SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2010, Issue No. 47
June 7, 2010

Secrecy News Blog: http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/

UN PROPOSES "GOOD PRACTICES" FOR INTELLIGENCE

The United Nations Human Rights Council last week presented a new set of institutional and policy practices for intelligence agencies that it said would help to improve accountability and protection of human rights in intelligence policy.

The new "Compilation of good practices on legal and institutional frameworks and measures to ensure respect for human rights by intelligence agencies while countering terrorism" discusses 35 principles and practices in four categories: legal mandate, oversight, compliance with human rights standards, and issues related to specific intelligence functions. The compilation was prepared for the UN by Special Rapporteur Martin Scheinin with the assistance of the Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces.

The UN Human Rights Council does not have (or claim to have) authority to dictate the intelligence policies of member nations. Moreover, the proposed "good practices" do not distinguish between democracies and dictatorships, or among governments that have an independent judiciary and those that came to power through electoral fraud or military coup. The practices also do not differentiate among domestic, foreign and military intelligence services, though each of these may be subject to different legal and policy frameworks. "It is not the purpose of this compilation to promulgate a set of normative standards that should apply at all times and in all parts of the world," the document states.

Indeed, "Very few States have included all of the practices outlined below in their legal and institutional frameworks for intelligence services and their oversight. Some States will be able to identify themselves as following the majority of the 35 elements of good practice. Other States may start by committing themselves to a small number of these elements...."

But Mr. Scheinin told the Council last week that he "hoped that States would use his compilation of good practices in an assessment of their own law and practice, and identify the areas of full adherence, of partial adherence and of non-adherence. Thereafter, they would hopefully determine the areas where they wished to adhere with the identified good practices in the future and set benchmarks for getting there." In other words, the compilation can serve as a template which citizens can use for comparing and evaluating national intelligence policies.

In many respects, the United States is among the nations with the best intelligence practices, with a relatively well-developed legal framework for intelligence activities and a mature oversight apparatus. But in other respects, it falls short.

For example, the UN compilation's Practice 9 requires that "Any individual who believes that her or his rights have been infringed by an intelligence service [should be] able to bring a complaint to a court or oversight institution.... Individuals affected by the illegal actions of an intelligence service [should] have recourse to an institution that can provide an effective remedy, including full reparation for the harm suffered."

But in cases like those of Khaled el-Masri and Maher Arar -- who appear to have been wrongly detained, "rendered" abroad, and tortured -- no adjudication or remedy is available from the U.S. government since their complaints have been deflected by the use of the state secrets privilege.

More generally, intelligence oversight in the U.S. has failed to generate a consensual public record concerning the extraordinary intelligence activities of the post-9/11 era, leaving the field open to continuing allegations of abuse and violations of law. Today, Physicians for Human Rights issued a report alleging that CIA medical personnel were complicit in unlawful human experimentation through their collaboration in monitoring the application of "enhanced" interrogation techniques. (http://phrtorturepapers.org). The CIA denies the charge.

In another instance where U.S. practice falls short of the ideal, the UN compilation's Practice 3 directs that "The powers and competences of intelligence services [should be] clearly and exhaustively defined in national law."

But the terms of current U.S. intelligence law are not entirely clear or exhaustive. We don't know, for example, the current nature or scope of domestic surveillance activities or what exactly was permitted under the most recently enacted amendments to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

That absence of public clarity is deliberate, said NSA Director Gen. Keith B. Alexander, the new Commander of US Cyber Command, in a speech at the Center for Strategic and International Studies last week.

In response to a question from Kate Martin of the Center for National Security Studies about the feasibility of increasing public disclosure of cyber security policy, Gen. Alexander said that was not his preferred approach. Instead, he promised, government officials would be fully candid with each other, while continuing to withhold information from the public. In other words, he said, what Americans can expect is "transparency at the classified level."


ANOTHER LEAK ARREST

The U.S. Army has arrested Spc. Bradley Manning of Potomac, Maryland for unauthorized disclosure of classified information. Among other things, he is suspected of having provided the video of a 2007 Apache helicopter strike in Baghdad that killed several civilians to the Wikileaks web site, which published it online in April of this year. The story was reported last night by Wired's Threat Level blog. See "U.S. Intelligence Analyst Arrested in Wikileaks Video Probe" by Kevin Poulsen and Kim Zetter:

Spc. Manning is currently being held in pre-trial confinement in Kuwait, according to an Army statement obtained by National Public Radio.

His arrest is the third known apprehension of a suspected leaker during the Obama Administration, after Shamai Leibowitz and Thomas A. Drake, and seems to reflect an increasingly aggressive response to unauthorized disclosures of classified information.


OSC VIEWS LEFT-WING CRIME IN GERMANY

"German security authorities reported a substantial increase in crime and attacks on police in 2009 related to left-wing political groups and individuals," said a new report from the DNI Open Source Center. "According to Germany's Interior Ministry, more extremist crimes and acts of violence occurred in 2009 than in any year since 2001. The ministry reported that in 2009, left-wing extremist crimes increased by almost 40% to 9,375," the report said.

"The Berlin intelligence service chief called his city the 'German stronghold of left-wing extremism,' noting 2,200 resident radical individuals, 950 of whom are 'autonomous' leftist anarchists. According to the police, the number of leftist crimes in Berlin doubled to 1,300 in 2009.... This increase in left-wing crime represents an additional concern alongside Germany's perceived problems with right-wing extremist and immigrant crime....Federal and local government officials have initiated measures to combat left-wing extremism," the report said.

A copy of the unclassified report, marked For Official Use Only," was obtained by Secrecy News. See "German Left-Wing Crime Increase Adds to Public Security Concerns," Open Source Center, April 27, 2010.

******************************

Secrecy News is written by Steven Aftergood and published by the Federation of American Scientists.

The Secrecy News blog is at:
      http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/

To SUBSCRIBE to Secrecy News, go to:
     http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/secrecy/subscribe.html

To UNSUBSCRIBE, go to:
      http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/secrecy/unsubscribe.html

OR email your request to saftergood@fas.org

Secrecy News is archived at:
      http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/secrecy/index.html

SUPPORT the FAS Project on Government Secrecy with a donation here:
      http://www.fas.org/member/donate_today.html