SUBJECT: PRESIDENT MOVES TO END SECRECY FILE: UFO494 The New York Times Wednesday, May 5, 1993 Page 1 (continued page A 10) President Moves to End Secrecy On Millions of U.S. Documents By Tim Wiener Special to the New York Times WASHINGTON, May 4 - President Clinton has taken the first step toward declassifying millions of secret Government documents, some kept under lock and key since World War I. A Presidential directive issued April 26 ordered a sweeping review of cold-war rules on Government secrecy with an eye to opening the nation's bulging secret archives and reducing the number of highly classified military and intelligence programs. The directive also establishes a task force that will draft the new rules on national security secrets by Nov. 30. Moreover, the order asks the task force to answer these questions: - What really needs to be kept secret? - How can information be declassified speedily? - How can excessive secrecy be avoided? New Light on Cold War The questions reflect Mr. Clinton's stated view that it is too hard to declassify old documents and too easy to classify new ones. "It is time to re-evaluate the onerous and costly system of security which has led to the overclassification of documents," Mr. Clinton said in a recent letter to Senator Howard M. Metzenbaum, the Ohio Democrat who is a member of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence. If carried out, the President's order could lead to the release of millions of secret military and diplomatic records, mostly from the cold war, historians and researchers said today. The release of such documents would shed new light on the hidden history of that twilight struggle. "So much is being released by the Soviet and Chinese sides on the deepest, darkest aspects of cold war history that you have to wonder what the rationale is for keeping secrets on our side," said John Lewis Gaddis, a diplomatic historian at Ohio University and a professor of American history this year at Oxford University who has advocated easing classification rules. Presidents Richard M. Nixon and Jimmy Carter each issued orders meant to make it easier to declassify secret documents. Neither had much effect, historians say, because they were virtually ignored by the intelligence and military bureaucracies that were told to carry them out. Now, however, the new heads of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Pentagon are on record as favoring the principle of openness. 'A Huge Mountain' No one knows how many classified documents exist, said the head of the new task force, Steven Garfinkel, director of the Information Security Oversight Office, the Federal agency that administers the classification secrecy system. "It's a huge mountain," he said. "Perhaps billions. The National Archives says it has 325 million pages of classified documents. There are hundreds of millions beyond that." The National Archives is one of about 80,000 Government depositories that store classified material, Mr. Garfinkel said. It holds secret documents older than 30 years and awaiting review for declassification. The acting National Archivist, Trudy Peterson, said she is drowning under reams of Top Secret paper. For example, under current procedures, it will take 19 years for the National Archives to review recently delivered State Department papers from the early 1960's. "This is intolerable," Ms. Peterson said in a recent letter to the National Security Adviser, W. Anthony Lake, "Documents from the World War I era still remain classified." Nor does anyone know how many secret military and intelligence programs exist, Mr. Garfinkel said. "I guess I'm the only person except the President and Vice President who has the right to know that number and I don't know what it is," he said. Not every document would have to be read and reviewed to be released, Mr. Garfinkel said.' "We have a finite number of real secrets," he said. "You could declassify thousands of documents with the declassification of a single secret." Classified documents are stamped Confidential, Secret and Top Secret. Others, classified above Top Secret, bear one of a plethora of code words. All are kept secret under national security laws on the ground that their release would damage national security. Those laws were strengthened by a 1981 Reagan Administration executive order. The order "resulted in enormous amounts of material being classified each day, and very, very little being declassified," said Page Miller, director of a national group of historians and archivists. Under the present system, documents can only be declassified with the approval of the agency that stamped them secret in the first place. Historians say these agencies are often reluctant to release potentially embarrassing records from their past. For example, American involvement in the 1953 coup in Iran that installed Shah Mohammed Riza Pahlevi was deleted from the official State Department history of those years published in 1989. "Historians have more access to KGB documents on the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan than they do to the C.I.A.'s coup," said Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive, a private research group that seeks to declassify Government documents. Agencies' Presence Mr. Garfinkel said his task force would have members from 22 military, intelligence, law-enforcement