http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2005/04/24/in_terror_wars_name_pu
blic_loses_information?mode=PF
In war's name, public loses information
Charlie Savage, Globe Staff

WASHINGTON, April 24, 2005 -- Federal agencies under the Bush administration
are sweeping vast amounts of public information behind a curtain of secrecy
in the name of fighting terrorism, using 50 to 60 loosely defined security
designations that can be imposed by officials as low-ranking as government
clerks.

No one is tracking the amount of unclassified information that is no longer
accessible.

For years, a citizen who wanted to know the name and phone number of a
Pentagon official could buy a copy of the Defense Department directory at a
government printing office. But since 2001, the directory has been stamped
''For Official Use Only," meaning the public may not have access to such
basic information about the vast military bureaucracy.

After a 1984 chemical plant accident killed 20,000 people in Bhopal, India,
Congress in 1986 passed the Emergency Planning & Community Right to Know
Act, giving Americans the right to know if they lived downwind from
dangerous chemicals. Until 2001, the Environmental Protection Agency posted
on its website each plant's plans for dealing with a disaster, leading to
public pressure on the chemical industry to maintain safer conditions. The
database has been removed from the website for security reasons.

For decades, the Defense Department's map office has made its topographic
charts available to the public. Biologists use them to map species
distribution, and airlines use them to create flight charts. But the
administration has proposed removing the maps from public use this fall, in
part to keep them away from ''those intending harm" to the United States.

In these cases and others, the information that the Bush administration is
removing from public access is not risky enough to national security to be
officially classified as ''Confidential," ''Secret," or ''Top Secret," under
rules in place for decades.

The public instead is losing access to large amounts of less-risky
information through terms such as ''For Official Use Only," ''Sensitive But
Unclassified," ''Not for Public Dissemination," and what Congress has
estimated as 50 to 60 other designations developed by federal agencies to
keep the public from seeing unclassified information.

Although some of these secrecy terms predate the Bush administration,
advocates of open government say their use has grown sharply over the past
four years. Precise numbers of documents being shielded are unknown because
the administration keeps no records. And there are only vague standards
governing the types of documents that can be made secret.

Under the official system for classified secrets, for example, each level of
secrecy comes with clearly defined criteria. There are strict limitations on
who is authorized to decide whether a piece of information should be
classified. Precisely 4,007 officials have this power. There are time limits
after which most classified secrets can become public. There is a process
for appealing a classification. And the government tracks how many
classified secrets it creates each year.

By contrast, terms such as ''For Official Use Only" have vague criteria that
vary from agency to agency. In some departments, any employee, even a clerk,
may stamp a document as off-limits. All 180,000 employees of the Homeland
Security Department may decide a document is ''For Official Use Only."

There is no system for tracking who stamped it, for what reason, and how
long it should stay secret. There is no process for appealing a secrecy
decision.

''Information is getting withheld arbitrarily and unnecessarily," said
Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists' Project on
Government Secrecy. ''That is bad because it impedes oversight and obstructs
accountability. It is the nature of bureaucracies to hoard information, and
these new unclassified control mechanisms allow them to do that without
restraint."

Asked about government secrecy at a recent conference of newspaper editors,
President Bush said he felt that ''citizens ought to know as much as
possible about the government decision-making." But he also warned that the
country had to be careful about information that could put lives at risk.

''I understand that there's a suspicion that we're too security-conscious,"
Bush said. ''I hope that we're becoming balanced between that which the
public ought to know and that which, if we were to expose, would jeopardize
our capacity to do our job, which is to defend America."

But critics contend that the system is far from balanced because the
standards for sensitive but unclassified information are so loose. In some
cases, the administration appears to have shielded information that posed no
realistic security risk, but did threaten its political interests. Other
times, bureaucrats appear to have acted overzealously, blocking useful
information to no end.

Representative Henry Waxman, Democrat of California, identified a series of
incidents in which he said security controls were invoked improperly to
prevent political embarrassment.

For example, in the midst of the 2004 presidential campaign, the State
Department released a report showing that during the Bush administration
terrorist attacks around the world had dropped to their lowest levels since
1969. But after critics challenged the numbers, the department recalibrated
and found that attacks were, in fact, at a 20-year high.

That September, just weeks before the election, the department's inspector
general completed a report blaming CIA analysts for producing faulty
numbers. The administration withheld the report from the public as
''Sensitive But Unclassified."

Now, the State Department has decided not to tabulate attacks in the annual
terrorism report. Larry C. Johnson, a former CIA and State Department
terrorism specialist, contended that the decision occurred after early
results showed that attacks jumped again, undercutting Bush's claim to be
winning the war on terrorism.

Said Waxman: ''It is indefensible to conceal the terrorism numbers from
Congress and the public."

