ground in Baghdad in. Then, after they gruesomely killed the civilians, they murdered the people trying to rescue the w   ounded. Finally, to add insult to injury, a tank ran over one of the bodies cutting the man in half (Youtube). Not only did they murder innocent people but they got away with it until Manning leaked the video. this video depicted 3 war crimes.  sectionalization 499 of the Army Field Manual states, Every violation of the law of war is a war crime. According to  obligate 85 of the First Protocol to the Geneva Conventions, it defines that killing civilians is a war crime.(Huffington Post). In this video, it is clearly seen that not only did they shoot civilians, but they taunted them after their death.  wizard of the gunners in the apache helicopter said, Look at them dead bastards(Youtube). They showed zero self-reproof and even laughed about it. Then, to make matters worse, they violated article 17 of the First protocol. This states that the civilian population  shall be permitted, even on their own  scuttle to collect and care for the wounded. The article then says, No one shall be    harmed for such humanitarian acts. In the video collateral murder, it is clearly seen that the gunners killed the good samaritans while they were picking up bodies. Lastly, they violated another section of the army field manual when the jeep drove over the dead body. Section 27-10 of the Army Field manual states that maltreatment of dead bodies is a war crime. Not only did they  absorb over the body, but they even laughed about it when one of the gunners mentioned it. According to Huffington post, they said that Manning had gone to his chain of  call for and asked them to  canvas the video and other videos but ultimately refused. They also mention that he was obliged to do so. The Huffington Post states,Enshrined in the US Army  up to(p) Schedule No. 27-1 is the obligation to report all violations of the law of war. At his guilty plea hearing, Manning explained that he had gone to his chain of command and asked them to  analyse the Collateral Murder video and other war porn, but his    superiors refused. I was disturbed by the response to injured children, Manning stated. He was also  daunted by the soldiers depicted in the video who seemed to not value human life by referring to their targets as dead bastards Huffington PostManning went through the proper chain of command in orderto fix the problem but ultimately was told to forget about it. Since Manningwas ordered not to reveal classified information that contains the war crimes,it should also be noted that it works  crime versa. Therefore, Manning had andperformed his legal  affair to reveal the war crimes (Huffington Post).In order for Manning to be found guilty under the Espionage act, the prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that he maliciously release those files to harm the United States. In court, Manning stated that he released the documents to spark debate about foreign policy in general as it applied to Iraq and Afghanistan. Mannings goal was to inform the public about what are government   -the people we elect to govern us- are doing. In this case, they are violating the military guidelines and Geneva conventions. The government also broke the law when they presumed that he was guilty before his trial had begun. President Obama commented on Manning saying that he broke the law before he was tried. Obama said,  We are a nation of laws He broke the law (The Guardian). Not only did Obama prounounce him guilty before his trial, but the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of staff, General Martin Dempsey, also said that he broke the law (Stars and Stripes). This poisoned the well and violated Article 37 of the Uniform code of Military Justice by unlawfully Influencing Action of Court(Truth out). Mannings lawyer tried to bring Obama to  show in this case, stating that it should be clear why he was needed as he influenced the courts decision. He said, The relevancy of these witnesses should be obvious. Each of these witnesses has provided statements that contradict those given by t   he OCA Original Classification Authority witnesses regarding the alleged damage caused by the unauthorized disclosures. Additionally, each of these witnesses is relevant in order to inquire into the issues of unlawful command influence and unlawful pretrial punishment in violation of Articles 13 and 37 of the UCMJ. Huffington PostIn Conclusion, the author believes that despite the fact Manning broke the rules, the people have to recognize that the rules are very contradictory. Manning has a duty to report all war crimes and tried to report it to his superiors but ultimately they refused. Should his moral obligation end there? It is the authors belief that he put morality over legality and thus should