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Some More CRS Reports

Some notable new reports of the Congressional Research Service include the following: “The Cost of Iraq, Afghanistan, and Other Global War on Terror Operations Since 9/11” (pdf), April 24, 2006. “Arab League Boycott of Israel” (pdf), April 19, 2006. “U.S. Special Operations Forces (SOF): Background and Issues for Congress” (pdf), updated April 17, 2006. “Sudan: […]

04.28.06 | 1 min read
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Archive Audit Suggests Overclassification is Rampant

A large fraction of the documents that were withdrawn from public access at the National Archives on purported national security grounds over the past several years did not meet the standard for classification and should not have been removed, according to an official audit of the activity released yesterday. “This audit identified a significant number […]

04.27.06 | 2 min read
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“Secret” 1970 Intelligence Budget Revealed

In 1970, the U.S. spent $6 billion on intelligence, according to a newly published account of a meeting that President Richard M. Nixon held with his Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board in July 1970. “The President stated that the US is spending $6 billion per year on intelligence and deserves to receive a lot more for […]

04.27.06 | 2 min read
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House Limits Debate on Largest Intelligence Budget Ever

House Republicans foreclosed Democratic efforts to offer amendments on warrantless domestic surveillance and other controversial intelligence topics when the FY 2007 Intelligence Authorization Act was brought to the floor yesterday. Instead, the House approved by a vote of 327-96 what Rep. Leonard Boswell (R-Iowa) described as “the largest intelligence budget in our history.” Democratic amendments, […]

04.27.06 | 1 min read
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Feinstein Bill Seeks Congressional Notice of Declassification

In the Senate, Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) yesterday introduced a bill to require the White House to notify Congress when it declassifies intelligence information. The bill was prompted by recent reports that the President selectively authorized certain disclosures by Vice Presidential aide Scooter Libby without informing the originating agency or other interested persons that the […]

04.27.06 | 1 min read
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Selected CRS Reports

Some recent reports of the Congressional Research Service obtained by Secrecy News include the following: “Renditions: Constraints Imposed by Laws on Torture” (pdf), updated April 5, 2006. “Treatment of ‘Battlefield Detainees’ in the War on Terrorism” (pdf), updated March 27, 2006. “Polygraph Use by the Department of Energy: Issues for Congress” (pdf), updated April 7, […]

04.27.06 | 1 min read
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Intelligence Fusion Centers Emerge Across the U.S.

The contours of the U.S. intelligence bureaucracy are expanding to include dozens of new “intelligence fusion centers” based around the country. An intelligence fusion center is “a collaborative effort of two or more agencies that provide resources, expertise, and/or information to the center with the goal of maximizing the ability to detect, prevent, apprehend, and […]

04.25.06 | 2 min read
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ODNI Pursues Intelligence Compensation Reform

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is attempting to revamp the compensation system for intelligence personnel to emphasize “pay for performance” rather than duration of employment. But it is considered a delicate, even “potentially destructive” task. “There can be no doubt that pay modernization is coming to the IC,” wrote DDNI Michael Hayden […]

04.25.06 | 1 min read
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House Poised to Grant Arrest Powers to CIA, NSA

The House version of the 2007 intelligence authorization bill would grant CIA and NSA security personnel the authority to make arrests for “any felony” committed in their presence, no matter how remote from the foreign intelligence mission it might be, the Baltimore Sun reported today. Section 423 of H.R. 5020 “appears…to grant to CIA security […]

04.25.06 | 1 min read
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Judging Secrets: The Role of the Courts

Federal courts could, and should, play a more effective role in curtailing unnecessary government secrecy, argues Meredith Fuchs, general counsel at the National Security Archive, in a splendid new law review article. “All too often, courts easily accept the argument that the executive needs unquestioning adherence to its judgments and that the court is not […]

04.25.06 | 1 min read
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Foreign Influence, Israel and the Security Clearance Process

Many people who have tangled with the security clearance system have found it bafflingly inconsistent and unpredictable. New research (pdf) on the role of foreign influence in security clearance disputes, particularly those involving Israel, finds an empirical basis for that perception. According to official guidelines for granting security clearances for access to classified information, foreign […]

04.25.06 | 2 min read
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A Flutter Over Air Force One Schematics

When the San Francisco Chronicle reported April 8 that information about the design and layout of the Presidential aircraft Air Force One was available on the world wide web, it generated a spasm of anxiety in some quarters. The anxiety was magnified by a follow-on story in the Chronicle April 19, reprinted in the Pentagon […]

04.20.06 | 2 min read
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