CIA CLASSIFICATION PRACTICES
CHALLENGED
The Central Intelligence Agency
has improperly classified and withheld from release at least five categories of
information related to its post-9/11 rendition, detention and interrogation
program, according to a detailed complaint filed by Openthegovernment.org with
the Information Security Oversight Office.
Classification of
this information has impeded government accountability for the controversial
CIA programs and derailed a full public reckoning over abuses that occurred, the complaint said.
"Secrecy regarding 'black
sites' and torture has played a major role in ensuring that no CIA personnel
could be prosecuted for torture, war crimes, destruction of evidence, or other
relevant federal crimes. It has ensured that civil courts were closed to
victims of torture, indefinitely delayed trials of the accused perpetrators of
the September 11 attacks, and put the United States in breach of its
obligations under the Convention Against Torture," wrote Katherine
Hawkins, National Security Fellow at Openthegovernment.org, who authored the complaint.
She specified five categories of information that
she said had been classified in violation of the executive order governing classification
policy and redacted from the summary of the Senate Intelligence Committee
report on interrogation:
* The
pseudonyms and titles, and in some cases the names, of CIA officials and
contractors implicated in the torture program.
*
The names of countries that hosted black sites (i.e. unacknowledged locations
of CIA detention centers abroad).
* Former
CIA detainees' descriptions of the details of their own torture.
* The
CIA's involvement in the torture of prisoners in Iraq.
* The
CIA's rendition of prisoners to torture in foreign custody.
The 38-page complaint presents extensive
arguments that certain particular information in each of these categories was
improperly classified by the CIA.
"There is
strong evidence that classification of evidence regarding the torture program
violated the Executive Order, in some cases willfully so," Ms. Hawkins
wrote. "It is important that there be consequences for this abuse of the
classification power to deter similar violations in the future. But it is even
more important that the cover-up end, and that ISOO act to oversee ongoing CIA
classification decisions regarding the rendition, detention and interrogation
program."
John P.
Fitzpatrick, the director of the Information Security Oversight Office (ISOO),
which oversees the classification system, said his office has already begun
"digging into the complaint in detail.... I don't yet know what level of
effort this will require."
Under Executive Order 13526 (section 5.2(6)), the
ISOO director is authorized and required to "consider and take action on
complaints and suggestions from persons within or outside the Government with
respect to the administration of the [classification] program established under
this order."
As a practical
matter, ISOO's capacity to investigate classification errors is limited by the
Office's size and budget.
Nevertheless, Mr. Fitzpatrick
said, "handling complaints like this is part of our mission, so we will
have to see what can be done."
The immediate
next steps, he said, include identifying the specific claims advanced by the
complaint and the parts of the executive order they may relate to; gathering
relevant facts that would support or refute the claims; and performing analysis
to reach a conclusion. Considering the length and detail of the complaint,
reviewing it "will take time."
* *
*
If there is a systemic solution
to the problem of overclassification, it is likely to involve the kind of
independent review that has been urged on ISOO by Openthegovernment.org in this
case.
Government
agencies that are left to their own devices will almost always classify more
information than is necessary or appropriate. Without assuming any malign
intent on their part, it is simply the path of least resistance.
However, when an
agency is required to justify its classification activity to an impartial
reviewer, even on a non-adversarial basis, a reduction in the scope of
classification results more often than not. This has been confirmed repeatedly.
* Between 1996
and 2014, the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel directed the
declassification of information in 71 percent of the documents presented to it
by members of the public whose direct requests to agencies had been denied,
ISOO reported in 2014.
*
Documents concerning covert actions that the CIA had refused to acknowledge on
its own were approved for declassification and publication in the Foreign
Relations of the United States series after deliberation by the so-called High-Level Panel composed of representatives
of the National Security Council, State Department and CIA.
*
CIA classification of many records related to the JFK assassination could
not withstand review by the independent Assassination Records Review Board. The Board
ordered declassification of tens of thousands of assassination-related records
including millions of pages.
* Even within
individual agencies, the process of challenging classification decisions has
borne fruit to a surprising extent. Government employees challenged the
classification status of various items of information in 813 cases in FY2014,
the Information Security Oversight Office reported. Their classification was overturned
in whole or in part in 453 of those cases.
It follows that
new venues and new procedures for independently evaluating disputed
classification decisions would help to reduce or eliminate spurious
classification.
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