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Identity Theft, and More from CRS

Noteworthy new reports from the Congressional Research Service obtained by Secrecy News include the following (all pdf). “Mexico’s Drug-Related Violence,” May 27, 2009. “The 2009 Influenza A(H1N1) ‘Swine Flu’ Outbreak: U.S. Responses to Global Human Cases,” May 26, 2009. “The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11,” updated May […]

06.08.09 | 1 min read
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FAS
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Peter B. Versus the CIA

Employment disputes are all too common inside and outside of government, including at the CIA.  In one pending lawsuit, a former CIA employee claimed that the Agency improperly terminated his employment and communicated negative information about him to another prospective employer, thereby violating his rights. In this case, however, the name of the aggrieved employee […]

06.08.09 | 1 min read
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FAS
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Online Transparency Discussions Move Forward

An innovative White House attempt to engage the interested public in the development of government policy on openness and transparency is moving briskly and, so far, productively. An initial online brainstorming session attracted over 98,000 visits and generated some 2,450 “ideas” for increasing public access to government information, over 11,000 comments on those ideas, and […]

06.04.09 | 2 min read
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A Few Intelligence Science Board Reports

There is “an astonishing number of groups and activities concurrently pursuing the subject” of information sharing, according to a newly disclosed 2004 report (pdf) of the Intelligence Science Board (ISB).  But those activities are not well coordinated.  “In effect, we aren’t even sharing information about information sharing.” The ISB is a little-known advisory panel that […]

06.04.09 | 1 min read
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The State Secrets Privilege, and More from CRS

The Congressional Research Service has prepared a new account of the state secrets privilege, which is used by the government to bar disclosure of certain national security information in the course of civil litigation.  While the CRS report contains nothing new, it is a detailed, dispassionate and fairly comprehensive account of the subject.  A copy […]

06.04.09 | 1 min read
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Global Risk
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A Chinese Seabased Nuclear Deterrent?

An article in USNI, which carries this photo of USS Hartford (SSN-768) damaged in a recent collision, discusses China’s ballistic missile submarines. By Hans M. Kristensen The magazine U.S. Naval Institute Proceedings has an interesting article about China’s nuclear ballistic missile submarines written by Andrew S. Erickson and Michael Chase from the U.S. Naval War […]

06.01.09 | 1 min read
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Obama Orders Review of Classification Policy

President Obama last week formally initiated a review of national security classification policy, directing the National Security Adviser to prepare recommendations for revising the current executive order on classification. “My Administration is committed to operating with an unprecedented level of openness,” the President wrote on May 27. “While the Government must be able to prevent […]

06.01.09 | 2 min read
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Secrecy Conceals Some Classification Costs

Following sharp increases in the first several years after 9/11, the total estimated costs of implementing the national security classification system seem to have leveled off at around $10 billion annually, according to a new report to the President (pdf) from the Information Security Oversight Office.  The total cost of protecting classified information in government […]

06.01.09 | 2 min read
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OSC Views Islam in Bolivia

The tiny Muslim community of Bolivia was surveyed in a recent report from the DNI Open Source Center.  The OSC report “is an overview of mosques, Islamic organizations, and religious leaders in Bolivia and their susceptibility to foreign Islamist influence.” Like many OSC products, this item has not been approved for public release.  A copy […]

06.01.09 | 1 min read
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A Profile of the Office of Legal Counsel

The organization, role and operation of the Office of Legal Counsel (OLC), which produces binding interpretations of the law for the executive branch, are usefully described in the Justice Department’s FY 2010 budget request (pdf). “OLC’s mission remains highly critical and urgent as the Department enters into a new era of responsibility confronting national security […]

06.01.09 | 1 min read
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FAS
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US Declares Nuclear Sites to the IAEA

A compilation of hundreds of U.S. nuclear sites and activities that were to be declared to the International Atomic Energy Agency by the United States was transmitted to Congress last month by President Obama. “The enclosed draft declaration lists each site, location, facility, and activity I intend to declare to the IAEA, and provides a […]

06.01.09 | 1 min read
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Global Risk
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North Korea’s Nuclear Test: Another Fizzle?

The North Korean nuclear test on May 25, 2009, was “heard” loud and clear around the world despite its apparent limited size. Detection of small, clandestine nuclear tests seems to work. . By Hans M. Kristensen The Korean Central News Agency reportedly has announced that North Korea “successfully conducted one more underground nuclear test on […]

05.25.09 | 1 min read
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