and administrative agencies that create secrets. That drew a skeptical response from long-time advocates of reform in secrecy procedures. "The President would have been far better advised to establish an independent commission," said Senator Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Democrat of New York. "The intelligence community is the problem. Nothing personal, but they live off secrecy. Secrecy keeps the mistakes secret." The great majority of official secrets are created by the Pentagon, the C.I.A., the State Department and the White House, which together generated almost six million classified documents last year. Those agencies still classify far more information than they release, said Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists, a prominent critic of government secrecy. But they have made only modest progress in unsealing secret information since the end of the cold war; the C.I.A. began to review all documents more than three decades old in 1991, said Peter Earnest, a spokesman for the agency. Mr. Lake, the National Security Adviser, has some personal experience in the secrecy debate. Five years ago, as an author writing a book about the fall of the Somoza government in Nicaragua in 1979, he was denied Government documents for years after filing requests under the Freedom of Information Act, said Mr. Blanton of the private National Security Archive, where Mr. Lake did his research. The denial came even though many of the classified documents he requested were papers he had seen or written as director of policy planning at the State Department in the Carter Administration, Mr. Blanton said. ========================================================================== Text of the Presidential Directive (Parts deleted because of 'rules from the National Security Council about the "courtesy copy" list, routing and signature block' - per Steven Garfinkel, director of the Information Security Oversight Office) FAXed to Jim Klotz 5/7/93 ========================================================================== 05/07/93 15:06 202 634 XXXX ISOO 001 INFORMATION SECURITY OVERSIGHT OFFICE 750 17TH Street, NW. WASHINGTON, DC 20006 FAX COVER SHEET Date: 5/7/93 To: James Klotz Phone #: ______________ FAX #: ______________ FROM: STEVEN GARFINKLE Information Security Oversight Office Phone #: (202) 634-6150 FAX #: (202) 634-6131 Number of pages (including cover sheet) 3 Per our conversation ========================================================================== 05/07/93 15:06 202 634 XXXX ISOO 002 April 26, 1993 PRESIDENTIAL REVIEW DIRECTIVE SUBJECT: National Security Information BACKGROUND With the end of the Cold War, we should re-evaluate our security classification and safeguarding systems, as articulated in E.O. 12356, to ensure that they are in line with the reality of the current, rather than the past, threat potential. OBJECTIVE The objective of this tasking is to review E.0. 12356 and other directives relating to protection of national security information with a view toward drafting a new executive order that reflects the need to classify and safeguard national security information in the post Cold War period. QUESTIONS The following sets forth the questions that should be addressed during this review. The resulting answers should serve as the basis for the drafting of the new proposed executive order which will be submitted upon completion of the review. - In the post Cold War era, what types of information continue to require protection through classification in the interest of our national security? - What steps can be taken to avoid excessive classification? - What steps can be taken to declassify information as quickly as possible? - What steps can be taken to declassify or otherwise dispose of the large amounts of classified information that currently exist in Government archives and other repositories? - What steps can be taken to reduce the number of, and to provide adequate oversight and control over, special access programs? - What steps can be taken to control unnecessary distribution and reproduction of classified information? ========================================================================== 05/07/93 15:06 202 634 XXXX ISOO 003 - What steps can be taken to enforce the "need-to-know" principle? - What steps can be taken to increase individual accountability for the operation of the classification system? IMPLEMENTATION This review should be conducted under the chairmanship of the Director of the Information Security Oversight Office (ISOO) in coordination with the National Advisory Group for Security Countermeasures. Representatives of the agencies which comprise the NAG/SCM shall be included in the task force. It is further directed that this review be coordinated with the joint DCI-Secretary of Defense Security Commission. The Chairman of the task force shall report to me through the NSC staff, Office of intelligence Programs. The review should be completed no later than November 30 1993, at which time a draft executive order superseding E. 12356 should be submitted for formal coordination. ============================================================================= ********************************************** * THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo * **********************************************