Hammered by criticism after Johnson's allegations, State Department
spokesman Richard Boucher last week denied that the decision to stop
tabulating attacks was political. Boucher said the new National
Counterterrorism Center would handle any public dissemination of statistics,
though he was unable to say when it would provide the official 2004 numbers.

In another recent case, Human Rights Watch earlier this month found an
unclassified draft of a new policy on a Defense Department website. The
document proposed holding suspected Iraqi insurgents without trial in the
same way that accused Taliban members have been imprisoned at Guantanamo
Bay.

After Human Rights Watch denounced the idea, the Pentagon took down its
entire electronic library of unclassified documents, including many hundreds
of unrelated papers. The military later put part of the website back up, but
dozens of unrelated documents that were previously available to the public
are still gone.

Such secrecy moves have been criticized across the political spectrum. A
recent report coauthored by the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think
tank, attacked ''overzealous" decisions to dismantle entire websites over
security fears.

It also said that the Bush administration has not conducted a systematic
review of formerly public information that has been made secret, by weighing
the likelihood that it could help terrorists against the ''countervailing
public safety and other benefits of providing" the information.

The move toward withholding unclassified information from the public occurs
as the administration's use of the classified secrets system is soaring. It
classified 16 million documents in 2004, the highest number recorded since
the government began keeping track of them in 1980. That number is up from
14 million in 2003, 11 million in 2002, and 8 million in 2001.

And the number of old documents being declassified dropped from an average
of 150 million a year during Bill Clinton's second term to an average of 54
million in Bush's first term. Last year, there were only 25 million
declassifications.

Although no numbers exist to track the number of unclassified documents
withheld from public view using a bureaucratic term such as ''For Official
Use Only" or by dismantling a website, anecdotal examples are mounting.

Last month, Representative Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Malden, asked the
inspector general of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to examine whether
the agency was using security threats as a ''pretext to prevent the public
from accessing documents that do not pose a security risk." The inspector
general agreed last week to launch an investigation.

Markey contended that the commission had blocked the public from viewing
unclassified nuclear information, so that only members of the industry were
able to discuss regulatory changes with the government. For example, the NRC
recently withheld a National Academy of Sciences report challenging the idea
that the industry-preferred way of storing spent nuclear fuel rods was safe
from terrorism, prompting Markey to accuse the agency of suppressing
information ''based on the fact that it disagrees with the conclusions, not
on any legitimate security" fears.

Meanwhile, Wenonah Hauter of Public Citizen has also raised concerns about
the NRC's proposal to prevent outside groups from viewing unclassified
safety plans. Public-interest groups have used such information to pressure
the agency to adopt higher standards for nuclear security, including
protecting power plants from truck bombs. If the proposed changes go
through, the public would be left ''in the dark about the competency of the
nuclear industry," Hauter said.

Sue Gagner, a spokeswoman for the NRC, said the agency is ''very mindful of
the public's need to know," but its ''concern is not to release information
that could be helpful to a terrorist."

With a few exceptions, the terms such as ''For Official Use Only" lack the
force of law, so if a member of the public finds out that the document
exists, he or she may still try to obtain it under the Freedom of
Information Act. However, the Bush administration is also fighting to avoid
releasing information under the act.

Under a Clinton administration policy, FOIA officers were supposed to
operate with a ''presumption of disclosure" unless it was ''reasonably
foreseeable that disclosure would be harmful."

But in October 2001, then-Attorney General John Ashcroft reversed course,
instructing agencies to withhold information unless there was no ''sound
legal basis" for doing so.

This policy discourages the release of information because few people are
willing to go to the trouble of filing a lawsuit. The administration has
also stretched the legal definitions of what is exempt, making FOIA
exceptions for documents that would invade personal privacy or reveal
internal agency procedures apply more sweepingly.

For example, Forbes Magazine reported in July 2004 that the Justice
Department cited ''unwarranted invasion of personal privacy" in rejecting an
FOIA request for press releases it had already issued concerning
terrorism-related indictments.

''If you can control the flow of information, you often can control the
process itself," said Peter Weitzel of the Coalition of Journalists for Open
Government. ''I think they believe that's the most effective way to govern,
and so that's what they sought out to do."

Some Republicans also worry that the government is being too secretive. Two
Texas Republicans, Senator John Cornyn and Representative Lamar Smith, have
sponsored a bill to strengthen the Freedom of Information Act by closing
loopholes, speeding up responses to FOIA requests, and establishing an FOIA
hotline service, among other things. ''Achieving the true consent of the
governed requires informed consent, and such consent is possible only with
an open and accessible government," Cornyn said in February.

Cornyn, a former Texas attorney general, said the federal government often
places documents beyond public view ''without real justification." He called
for a system that ''strikes the right balance between the need to classify
documents in our national interest and security, and our national values of
open government."

Bryan Bender of the Globe staff contributed to this report.
C Copyright 2005 The New York Times Company




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