[Infowarrior] - "DYSFUNCTIONAL" INFORMATION RESTRICTIONS

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Mon Jan 14 18:34:52 UTC 2008


(c/o SecrecyNews)

AN INSIDE VIEW OF "DYSFUNCTIONAL" INFORMATION RESTRICTIONS

Much of the criticism directed at government secrecy is predicated on the
idea that secrecy impedes government accountability and degrades public
participation in the deliberative process.

But the secrecy system is also subject to growing internal criticism on
altogether different grounds: namely, that it "has become dysfunctional in
the face of current needs of national security."

"The philosophy behind the policies for secrecy needs to move into the 21st
Century and away from the WWII model which was deny to the enemy, grant to
as few as possible," said M.E. Bowman, a former FBI intelligence official
who returned to government last year in a senior counterintelligence
capacity.

"Today, in an information sharing environment USG [U.S. Government]
personnel are just about always going to be in violation of one executive
order (classification or access) or another (sharing). I truly believe that
the USG would be better served with a different philosophy behind
classification and access," he told Secrecy News.

"I have never lost a court case on protecting secrecy, but that is because
the criteria permitted me to win. In fact, a lot of the seminal FOIA law is
argument that I developed in litigation. [But] I think the time is long past
when we need to amend the criteria."

Mr. Bowman elaborated his critique of the existing information security
regime in an article that appeared last year in Intelligencer, the journal
of the Association of Former Intelligence Officers.

See "Dysfunctional Information Restrictions" by M.E. Bowman, Intelligencer,
Fall/Winter 2006-2007, posted with the permission of the Association of
Former Intelligence Officers (www.afio.com):

http://www.fas.org/sgp/eprint/bowman.pdf

"Despite the obvious difficulties, the need is real and of such a magnitude
that changes to our heritage of information restrictions simply cannot be
placed in the 'too hard' box," he wrote. "We must update our philosophies of
access and control, [and] change the guidelines that proceed from those
philosophies."




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