SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2011, Issue No. 30
March 30, 2011Secrecy News Blog: http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/
- DNI DRAGS HEELS ON GAO ACCESS TO INTELLIGENCE
- PIDB ON DISCRETIONARY DECLASSIFICATION, OTHER TOPICS
- SIX DAYS OF ODYSSEY DAWN (LIBYA) COST $400 MILLION
DNI DRAGS HEELS ON GAO ACCESS TO INTELLIGENCE
The Director of National Intelligence has prepared a draft intelligence directive on access by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) to intelligence information, but it is "shockingly bad," a congressional official said.
The GAO is an investigative arm of Congress that performs audits and reviews in support of congressional oversight and the legislative process. But GAO access to intelligence information has often been frustrated by resistance from the executive branch, which has sought to strictly limit the conduct of intelligence oversight to the congressional intelligence committees.
In an attempt to clarify the role of the GAO in intelligence oversight, the 2010 intelligence authorization act directed the DNI to prepare a new intelligence community directive to govern GAO access to intelligence information. The first draft of the new directive is said to reserve maximum discretion to the DNI, and to offer little practical assurance that GAO will get access to the information it needs.
So, for example, the definition of intelligence information that may be withheld from GAO extends broadly to law enforcement, military and intelligence information related to national security. GAO access is to be denied whenever it concerns information regarding "intelligence budgets or funding, or personnel information that... may reveal intelligence strategy, capabilities, or operations."
"In other words, GAO cannot look at anything that involves money or people," the congressional official told Secrecy News. "Combine that with the sweeping, open-ended definition of intelligence and large chunks of the federal government suddenly vanish from [GAO] oversight-- DOD, FBI, DHS, State Department, etc."
In fact, because the pending Directive would extend to the entire intelligence community, it could actually make things worse than they already are by undermining current GAO oversight of military intelligence agencies, which by all accounts has been fruitful and effective.
Intelligence officials appeared to be taken aback by the criticism of the draft directive, which has not yet been released. They said the draft is still in preparation and that it is not intended to undermine GAO's oversight function.
But the Obama Administration has strongly opposed an enhanced role for GAO oversight of intelligence. The Obama White House even threatened to veto the 2010 intelligence authorization act over the issue.
Meanwhile, intelligence agencies are operating in an oversight vacuum without effective supervision of their spending practices. Most of the agencies cannot and do not produce auditable financial statements, the Senate Intelligence Committee reported this month.
"The CIA has submitted its financial reports to an independent auditor but has received a disclaimer of opinion due to the inability of the auditor to gather certain relevant facts. The NSA, DIA, and NGA are still not even prepared to submit their financial reports to independent audit," the Senate Committee said.
PIDB ON DISCRETIONARY DECLASSIFICATION, OTHER TOPICS
In its ongoing consideration of policy options for "transforming classification," the Public Interest Declassification Board has produced three short new papers that are intended to prompt further discussion.
The new papers discuss Simplifying the Declassification Review Process for Historical Records, Discretionary Declassification and Release of Contemporary National Security Information, and Regularizing the Declassification Review of Classified Congressional Records.
Interested members of the public are invited to comment on the PIDB blog here:
http://blogs.archives.gov/transformingclassification/
SIX DAYS OF ODYSSEY DAWN (LIBYA) COST $400 MILLION
The first six days of Odyssey Dawn, the US war in Libya, cost an estimated $400 million, according to a new report from the Congressional Research Service.
"Using operational details provided by DOD and DOD cost factors, a 'bottoms-up' estimate of the cost of initial operations suggests that in the first six days of operations, DOD has spent roughly $400 million," the report said.
"U.S. participation in Operation Odyssey Dawn and NATO operations around Libya raises a number of questions for Congress, including the role of Congress in authorizing the use of force, the costs of the operation, the desired politico-strategic end state, the role of U.S. military forces in an operation under international command, and many others," said the CRS report, which fleshed out many of those questions.
See "Operation Odyssey Dawn (Libya): Background and Issues for Congress," March 28, 2011:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/natsec/R41725.pdf
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Secrecy News is written by Steven Aftergood and published by the Federation of American Scientists.
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