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Presidential Claims of Executive Privilege, and More from CRS

Noteworthy new reports from the Congressional Research Service that have not been made readily available to the public include the following (all pdf). “Africa Command: U.S. Strategic Interests and the Role of the U.S. Military in Africa,” updated March 10, 2008. “High Altitude Electromagnetic Pulse (HEMP) and High Power Microwave (HPM) Devices: Threat Assessments,” updated […]

04.28.08 | 1 min read
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Global Risk
Blog
Russian Nuclear Missile Submarine Patrols Decrease Again

By Hans M. Kristensen The number of deterrence patrols conducted by Russia’s 11 nuclear-powered ballistic missiles submarines (SSBNs) decreased to only three in 2007 from five in 2006, according to our latest Nuclear Notebook published in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. In comparison, U.S. SSBNs conducted 54 patrols in 2007, more than three times […]

04.28.08 | 3 min read
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Global Risk
Blog
New Chinese SSBN Deploys to Hainan Island

By Hans M. Kristensen The Chinese navy has deployed a Jin-class (Type 094) ballistic missile submarine to a new base near Yulin on Hainan Island on the South China Sea, according to a satellite image obtained by FAS. The image shows the submarine moored at a pier close to a large sea-entrance to an underground […]

04.24.08 | 5 min read
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Global Risk
Blog
The Good Old Days: The military budget is out of control

The military budget is out of control. Not in the sense of the mantra of “waste, fraud, and abuse.” That is, in fact, a tiny slice of the enormous U.S. military spending. No, the budget is out of control in the sense that spending on the military is no longer subject to meaningful political review. […]

04.23.08 | 1 min read
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FAS
Blog
National Security and the Presidential Transition

“The 2008-2009 election marks the first presidential transition in the post-9/11 era, and is of concern to many national security observers,” a new report (pdf) from the Congressional Research Service says. “While changes in administration during U.S. involvement in national security related activities are not unique to the 2008-2009 election, many observers suggest that the […]

04.22.08 | 2 min read
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FAS
Blog
A Primer on Science Policy, and More from CRS

The basic structures and procedures of science and technology policymaking are presented in detail in a new report from the Congressional Research Service. See “Science and Technology Policymaking: A Primer” (pdf), April 18, 2008. Other noteworthy new reports from the Congressional Research Service that have not been made readily available online include the following (all […]

04.22.08 | 1 min read
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FAS
Blog
National Security Letters and Secret Law

The implications of the expanded use of “national security letters” by the FBI and other agencies to compel disclosure of business record information will be explored in a hearing tomorrow before the Senate Judiciary Committee. For an introduction to the subject see “National Security Letters in Foreign Intelligence Investigations: Legal Background and Recent Amendments” (pdf), […]

04.22.08 | 1 min read
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Global Risk
Blog
Ben Stein Is Very, Very Wrong: Problems with Expelled: No Intelligence Allowed

Wolfgang Pauli is a legendary figure among physicists. He is remembered for having both one of the greatest minds of the twentieth century and one of its sharpest tongues. One student’s paper he dismissed by saying: That’s not right; it isn’t even wrong. (Or words to that effect in German; Pauli was Viennese.) If a […]

04.18.08 | 2 min read
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FAS
Blog
Stage Set for Transfer of CIA Records to National Archives

A memorandum of understanding (pdf) signed this month by the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and the National Archivist is expected to enable the transfer of many permanently valuable historical CIA records that are 50 years old or older to the custody of the National Archives (NARA), officials of both agencies said today. Up […]

04.17.08 | 2 min read
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FAS
Blog
A New ISOO Director, and Various Items

William J. Bosanko was formally named this week as the fourth director of the Information Security Oversight Offfice, the executive branch agency that is responsible for oversight of national security classification and declassification policy government-wide. A ten-year veteran of the ISOO staff, Mr. Bosanko shares an understanding of the ideals and the realities of classification […]

04.17.08 | 2 min read
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FAS
Blog
War Crimes and Persian Gulf Weather

Prodded by a request from the Federation of American Scientists, the U.S. Marine Corps recently restored online public access to many of its doctrinal publications, Federal Computer Week reported on March 27. One of those Marine Corps documents addresses war crimes (pdf), describing prohibited actions and the need to prevent them. “While we Marines fight […]

04.17.08 | 1 min read
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FAS
Blog
AIPAC Defendants Say Testimony from ISOO’s Leonard is Crucial

Testimony from classification expert J. William Leonard, the former director of the Information Security Oversight Office, will “seriously undercut the government’s case” against two former officials of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) who are charged with unlawful receipt and transmission of classified information, defense attorneys argued in a dramatic new pleading (pdf) urging […]

04.16.08 | 3 min read
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