The WikiLeaks Dump: More Secrecy=Fewer Secrets

Most of the information in the more than 250,000 diplomatic cables dumped by the website WikiLeaks Sunday will prove to be quotidian and inconsequential. The fact that an American diplomat believes Russian president Dmitry Medvedev plays “Robin to [Russian Prime Minister Vladimir] Putin’s Batman” is not going to shake the foundations of American diplomacy. Anyone who has followed the troubled effort by the Obama administration to close Guantanamo Bay will not be surprised to learn that hard-working emissaries have been begging countries to take some of the detainees at Camp X-Ray off America’s hands. It is not shocking that the U.S. mission to the U.N. was asked in July 2009 to report on “views of United Nations (UN) member states on contributing troops and air transportation equipment, such as helicopters, to the UN Mission in Sudan (UNMIS) and the African Union.”

But just because most of the documents don’t directly threaten U.S. national interests doesn’t mean all of them are benign. The revelation of Yemeni President Abdullah Saleh’s acquiescence to American bombing in his country or of U.S. efforts to secure Pakistani nuclear material could endanger Americans at home and abroad. More important, those who are reassured by the gray communication of America’s diplomats are missing the larger point: there is a direct relationship between the existence of classified banality and the dangerous disclosure of secrets that can harm America’s national security.

America’s government is consumed by classification. Hundreds of thousands of government documents are marked confidential, secret, top secret or SCI (Sensitive Compartmented Information) every year, including everything from decades-old historical documents to ones other agencies have already declassified. As the elder statesman of bipartisan secrecy skepticism, Senator Daniel Moynihan of New York, wrote in 1997, the more government declares everything secret, the less secure the actual secrets are. “The system grew so vast… that it began to appear unavailing,” Moynihan wrote in his congressionally mandated bipartisan report, “Almost everything was declared secret; not everything remained secret, and there were no sanctions for disclosure.” Larry Combest, the Republican from Texas who served as the Moynihan commission’s vice chairman, said they were “confronted on many levels with the lack of credibility and loss of respect for the Government system of secrecy, born in part through overclassification, too much complexity, and the well-known phenomenon of self-perpetuating bureaucracy.”

The problem became acute in the 1990s with a massive expansion of those who can create classified documents. In 1995, Bill Clinton issued executive order 12958, which gave some 20 officials, including the President, the power to classify documents as top secret, meaning their disclosure would likely “cause exceptionally grave damage to the national security” of the U.S. But the order also delegated that authority to 1,336 others, and granted derivative classification authority to some two million government officials and a million industry contractors, according to the Moynihan report.

The more government officials are empowered to classify documents, the more people doing government work need clearances to look at it. In 2008 alone DoD issued some 630,000 security clearances. In its deep investigation of American secrecy earlier this year, the Washington Post found some 854,000 had top secret clearance. The issuance of clearances has been flawed and unrigorous, according to the Government Accountability Office (GAO). In 2009, the GAO found that “87% of about 3,500 investigative reports that adjudicators used to make clearance decisions were missing at least one type of documentation required by the federal investigative standards,” including information on previous employment, social references and complete security forms. 12% of the reports didn’t include a subject interview.

Which brings us to the source of the leak of the diplomatic cables. The U.S. government has arrested Bradley Manning, a private in the U.S. Army who had access to the SIPRNET system on which classified documents up to the designation “secret” are shared by U.S. government agencies around the world. Manning reportedly told a fellow hacker that he downloaded to CD discs compressed files of the cables and gave them to WikiLeaks. 11,000 of the documents are marked “secret”, none are marked “top secret”.

No one has yet found fault in Manning’s security clearance issuance. And even without over-classification he might have obtained the documents and given them to WikiLeaks. But years of expanded classification and sprawling clearance issuance has vastly increased the pool of potential leakers to WikiLeaks, and has diminished the seriousness with which people treat the leaking of classified information. “Classification policy is close to the root of this scandal,” says Steven Aftergood, author of the Secrecy News blog at the Federation of American Scientists. “A determined effort to combat overclassification would reduce the volume of material that requires protection, thereby improving the security of genuine secrets and it would increase public and official confidence in the integrity of the classification system, thereby reducing the motivation for, and tolerance of, unauthorized disclosures.”

The Obama administration has said that it intends to address the problem, but DoD is resisting reform.

