Chelsea Manning To Get Initial Gender-Identity Treatment

National security leaker Chelsea Manning can get initial treatment for a gender-identity condition from the military after the Bureau of Prisons rejected the Army's request to accept her transfer from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to a civilian facility, according to The Associated Press.

Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has approved the Army's recommendation to keep the Army private in military custody and start a rudimentary level of gender treatment, a defense official said Thursday, the AP reported.

Defense officials have said the Army doesn't have the medical expertise needed to give Manning the best treatment, according to the AP.

Manning has been diagnosed with gender dysphoria, the sense of being a woman in a man's body with the Army tried to work out a plan to transfer Manning to a federal prison where she could get better treatment, the AP reported.

Officials said Thursday that federal authorities refused the proposal. Officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly by name, according to the AP.

The initial gender treatments provided by the military could include allowing Manning to wear some female undergarments and also possibly provide some hormone treatments, the AP reported.

The decision raises a number of questions about what level of treatment Manning will be able to get and at what point she would have to be transferred from the all-male prison to a female facility, according to the AP.

In May, Manning's lawyer, David Coombs, had contended that civilian prisons were not as safe as military facilities. In a statement, he had said, "It is common knowledge that the federal prison system cannot guarantee the safety and security of Chelsea in the way that the military prison system can," the AP reported.

"It has been almost a year since we first filed our request for adequate medical care," Coombs said, according to the AP. "I am hopeful that when the Army says it will start a 'rudimentary level' of treatment that this means hormone replacement therapy."

If hormone therapy is not provided, he said he will have to take "appropriate legal action to ensure Chelsea finally receives the medical treatment she deserves and is entitled to under the law," the AP reported.

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