Share

Review of Government Secrecy Ordered

by: Carrie Johnson  |  The Washington Post

photo
United States National Security Adviser Gen. James L. Jones (retired). Jones was asked by Obama to canvas executive branch officials about their procedures for handling classified material. (Photo: Getty Images)

    Obama names Holder, Napolitano to lead drive for "unprecedented level of openness"

    President Obama directed his national security adviser and senior Cabinet officials yesterday to examine whether the government keeps too much information secret.

    In a memo, Obama acknowledged that too many documents have been kept from the public eye for years and affirmed that he remains "committed to operating with an unprecedented level of openness."

    Obama asked national security adviser James L. Jones to canvas executive branch officials about their procedures for handling classified information and to make recommendations about better information sharing.

    The president also said that turf battles and problems with technology continue to pose obstacles to disseminating unclassified national security information among federal agencies with their partners in states and the private sector.

    To help clear the path, Obama created a task force yesterday to study that and related issues for 90 days, putting Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. and Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano at the helm.

    Government officials representing a broad swath of agencies will review procedures for labeling and sharing sensitive information to make sure that the needs of law enforcement, privacy and civil liberties "strike the proper balance," the memo said.

    Obama also proposed a National Declassification Center to streamline procedures for releasing classified information, when appropriate, under the guidance of the archivist of the United States. The broad initiative is in line with an executive order issued by Obama on Jan. 21, when he promised to move forward with "a presumption in favor of openness."

    Instructions to Jones made specific reference to Bush administration orders that delayed automatic declassification dates, eliminated a presumption of declassification that dated from the Clinton administration, and reclassified some information that had already been made public.

    Obama asked for recommendations on "the possible restoration of the presumption against classification" that would preclude making something secret where there was "significant doubt" about the need to do so. It also raised the possibility of a "prohibition of reclassification of material that has been declassified and released to the public under proper authority."

    Steven Aftergood, director of the Project on Government Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, praised the move as a way to "set the wheels in motion."

    "This is music to the ears of many of us," Aftergood said, "but the hard work remains to be done - how to translate these goals into policies."

--------    

    Staff writer Karen DeYoung contributed to this report.

  

»


Comments

This is a moderated forum.  It may take a little while for comments to go live. Be civil and on-topic, don't threaten or advocate violence, please keep it under 300 words. Thanks for participating.

If Obama wants transparency,

If Obama wants transparency, shouldn't he start by producing his long-form birth certificate to show he is Constitutionally eligible to serve as president? His short-form "certificate of live birth" does not show a hospital or attending physician, and some charge that people at that time could get a short form birth certificate in Hawaii without being born in Hawaii. That seems like a long shot to me, except for the fact that Obama has been so elusive about his long form birth certificate. It would be easy to dispel the rumors. McCain had a Congressional hearing to prove his eligibility, but Obama did not.

Is there even any doubt

Is there even any doubt about the question? Of course the US government keeps too many "secrets". It's been doing this for several generations to cover its posterior.

"President Obama directed

"President Obama directed his national security adviser and senior Cabinet officials yesterday to examine whether the government keeps too much information secret." Let's see if I got this right: he wants the government to decide if it's own activities are too secretive or not. That's like wanting the US military to give us an accurate count of the Iraqi citizens it has murdered with its white phosphorous and cluster bombs. Listen to Maxwell Jordan sometime on Youtube. That is my response to this remarkable idiocy.

EXCELLENT! Openness and

EXCELLENT! Openness and transparency are a requirement of a democracy. Now, we just need to add full ACCOUNTABILITY for illegal acts. We WERE a nation of laws until the secret administration of the Bush / Cheney monarchy. THAT needs to change and we need to implement the Special Prosecutors Full Employment Act, OMHO.

Secret Government Rules USA.

Secret Government Rules USA. If we were to see this headline in every news outlet in America,we might feign surprise,yet every day government seeks to hide and classify everything it can get away with. Even in cities where the so-called "Sunshine Ordinances" have been enacted by voters, the mayors and supervisors(Gavin are you listening?) bend and break open meeting laws.Even John Lennon had a secret 900 page dossier rigidly held by the FBI,in their sweaty hands,for national security reasons. No fly lists are simply Secret Gov at work,generating hit-lists on their whim.It's time to bust these doors open and grab these petty sweating bureaucrats and find out what they are hiding from. Like tax money financed pedophiles they are worried more about the truth than anything their walls of "security" may prevent from happening.Free information from the clasp of these fear mongers in public office and we will see the rats abandoning their oh-so-pure offices of deceit paid for by our taxes. Their only enemy is us:We the People!