US Army Pfc. Bradley Manning disclosed potentially damaging classified information in at least 117 of the more than 250,000 US State Department cables he has acknowledged sending to WikiLeaks, according to evidence prosecutors presented at his court-martial.
The cables published on the website of the anti-secrecy organisation in late 2010 contained protected information about foreign governments; foreign relations; US military activities; scientific, technological or economic matters; and vulnerabilities in America’s infrastructure, a State Department classification expert said.
Manning said in a courtroom statement in February that since the cables were labelled for wide distribution within the government, he believed that “the vast majority” of them were not classified, even though they were on a computer network reserved for classified material.
He contends the cables revealed secret pacts and duplicity that, while possibly embarrassing, should be publicly exposed.
In written testimony read aloud by a prosecutor, classification expert Nicholas Murphy listed 96 cables that he said had been properly classified as “confidential” and 21 properly classified as “secret.”
His testimony revealed for the first time the specific cables that are the basis for a federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act charge that is among 21 counts the former intelligence analyst faces.
The globe-spanning reports include at least six sent from the US embassy in Baghdad from 2006 to 2009. One from Jan. 5, 2007, reported that Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki “is increasingly willing to allow targeted military action against elements of Moqtada al-Sadr’s Jaish al-Mahdi militia and other Sadr organisations.”
A confidential December 14, 2007, cable from the US embassy in Moscow reported on a consensus among Russian political observers on “a need for the Kremlin to reform itself and reverse a pendulum that has swung too far in favour of state authority.”
Prosecutors began presenting testimony about the cables on Wednesday when a former State Department official testified on cross-examination that the agency’s computer network would have anyone with Manning’s top-secret security clearance unrestricted access to the cables. The government alleges he stole them.
Earlier yesterday, the military judge ruled that Manning’s lawyers can offer evidence contradicting the government’s assertion that he revealed classified information in a leaked battlefield video from Iraq.