Fifty years later, WWII over, US secrecy still hangs over the Nazi era:
     "The CIA special counsel who sits on the commission said the CIA opposes
mass declassification because it needs to protect its sources and methods.
     "The FBI counsel on the panel said the FBI would also not agree to any
bulk declassification of World War II data."


World War II Crime Data Is Studied

By DAVID BRISCOE
.c The Associated Press


WASHINGTON (AP) - Members of a commission trying to identify and declassify
millions of World War II documents on possible war crimes say they might
finish work on Nazi Germany by October 2001, but will need at least another
year to review files on Japan.

More than halfway through the commission's three-year task, at least 70
percent of documents remain secret, members told Congress on Tuesday.

Slowing the search is the need to clear some documents with other
governments, as well as CIA, FBI and Pentagon resistance to any ``bulk
declassification'' of files even though they are now half a century old.
Those agencies insist, however, that their page-by-page, and sometimes
line-by-line declassification procedures are moving along rapidly.

Disclosure of Japanese documents is complicated by the need to obtain
Japanese cooperation, commission members said at a hearing, although they had
not yet taken steps to do so. Millions of documents captured during the war
were returned to Japan in the 1950s.

``We have not even begun to get our arms around the Japanese issue,'' said
Richard Ben-Veniste, member of the Interagency Working Group assigned to
ensure compliance with the 1999 Nazi War Crimes Disclosure Act.

The law requires declassification within three years of all U.S-held papers
relating to possible war crimes and looted property during World War II. It
covers Germany and its allies, including Imperial Japan during its battle to
conquer Asia.

The working group, which includes government agency representatives as well
as outside members, reported on its progress to members of the House
Government Reform Committee a day after releasing 400,000 newly declassified
pages from the Office of Strategic Service, World War II predecessor of the
CIA.

Some of those documents, now available at the National Archives, suggested
that Britain and the United States knew several days beforehand in late 1943
that the Nazis were going to round up Rome's Jews for ``thorough
eradication.''

Michael J. Kurtz, assistant national archivist, said those documents and
others yet to be released will help scholars for years and ``may help to
answer questions about how much our government knew about the Holocaust as it
was being perpetrated.''

Work on papers from the European war probably could be completed by January
2002, and work on Japan could be completed in another year - if Congress
agrees, Kurtz said. Rep. Tom Lantos, D-Calif., Congress' only Holocaust
survivor, is preparing legislation to extend the deadline and provide
additional funding.

Elizabeth Holtzman, a former member of Congress who sits on the commission,
said she doubts whether even the European documents can be finished to meet
the congressionally mandated deadline. On Japan, she said, investigation is
needed to find out the conditions under which papers were sent back to Tokyo
in 1958.

``It would be quite extraordinary to have returned those documents and then
not be permitted to see them,'' Holtzman said.

The commission started in 1999 with more than 600 million pages that might
have been covered by the act. By last July, that had been narrowed to about
90 million and officials expect between 5 million and 8 million when all
records are screened.

So far, 1.5 million pages have been declassified - all related to the war in
Europe.

Kenneth Levit, CIA special counsel who sits on the commission, said the CIA
opposes mass declassification because it needs to protect its sources and
methods. But he said procedures have been established for quickly
declassifying older records, however.

John Collingwood, FBI member on the panel, said the FBI has been
declassifying documents at ``an incredibly fast pace'' but also could not
agree to any bulk declassification of World War II data.

Col. Lewis Thompson, Army representative, said the Army has been converting
old microfilms to digital files on optical disks and is rapidly gaining the
capability of searching old records by computer, processing up to 70,000
pages a week.

On the Net:

Nazi War Criminal Records Interagency Working Group: www.nara.gov/iwg



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