I'm sure we can all agree that he doesn't deserve a price on his head. That's equating him to ACTUAL terrorists... you know, the kind that willfully and intentionally try and kill people?
There are those who believe that the leaks earlier this year naming civil informants in Afghanistan is just as bad.[/QUOTE]
So let me get this straight... you believe that the guy who accidentally revealed the names of civil informants in Afghanistan due to an honest oversight (and he's admitted that it was a mistake not to redact those) is as bad as the guys who
train, finance, arm, and order extremist groups to kill Americans, Israelis, and anyone who stands in their way? That's not just dishonest... that's insane.[/QUOTE]
So you're saying that a person who aids and abets terrorists by providing them the means of eliminating spies is better than the terrorist that uses that information?
Sure, everything is on a scale, but your argument seems to suggest that the person who does that should not come under condemnation.
There's a difference between an "honest mistake" and releasing classified materials that directly results in murder of those trying to help us. At best he was grossly negligent.
It isn't an issue of standing idly by while a mugger kills their victim. He acted of his own accord to push information that leads the mugger to kill their victim.
Saying that he's sorry, and that he didn't really mean to release some of that information doesn't absolve him of the fact that his actions helped terrorists more than they helped anyone else.