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Home Front: Politix
Government holds secret info close to the chest. Wotta surprise.
2005-03-16
The federal government moved to classify more than 15 million pieces of information in 2004 — the largest number since the peak of the Cold War. The unprecedented secrecy, say some members of Congress and government watchdogs, is hindering the War on Terror and putting Americans at risk. "Somewhere in the vast cache of data that never should have been classified, and may never be declassified, is that tiny nugget of information that, if shared, could be used to detect and prevent the next deadly terrorist attack," said Rep. Christopher Shays, R-Conn., chairman of the National Security, Emerging Threats and International Relations Subcommittee of the House Government Reform Committee.

Lawmakers and witnesses attending a March 2 hearing on what one expert termed the "pseudo-classification" of documents say that in the government's zeal to protect information, thousands of documents that would not normally be considered top secret are being kept from congressional oversight, public view and other agencies relying on the data. "Some of the examples we reviewed involve absurd overreactions to vague security concerns," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., in a letter to Shays before the hearing. In one example, Waxman said the Department of Homeland Security had concealed the identity and contact information of its new Transportation Security Administration ombudsman, whose chief responsibility is to interact with the public over airport security measures.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#5  the big brew ha ha is over the lack of information Bush gives the politicians that don't have a "Need to Know". Must be humbling to know that you are only a lowly congressman and NOT the leader of the country.
Posted by: Glereger Angeart4725   2005-03-16 11:08:36 PM  

#4  B-1 Bob? The only Congressman ever to become a Black Ace? Hell, why not. I've always thought Senator McCain had the makings of a black ace.
Posted by: Fr. Kolac   2005-03-16 3:56:00 PM  

#3  "Some of the examples we reviewed involve absurd overreactions to vague security concerns," said Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., in a letter to Shays before the hearing.

If there's one Congressman familiar with the concept of absurdity, it's Waxman. Bring back B-1 Bob!
Posted by: Raj   2005-03-16 1:18:49 PM  

#2  Just because something is secret doesn't mean it isn't shared within the intellignece community. All this stuff should be going into intelligence databases somewhere.
Posted by: Spot   2005-03-16 8:30:27 AM  

#1  Article: A CIA spokesman told FOXNews.com that a lot has been done to change the culture and learn lessons. He pointed to a recent example in which government officials made public a transmission between Al Qaeda founder Usama bin Laden (search) and his top agent in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi (search).

This is absurd on its face. It means that bin Laden now knows that the means he used to communicate with Zarqawi is no longer secure. I hope there was a good reason for making this public disclosure other than the media wanted to know. I don't want to know - just kill the holy warriors and leave me out of the loop if it helps our people do their jobs.
Posted by: Zhang Fei   2005-03-16 3:10:08 AM  

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