News

Actions

Obama expected to defend Manning decision at news conference

Posted at 9:00 AM, Jan 18, 2017
and last updated 2017-01-18 15:10:11-05
President Barack Obama is expected to defend his decision to shorten the sentence of convicted leaker Chelsea Manning when he holds his final news conference on Wednesday, two days before his second term ends.
 
Manning was among 273 people granted clemency Tuesday by Obama. 
 
The former Army intelligence analyst asked Obama last November to commute her 35-year sentence for giving classified government and military documents to the WikiLeaks website. Manning, who was known as Bradley Manning at the time of her 2010 arrest, is more than six years into the sentence. She is to be released from prison in May.
 
Republicans blasted the decision to commute Manning's sentence, with House Speaker Paul Ryan calling it "outrageous" and saying Obama had set a "dangerous precedent" that anyone guilty of compromising U.S. national security will no longer have to pay for their crimes.
 
White House press secretary Josh Earnest previewed Obama's line of defense, saying in television interviews Wednesday morning that the amount of time Manning had served was consistent with sentences imposed on others found guilty of committing similar crimes.
 
Earnest also took issue with Obama's GOP critics, noting their support for President-elect Donald Trump, who recently appeared to side with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. The website last year released thousands of hacked emails belonging to the chairman of Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential campaign, and to the Democratic National Committee.
 
U.S. intelligence agencies later concluded that Russia was behind the hacking because it wanted to influence the election to benefit Trump.
 
One name missing from the list of pardons and commutations the White House announced Tuesday is U.S. Army Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl. The former prisoner of war is accused of endangering comrades by walking off his post in Afghanistan, and has asked Obama for a pardon.
 
A pardon would allow Bergdahl to avert a military trial scheduled for April. He faces charges of desertion and misbehavior before the enemy. The misbehavior charge carries a maximum penalty of life in prison.
 
Obama's spokesman declined to comment when asked Wednesday about Bergdahl.
 
"If we have news on this, then that's news that President Obama will make," Earnest said.
 
At the news conference, Obama is also expected to talk about his vision for the country after he is no longer president, and his commitment to working closely with the incoming Trump administration, Earnest said.