 

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  • http://jcapan.wordpress.com jcapan

    So, are double-link comments just disappearing now? At least put them into moderation.

    Anyway, I was saying that the amount of statist sympathy in our media is distasteful. And as a salve:

    Digby: “My personal feeling is that any allegedly democratic government that is so hubristic that it will lie blatantly to the entire world in order to invade a country it has long wanted to invade probably needs a self-correcting mechanism. There are times when it’s necessary that the powerful be shown that there are checks on its behavior, particularly when the systems normally designed to do that are breaking down. Now is one of those times.”

    As well as this comment at Adam Serwer’s that springs to mind:

    “We are engaged in a trillion-dollar war right now in Iraq that was hyped in the American media precisely by national security reporters, serious people all, who passed on anonymous government claims that turned out to be rank falsehoods or reckless exaggerations….

    There is only one news story that matters in a democracy: the abuse of power. Everything else is mere chronicle. When a reporter habitually declines to scrutinize the exercise of power thoroughly and skeptically (an activity which tends to make powerful people very, very angry), she is not really a reporter anymore, and is certainly not a ‘good’ one….”

  • http://vittorskes.wordpress.com vittorskes

    If they are so traumatized by the leakage of confidential data why they can’t set up some super science software, which would analyze internet traffic, email, chats,etc and if it is confidential signals to security guys to intercepts leakage and punish the guilty. I know such systems intercepts even the passwords in internet and allow police or security officers read email and even enter into correspondence as if they are original owners of email account.
    I know Falcongaze company.They produce something super innovative in this field.

  • herby002

    According to what I heard on the radio today there was a software program setup that is designed to alert security personnel, but for some reason it was turned off in Afghanistan, so nobody was alerted that downloads of “secret” files was taking place. I wonder whose heads will roll, and where else they will find similar vulnerabilities. After all, I read a story some months ago about off-base Afghani merchants selling stolen USB drives taken from US base computers, listing troop deployments, soldiers’ personal info, etc.

  • waynebernard

    This is what passes for intelligence at the State Department? Release of this is going to threaten American security?

    http://viableopposition.blogspot.com/2010/11/wikileaks-muammar-al-qadhafi-and-his-so_28.html

    Has no one at the State Department heard of Wikipedia or Google? From this cable, Colonel Qadhafi’s proclivities look no worse than those of many celebrities and aging rock stars.

  • http://derekg.wordpress.com/ Derek

    One thing an event like this does is expose those media outlets which are purveyors of information and which are distribution outlets for propaganda. The propagandists have no choice but to suggest the information is underwhelming, to hide the fact they were out scooped by the internet, yet again, or simply will not report the information themselves.

  • Ivy_B

    This is the major story on both BBC & Sky News. BBC lunchtime headlined the Iran – Saudi story, but then went over each of the tidbits about the various foreign leaders. BBC American correspondent says they are very damaging to US credibility. Suggests countries aren’t going to be willing to trust Americans in the future. Other surprise is the spying at the U.N.

    If it weren’t for the snow in Scotland and the British cricket team playing for the Ashes there would be no other story.

    South African radio noted the mention of Nelson Mandela.

  • Alex Vallas

    The leaks reveal a total lack of tight security that is abhorent and inexcusable. No one person should have access to all those documents — nor should all the documents (Pentagon and State) be lumped together. At one time I had a Top Secret clearance with further clearance for “Eyes Only For the President or Secretary” and “Eyes Only for the Ambassador.” At NO time was I able to access documents that did not relate to the issues of my foreign post assignments. That’s the way it shoud be, i.e, on need to know basis.
    Insofar as the traitor or traitors who revealed these documents, they should be tried and if convicted, executed. There is no excuse for an American to take actions that could put our troops in harm’s way or damage our relations with other countries. Recall the old saying “loose lips sink ships.”

  • newfreedomblog

    Sunshine is indeed the best disinfectant. Why hide the majority of this stuff? Everyone knows Batman and Robin so far as Putin and Medvedev, no surprise here.
    .
    Saudi Arabia has been playing both sides for a long long time.
    .
    The traitor, which is what Manning is, should be put to death. Period. Let’s move on. There are many bigger fish to fry right now. North Korea comes to mind.

