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U.S. Ready to Rescind Clinton Order on Government Secrets

March 21, 2003
By ADAM CLYMER






WASHINGTON, March 20 - Making it easier for government
agencies to keep documents secret, the Bush administration
plans to revoke an order issued by President Bill Clinton
that among other provisions said information should not be
classified if there was "significant doubt" as to whether
its release would damage national security.

The new policy is outlined in a draft executive order being
circulated among federal agencies. A final version is
expected to be adopted before April 17, when the last
elements of the Clinton order would take effect, requiring
automatic declassification of most documents 25 or more
years old. Under the draft, such automatic declassification
would be postponed until Dec. 31, 2006.

Other provisions of Mr. Clinton's order, which was issued
in 1995, are already in force. But major changes to them
contemplated in the draft would treat all information
obtained from foreign governments as subject to
classification and end the requirement that agencies
prepare plans for declassifying records.

The new policy would also permit reclassification of
documents that have already been made public, and give the
Central Intelligence Agency special authority to resist
decisions by an interagency panel that considers
classification appeals, typically from researchers.

Sean McCormack, spokesman for the National Security
Council, declined to comment on the ground that the Bush
order was not final. But William Leonard, director of the
Information Security Oversight Office at the National
Archives, defended the proposal, saying it "comes as close
to institutionalizing automatic declassification as
possible."

Historians and other critics of government secrecy had
mixed reactions. Bruce Craig, director of the National
Coalition for History, said of the draft, "In general it's
far better than what many in the historical community had
expected to see coming out of the Bush administration." He
called it "more an edit than a substantial rewrite."

Steven Aftergood, who directs the Project on Government
Secrecy at the Federation of American Scientists, said,
"One might have expected a more aggressive, pro-secrecy
policy than this draft." He said its strength was that it
preserved both automatic declassification and the
interagency appeals panel from the Clinton administration.

"This draft does not shred the existing policy; it merely
attenuates it somewhat," said Mr. Aftergood, who made the
draft public last week in Secrecy News, his Internet
publication.

But Anna K. Nelson, an American University historian, was
more critical, saying: "This is in context with the way
this administration has done the whole bit on secrecy. They
have left a skeletal process."

The document does retain many central provisions of the
Clinton directive, notably that "in no case shall
information be classified in order to (1) conceal
violations of law, inefficiency or administrative error;
(2) prevent embarrassment of a person, organization or
agency; (3) restrain competition; or (4) prevent or delay
the release of information that does not require protection
in the interest of national security."

Dr. Nelson, however, complained in particular about the
deletion of the sentence in Mr. Clinton's order that said,
"If there is significant doubt about the need to classify
information, it shall not be classified." She called that
change "a clear fire bell in the night." Mr. Aftergood
agreed, saying, "It signals a preference for secrecy."

Mr. Leonard, who was appointed to his post by the national
archivist with the approval of President Bush, took a
different view. He said the Clinton administration had
inserted that provision to overturn a Reagan administration
policy that took the opposite tack, calling for
classification in cases of doubt. He said the new deletion
would mean that the order "doesn't say one way or the other
- a change of tone more than anything else."

The practical effect will be "nil," Mr. Leonard continued,
because the draft order retains provisions urging agencies
to see declassification's values, for instance the national
progress that results from the free flow of information.

Tom Blanton, executive director of the National Security
Archive, a group that publicizes government documents, also
objected, though, particularly to the provision on
information from foreign governments. It says, "The
unauthorized disclosure of foreign government information
is presumed to cause damage to national security." The
phrase "damage to national security" is defined in the
order, and in law, as the basis for classifying documents
as confidential, secret or top secret.

Mr. Blanton said the language on foreign government
information was too broad, and would extend even to
information given the Department of Commerce or the
Export-Import Bank.

"Making all foreign government information presumptively
classified," he said, "means we're lowering our openness
standard to the lowest common denominator of our ostensible
allies."

A frequent critic of government secrecy, Mr. Blanton did
praise the draft for retaining the concept of automatic
declassification.

The Clinton order required that documents generally be
classified for no more than 10 years. But it allowed for
periods up to 25 years in several specific circumstances,
including those involving information on weapons of mass
destruction.

The Bush administration's draft, on the other hand, does
not require a specific reason for the 25-year standard,
saying instead that it can be applied if the classifying
authority determines that "the sensitivity of the
information" demands it.

Mr. Leonard, of the National Archives, said an important
element of the draft was its retention of the Interagency
Security Classification Appeals Panel, which decides
appeals from decisions by agencies to classify or not to
declassify documents. He said the panel had overruled
agency decisions in about 70 percent of the cases brought
before it.

But the administration's draft gives the Central
Intelligence Agency special standing. While other agencies
can appeal to the president if they feel that panel
decisions against them are wrong, the director of central
intelligence would be permitted to block panel
declassification orders unless the president overruled him.


http://www.nytimes.com/2003/03/21/politics/21SECR.html?ex=1049257548&ei=1&en=c95771c0cf61d351



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