![]() In 2012, similar self-reported data added up to more than 95 million classifications, or three new state secrets per second. At the time, this seemed like an improvement. In 2017 alone, officials told the ISOO that they had stamped something with “confidential,” “secret” or “top secret” more than 49 million times. Only those who already have access to a specific program’s information can grant others with clearance permission to see it, and only if the requestor has an explicit reason for their “need to know.” The system creates the impression that only a select few are permitted to handle carefully defined categories of truly dangerous information.īut these rules do not describe what is actually happening. But being approved for a level of clearance does not automatically give one access to classified information. Anyone seeking a security clearance to handle these materials must undergo rigorous background checks and training. The security classification system is designed to control information according to its level of sensitivity, ranging from confidential to top secret. Government officials are classifying so much that it is becoming impossible to prioritize and protect truly sensitive information, much less review classified records so they can eventually be released to the public. The report warns of a “dire need” to reform the current system of classification and declassification - cautioning that secrecy itself is out of control. This report was given to the Biden administration on July 26 and was written by Mark Bradley, director of the National Archives’ Information Security Oversight Office, which is responsible for overseeing the safeguarding of critical classified information. While the eyes of journalists, Congress and the public are on the Department of Justice investigation of the classified documents that former President Donald Trump removed from the White House, a recent report about a different critical issue of government secrecy has gone unnoticed. ![]() Matthew Connelly is a professor of history at Columbia University and author of the forthcoming book “The Declassification Engine: What History Reveals about America’s Top Secrets.” he wrote this column for the Los Angeles Times. The BDN Opinion section operates independently and does not set newsroom policies or contribute to reporting or editing articles elsewhere in the newspaper or on. ![]()
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