  • michaelfury
  • michaelfury

    “The traitor, which is what Manning is, should be put to death.”

    Perhaps he should be butchered with a 30mm chain gun?

    http://michaelfury.wordpress.com/2010/04/07/payback/

  • http://rbmatudan.wordpress.com rbmatudan

    I guess the two faced nature of the American gov’t was finally revealed to the world. It all just puts the spotlight on just how inept American foreign policy really is, sort of like an extraordinarily expensive game played by the power elite, and played for by the tax payer for generations to come. If it forces us to come to our senses and get our own house in order, instead of playing war games ostensibly to soften up new markets for the economic part of the establishment, it will all be a good thing.
    http://www.pathtoasia.com/jobs/

  • http://shortplaysaboutrealpeople.wordpress.com Michael Maiello

    In better times the press would be more excited about the existence of Wikileaks. The press, after all, exists to expose rather than keep secrets. Instead I see trepidation and a lot more meta coverage of this sort when we’d be better served by hearing more about what’s in the documents than fretting over who released them.

  • http://briskfeetinn.wordpress.com briskfeetinn

    save you a lot!you must not miss it!

    ===== http://www.briskfeetinn.com =====

  • http://talaima.wordpress.com talaiman

    this is the security of the UNITED STATES? Haker about that, I can with it, the vision of the world’s largest is to fizzle.
    Obama is perdiendo credivilidad and leaves the country in shame

    from spain

  • http://2thirdsrocks.wordpress.com 2thirdsrocks

    ‘loose lips sink ships”
    .
    Another good reason to keep c@cksuckers out of the military.

  • http://derekg.wordpress.com/ Derek

    One of the other hidden truths this event exposes is the fact that there is very little difference between Democrats and Republicans, other than in the disparate avalanche of empty rhetoric we are all exposed to, by them, and the idiot savants who serve as their handmaidens.

  • sacredh

    We’re not all that “united” anymore.

  • http://www.thedailyalmanac.com thelastrefuge

    Global Reactions to Newest WikiLeaks Documents Roll in
    A large batch of US diplomatic messages obtained by WikiLeaks reveals many cases of two-faced diplomacy, especially in the Arab world, and other potentially embarrassing moments for the US and American allies. http://www.newslook.com/videos/269747-global-reactions-to-newest-wikileaks-documents-roll-in?autoplay=true

  • fiso takirambudde

    The third round of Wiki leaks publications has done irreconcilable harm to resolving the issue of Nuclear Proliferation and Iran. It is a rallying cry for hardliners such as Ahmadinejad who now believe that they are surrounded on all sides. This mentality of a cornered animal is extremely dangerous to global peace because rational thought has flown out the window. Now more so than ever, can Iran justify pursuing a nuclear arsenal in aims of defense. Conflict in this region would be the tipping point and break and already fragile global economy. Check out the effects of an armed conflict in the region.

    Conflict with Iran- http://www.hiddenlevers.com/hl/u?fDJMCg
    We know if something bad happens we know oil prices will spike, but it would baffle me if the correlations between oil and S&P would hold. For the past year S&P has moved with Oil, but look to 5 years and we see the two can move independently.
    S&P vs Oil @ 1 year- http://www.hiddenlevers.com/hl/u?g8IMNE

    S&P vs Oil @ 5 years- http://www.hiddenlevers.com/hl/u?ebsH3G

  • herby002

    I was wrong.
    Correction: The computer security monitoring system was turned off in Iraq, not Afghanistan; the soldier accused of downloading the files was stationed in Iraq.
    The stolen drives in Afghanistan were USB thumb drives, apparently left in base computers or in drawers, etc.

  • herby002

    6.1′loose lips sink ships”
    .
    2thirdsrocks,
    .
    Leave it to you to degrade the discussion even more than you usually do.

  • http://eshoes.wordpress.com bition

    Yeah, I love that saying:” More Secrecy, Fewer Secrets”. That’s so classic and quite right. Because of the development of Internet, imformation travels so fast. And even you just need to move your fingers you can get everything you need, just like: information, shopping and so on.

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    3. To buy NFL Jerseys, go to this page:
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    I hope you can love that. Have a great day, guys!

  • http://2thirdsrocks.wordpress.com 2thirdsrocks

    Aw come on lefty, loosen up. That was funny I don’t care who you are.

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