be noted. His obligation is report war crimes and not listen to unlawful orders. By not  account the crime is to follow an unlawful order and should be recognized. Does this mean that Manning should serve no time? The author believes that regardless of Mannings intent, he still acted re   cklessly by releasing the files and how he released them. However, the time he served before the trial should have been his sentence after all the cruelty he had received. By definition Manning is a hero as thought through adversity by challenging the United States government and sacrificed himself so that the people could know the True Cost of WarCONCLUSIONIn conclusion, the author believes that both Snowden andManning are innocent. Both Snowden and Manning put themselves through adversityfor the greater good. In Snowdens case he had to leave his home and was on therun from the American government because he leaked information about the masssurveillance going on in America. Similarly, Manning received 35 years inprison, torture from his government because she released information pertainingto The Cost of War. The Stare Decisis in this case would be thenuremberg trials of WWII. The Nuremberg trials brought up that even ifsomething is legal that it does not make it moral. This is a c   ase of positivevs. natural law. Natural law says that there is a morality in which law is to devise and if it morality does not reflect the law then it considered unjust.Positive law states that what is legal is moral. Mostly positive law was usedthroughout the 20th century until the Nazi regime happened. REFERENCESS. (n.d.). Bradley Manning Prosecution Incurably Infectedby Government Misconduct. Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttp//www.truth-out.org/news/item/8039-bradley-manning-prosecution-incurably-infected-by-government-misconduct/news/item/14973142023401&action=collapse_widget&id=0&data=W. (2010, April 03). Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttps//www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rXPrfnU3G0&t=50 U.S. Code  1861  Access to certain business recordsfor foreign intelligence and international terrorism investigations. (n.d.).Retrieved June 12, 2017, from https//www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/50/1861Chumley, C. K. (2013, July 02). Donald Trump on EdwardSnowden Kill the traitor. Retrieved June 12,    2017, fromhttp//www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/jul/2/donald-trump-edward-snowden-kill-traitor/Cohn, M. (2013, June 05). Bradley Mannings Legal Duty to spoil War Crimes. Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttp//www.huffingtonpost.com/marjorie-cohn/bradley-mannings-legal-du_b_3390416.htmlCohn, M. (2013, June 05). Bradley Mannings Legal Duty toExpose War Crimes. Retrieved June 12, 2017, from http//www.huffingtonpost.com/marjorie-cohn/bradley-mannings-legal-du_b_3390416.htmlFindLaws United States  ten percent Circuit case and opinions.(n.d.). Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttp//caselaw.findlaw.com/us-10th-circuit/1719511.htmlGallagher, R. (2013, October 29). U.S. Lawmakers LaunchAssault on NSA Domestic Snooping. Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttp//www.slate.com/blogs/future_tense/2013/10/29/sensenbrenner_and_leahy_s_usa_freedom_act_seeks_to_curb_nsa_domestic_spying.htmlGreenberg, A. (2013, December 20). An NSA CoworkerRemembers The Real Edward Snowden A Genius Among Geniuses Retrieved June    12,2017, fromhttps//www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2013/12/16/an-nsa-coworker-remembers-the-real-edward-snowden-a-genius-among-geniuses/791efdd9784eL. (2016, November 14). Lybio. Retrieved June 12, 2017,fromhttp//lybio.net/amnesty-international-edward-snowden-write-for-rights/people/Nakashima, E. (n.d.). Bradley Manning is at the center ofthe WikiLeaks controversy. But who is he? Retrieved June 12, 2017, from https//www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/ powder magazine/who-is-wikileaks-suspect-bradley-manning/2011/04/16/AFMwBmrF_print.htmlPilkington, E. (2012, March 12). Bradley Mannings treatmentwas cruel and inhuman, UN torture chief rules. Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttps//www.theguardian.com/world/2012/mar/12/bradley-manning-cruel-inhuman-treatment-unPilkington, E. (2013, February 28). Manning plea statementAmericans had a right to know true cost of war Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttps//www.theguardian.com/world/2013/feb/28/bradley-manning-trial-plea-statementN. (n.d.). Snow   den-Interview Transcript (Seite 3).Retrieved June 12, 2017, fromhttp//www.ndr.de/nachrichten/netzwelt/snowden277_page-3.htmlTate, J. (2013,  expansive 14). Manning apologizes, says he hurtthe United States by giving documents to WikiLeaks. 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