April 4, 2026

7 thoughts on “Open Letter to Nobel Laureates: A Plea to Exonerate Wikileaks’ Assange and Manning

  1. Hi ,
    It is obvious that this level is above ,normal comments,the reason why no one has even tried to put a step forward.In one way its refreshing to note ,most comments are local ,diversity is too much for the “odiangabuks” Manning and Assange are crusaders who have few peers.The debate required pales others in this forum.
    I am not surprised that no one is responding cause ,its simply too deep for most folks.
    Ean Wuod Luo

  2. We are living in times of fear ,Fear of ones life ,fear of being exposed .Take Eu countries being Americans Underdogs . Where nobody is criticising USA Impunity nobody talking or defending both Manning and Assange for fear of the Dominant USA.We are living in time of fear .Democracy is dying slowly every where better days were during Cold-war -Era. Nobel Price is loosing credibility hence being selective.

  3. A good observation Wuod Luo. Where is Ethical Kenyan who thinks many commentators are semi-illiterate?

  4. There can be no doubt that in 2012, the foreign policy of the United States of America is no longer based upon diplomacy, but rather, skulduggery, bullying, blackmail, belligerence, interference, supporting terrorists and breaching every norm in the book of international law…. a demonic list which forms the political epitaph of Hillary Clinton.

    The United States of America has joined its FUKUS Axis partners France and the UK (together with wannabe Ottoman imperialist Turkey and the Gulf Cooperation Council) in recognising the Syrian opposition as the only “legitimate representative” of the Syrian people.

    For a start, how about asking the Syrian people? Secondly, the representative of the Syrian people under international law is the Syrian Government led by His Excellency President Bashar al-Assad. Thirdly who is the President of the United States of America to announce what is, or is not, the legitimate representative of a sovereign nation? Fourthly, why is the United States of America joining its FUKUS Axis allies in recognising terrorists?

    Terrorists? Yes, you know, like the LIFG, supported by the UK government in Libya while still on the proscribed list of the Foreign and Commonwealth office as pointed out in this column at the time, and as sent as documentary evidence to the FCO itself with the question why, if the Foreign Secretary William Jefferson Hague was aware that the LIFG was on the FCO’s own proscribed list, and supporting this group knowingly, was he not summarily arrested for breaking his own, and British, law?

    Print version Font Size Send to friend The answer, predictably, was an extremely weak, red-faced rhetorical question for an answer, starting, “How about….?” and a stupid question attached.

    And why, in Syria, is the United States of America recognising terrorists? Does President Obama not know that the “legitimate representative” he supports has been responsible for the murder of thousands of people? Does President Obama not know that his “legitimate representative” has committed unspeakable and demonic acts of torture, kidnapping, summary executions and sodomy? Does President Obama not know that his “legitimate representative” attacked a school recently with military hardware?

    Does President Obama not know that his “legitimate representative” today launched a terrorist attack in the centre of Damascus? Does President Obama not know that his “legitimate representative” is conducting abductions and kidnappings and asking for ransom to finance its evil deeds?

    The list can go on and on and on as indeed it did in Libya, a country destroyed and thrown back into a quagmire of sectarian violence which is due to last for decades, and destabilise North Africa. The bottom line is, in a word, interference, not diplomacy and the philosophy is not one of claiming the moral high ground – that bullshit was exposed when NATO started lying to the Warsaw Pact – but rather, implementing the policies of the lobbies which control the NATO member states.

    The conclusion is that the United States of America is not a respectable member of the international community. The USA and its poodle states are cowardly pariahs acting in a pack for security and attacking sovereign nations imposing democracy from 30,000 feet and implementing it using terrorists.

    Like all playground bullies, they think they can dish it out but when it comes back and smashes them square in the face, they run sobbing like the snivelling cowards they are. The moral high ground in this way totally taken away from them, no longer can they complain about terrorists or terrorism when they themselves are part of the problem and not the solution.

    It becomes ever clearer that a New World Order is being formed around the cornerstone of BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, China) and like-minded nations which favour debate, discussion and dialogue as their modus operandi.

    What a disgusting comment on the likes of Obama, Hague, Cameron, Clinton, their revolting Napoleonic friends and the sickening cowards which implement their policies.

    Timothy Bancroft-Hinchey

    Pravda.Ru

  5. On the Listening Post this week: Wikileaks suspect Bradley Manning versus the US government – but where was the media? Plus, a look at Thailand’s controversial lese majeste law.

    It was one of the biggest stories of 2010. Millions of classified US government documents leaked onto the internet through the Wikileaks website. Although it made the name of the site founder Julian Assange, the man accused of actually giving him the material is rather less well known. That man, US soldier Bradley Manning, is currently in a US prison awaiting trial over the case.

    Of the 22 charges against Bradley Manning, the most serious include revealing classified information to unauthorised persons, violating orders and aiding the enemy. That last charge could lead to life imprisonment for the 25 year-old.

    Two weeks ago, he spoke publicly for the first time in over two years in a pre-trial hearing where he claimed he was treated unlawfully whilst being held in military custody. This should have been an easy story for the media – an American whistleblower allegedly the source of many of the most important stories of the past two years speaking for the first time.

    But the coverage, especially in the US, has been surprisingly sparse; it is conspicuous by its absence not least in the New York Times. Despite partnering Wikileaks on the story, they did not send anyone to cover the event preferring to use agency copy. Listening Post examines Manning’s treatment by the media.

    In this week’s Newsbytes: Argentina’s media giant Clarin has managed to hold out a little longer against the government’s attempts to break up their empire; a South Sudanese journalist with a reputation for criticising the government there has been shot dead outside his home; the US based Committee to Protect Journalists records 232 of them in its annual survey with Turkey, Iran and China taking the top three places in that order; and, it turns out one US journalist has been making up sources and quotes for the last 14 years at the Cape Cod Times.

    Our feature this week is on Thailand. Recently thousands of Thais gathered in Bangkok to mark the 85th birthday of their monarch, King Bhumibol Adulyadej. The monarchy has great importance in Thai life, so much so that a 100-year-old law exists making it a crime to say or write anything deemed offensive about the royal family.

    The lese majeste law is not just a symbolic relic though; it has become a political weapon to be used with increasing frequency. From a handful of cases six years ago, there has been a steep rise as 2010 saw almost 500 cases.

    Finally, one for the computer geeks out there – the story of the daddy of all computer images, the humble GIF. The famous image format is 25-years-old this week and we found this fun little video celebrating its birthday. ‘A Short History of the GIF’ chronicles the format’s journey from the late 1980’s through to today’s multi-platform media world using gif animations – and it is our video of the week.

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