I've never understood how 'declassified' can mean 'half of it is blacked out but here ya go!' Yes, I understand that there are other classified documents it can refer to, but if you have to go so far as to literally black out an entire half-page paragraph how can you be sure they're not just redacting everything that incriminates them more? What's the point?
Like I said, I didn't spend long with it, but it seemed to me that the core of the document (eg, what wasn't redacted) was the incriminating part. Likely active procedures that were found to be legal probably should stay secret. Procedures were the NSA was found to be in breach of the law are discussed in the plain text.
A conservative view of the releases here. Carrie was the one who thought Obama's reforms were unneeded and too much, so take her article with that in mind (although if you read it to the end you won't be left with any doubts about her view of things...). Her take on the reason and likely results of the releases;
don’t like it one bit. I can imagine at least two possible reasons for the release: either the government knows that more leaks are coming and is trying to get ahead of the newspapers, or, it felt compelled to push back against the story line that the FISA Court is just a shadow of a real court. But I hope it is clear that the critics of surveillance activities only see transparency as the first step in a longer fight. The strategy is a one-two punch. The first punch is transparency. The second is to scale back or eliminate our national security surveillance capabilities altogether. Don’t take my word for it, an activist from the Electronic Frontier Foundation said as much in a discussion I took part in on KCRW’s show “To the Point” yesterday.
I don't think this is entirely inaccurate, although I do disagree with the idea that these releases are a bad idea. I think this strengthens the case for further restrictions on the NSA's actions - including in my mind - but at the same time it does show that the FISC is at least a viable model for such restrictions and isn't the toothless rubber stamp it's been accused of being. Given the first is pretty universally assumed right now (at least among those paying attention) achieving the latter even in a limited form is a worthwhile goal for the government.
Lawfare also have a more detailed series on the documents from Witts.
1,
2,
3,
4. Part 2 addresses the October ruling, which is the big issue here. If you want to see how incriminating the documents are, read that part. Part 3 is about the government's response to that ruling in the following months.
Bradley Manning has come out as transgendered, and wishes to be refereed to as Chelsea.
Someone tell me they punked the NY times. Also on CBS. And CNN. And Washington post.
You heard it here first folks.
For the record, this was semi-public knowledge for a while. There was a concious decision made not to make it an issue on the part of a lot of people who knew. One I agreed with and went along with.
Back in June of 2010 Wired released
chat logs between Manning and Adrian Lamo. These were heavily redacted. A lot of people complained about that, believing it was protecting Lamo. So a year later they released
the whole things. They had been protecting Lamo, but also had removed multiple references to Manning's desire to transition. Honestly, it's those logs that have given me the most sympathy for Manning and always said she should have only received time served as a sentence. And that make me hope she can get a commutation from Obama once his appeals are exhausted. They are fucking heartbreaking.
EDIT: Pronouns. How do they work.