Ex-CIA Boss Resigns From Harvard After Chelsea Manning Hire

Former CIA Acting Director Michael Morell announced his resignation Thursday as a senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School after the university hired Chelsea Manning as a visiting fellow.

“Unfortunately, I cannot be part of an organization – The Kennedy School – that honors a convicted felon and leaker of classified information, Ms. Chelsea Manning, by inviting her to be a Visiting Fellow at the Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics,” Morell wrote in a letter addressed to Harvard Kennedy School Dean Douglas Elmendorf.

“Ms. Manning was found guilty of 17 serious crimes, including six counts of espionage, for leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents to Wikileaks, an entity that CIA Director Mike Pompeo says operates like an adversarial foreign intelligence service.”

Former Mossad Director Tamir Pardo Speaks At Harvard Former Mossad Director Tamir Pardo Speaks At Harvard

Former CIA Director Michael Morell speaks at a forum at Harvard University on May 3, 2016. Paul Marotta / Getty Images, file

Morrell’s letter stressed that he does not take issue with Manning’s gender identity and is against President Trump’s ban on transgender service members.

“It is important to note that I fully support Ms. Manning’s rights as a transgender American, including the right to serve our country in the US military,” Morell wrote. “But it is my right, indeed my duty, to argue that the School’s decision is wholly inappropriate and to protest it by resigning from the Kennedy School.”

Manning wasn’t the only person announced as a visiting fellow this week. Harvard University also announced former White House spokesman Sean Spicer was appointed.

Image: Chelsea Manning's first photo after being releasedfrom prison Image: Chelsea Manning's first photo after being releasedfrom prison

Chelsea Manning’s first photo after being released from prison. Tim Travers Hawkins / via Chelsea Manning

“Broadening the range and depth of opportunity for students to hear from and engage with experts, leaders and policy-shapers is a cornerstone of the Institute of Politics,” Bill Delhunt, acting director of the institute at the Harvard Kennedy School, said. “We welcome the breadth of thought-provoking viewpoints on race, gender, politics and the media.”

In a phone conversation with NBC News, Manning’s lead counsel on appeal, Nancy Hollander, disputed Morell’s claims that Manning put the nation in danger.

“There’s a quote from Secretary of Defense [Robert] Gates about how people don’t work with the U.S. because they like us or because they trust us, but because they fear us and respect us,” she said. “So maybe at most, the U.S. was embarrassed. They never identified a single person who was harmed.”

“I think it’s terrific,” Hollander said of Manning’s appointment at Harvard. “I think it’s terrific for Chelsea and for Harvard and for the students. Of course she’s not posing harm to anybody anywhere. She did a public service.”

The Harvard Kennedy School has not yet returned a request for comment from NBC News.

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