SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2011, Issue No. 105
November 14, 2011

Secrecy News Blog: http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/

A NEW INTELLIGENCE ORG ON CLIMATE CHANGE IS NEEDED, DSB SAYS

The U.S. intelligence community needs an organization that can assess the impacts of climate change on U.S. national security interests in an open and collaborative manner, according to a new report from the Defense Science Board (DSB).

The Director of National Intelligence should establish a new intelligence group "to concentrate on the effects of climate change on political and economic developments and their implications for U.S. national security," said the DSB report on "Trends and Implications of Climate Change for National and International Security."

The Central Intelligence Agency already has a Center on Climate Change and National Security. So why would the Intelligence Community need an entirely new organization to address the exact same set of issues?

One reason is that the role envisioned for the new organization is inconsistent with the practices of the CIA Center. So, for example, the new intelligence group would be expected to pursue cooperative relationships with others inside and outside of the U.S. government. It would also "report most of its products broadly within government and non-government communities," the DSB report said.

But the CIA Center, by unspoken contrast, does not report any of its climate change products broadly or allow public access to them. ("At CIA, Climate Change is a Secret," Secrecy News, September 22, 2011).

The CIA's unyielding approach to classification effectively negates the ability of its Center on Climate Change to interact with non-governmental organizations and researchers on an unclassified basis. Since, as the DSB noted, much of the relevant expertise on climate change lies "outside the government [in] universities, the private sector, and NGOs," the CIA's blanket secrecy policy is a potentially disabling condition.

In fact, the DSB report said, the secretive approach favored by CIA is actually counterproductive.

"The most effective way to tackle understanding [climate change] may be to treat it, for the most part, as an open question, transparent to all engaged in its study," the DSB report said. "Compartmentalizing climate change impact research can only hinder progress."


CIA SEES "LITTLE LIKELIHOOD" OF FINDING DOCS ON SECRECY REFORM

There is "little likelihood" that the Central Intelligence Agency will be able to produce any records documenting the CIA's implementation of the Fundamental Classification Guidance Review that each classifying agency is required to conduct, the Agency said last week.

The Fundamental Classification Guidance Review (FCGR) was ordered by President Obama in his December 2009 executive order 13526 (section 1.9) as a systematic effort to eliminate obsolete or unnecessary classification requirements. It is the Obama Administration's primary response to the problem of over-classification, and it has already achieved some limited results at the Department of Defense and elsewhere.

But it can't possibly work if agencies don't implement it. And so far there is no sign of any such implementation at CIA, despite the fact that compliance is not optional.

In response to FOIA requests over the past year for records on the CIA's progress in conducting its fundamental review, the CIA said it still had no records on the FCGR that are subject to the FOIA requests.

In an earlier response, "we informed you that a search was conducted and no records responsive to your request were located," wrote Susan Viscuso, CIA Information and Privacy Coordinator, on October 26. "Although there is little likelihood that an updated search would produce different results, we will be glad to do so."

Ms. Viscuso's letter appeared to hint that responsive files might be contained in CIA "operational files" that are exempt from search and review under the CIA Information Act. But such a claim would be substantively and legally spurious, especially since responsive records on the FCGR would have been "disseminated" outside of their source files (e.g. to the Information Security Oversight Office), which would nullify their exemption from search and review.

Meanwhile, another intelligence agency, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), proved more responsive. The NRO said in a report on the FCGR that was released last week under the FOIA that it had scheduled all of its classification guides for a fundamental review, as required. The NRO, which is responsible for U.S. intelligence satellites, also said it was preparing an integrated classification guide that would be "more agile, timely, consistent, uniform, and flexible in providing classification guidance and principles at the lowest appropriate classification level."

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Secrecy News is written by Steven Aftergood and published by the Federation of American Scientists.

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