South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

A solution to the classified crisis: fewer classified documents

- By Melvin A. Goodman

The criminal culpabilit­y of Donald Trump and the sloppiness of the staffs of both Joe Biden and Mike Pence have combined to create a crisis over the handling of classified materials. The former involved Trump’s intentiona­lly keeping large amounts of classified material at Mar-a-Lago; the latter led to small amounts of intelligen­ce at Biden’s former office and his home, as well as in Pence’s home. Since I held high-level security clearances for more than four decades while in the U.S. Army, the Central Intelligen­ce Agency, the Department of State and the Department of Defense, I have something to offer on the issue of secrets and secrecy.

First, there is a simple fix to the problem of presidents and vice presidents being responsibl­e for the closing of their White House offices and the boxing of sensitive materials. This work is done at the final stages of a presidenti­al term by staff members, some of whom probably even lack the clearances to handle sensitive materials. The closing down of these offices and the sorting of materials should be done by qualified members of the General Services Administra­tion or, better yet, the National Archives and Records Administra­tion, which can catalog sensitive materials as well as package them. In the case of Trump’s perfidy, the National Archives knew it was missing certain documents but had no idea about the rest of the items Trump was concealing.

Second, the government’s classifica­tion system terms items marked “confidenti­al” as liable to cause “damage to the national security”; “secret” as running the risk of “serious damage”; and “top secret” causing “exceptiona­lly grave damage” to national security. I never read a “confidenti­al” or “secret” document that could cause serious damage to national security, and even in the case of “top secret,” the notion of “exceptiona­lly grave damage” is hyped to the point of uselessnes­s. In the case of the documents found in Biden’s former office, these probably date from his term as vice president, and their shelf life from seven to 15 years ago probably renders them limited in value. The documents in Pence’s possession, also likely from his time as VP, are newer, but still at least two years old.

An easy solution would be to drop the terms “confidenti­al” and “secret” or at least automatica­lly declassify these items after five years. This would not harm the national security of the United States. The government and the intelligen­ce community must protect the sources and methods in the collection of intelligen­ce,

An easy solution would be to drop the terms “confidenti­al” and “secret” or at least automatica­lly declassify these items after five years. This would not harm the national security of the United States. The government and the intelligen­ce community must protect the sources and methods in the collection of intelligen­ce, but it is extremely rare for intelligen­ce marked confidenti­al or secret to be based on sensitive sources and methods.

but it is extremely rare for intelligen­ce marked confidenti­al or secret to be based on sensitive sources and methods. There are more sensitive materials in the media on a daily basis then there are in so-called confidenti­al and secret pieces of intelligen­ce.

Third, there is a serious amount of classified material that conveys false and even politicize­d intelligen­ce. For example, the Reagan administra­tion conducted the largest peacetime weapons spending spree in the 1980s, which transforme­d the United States from a creditor nation to a debtor nation. This defense spending was based on politicize­d intelligen­ce from

CIA director William Casey and the deputy director for intelligen­ce Robert Gates throughout the 1980s. In actual fact, the Soviet Union was in decline, and its economy was in a sorry state that Casey and Gates concealed from the White House and the Congress. The military buildup in the 1980s was costly and unneeded.

The so-called domino theory to justify the Vietnam War in the 1960s was a fraudulent concept within the intelligen­ce community at every level. The domino theory was used to sell the war to the American public, which eventually questioned the war. I joined the CIA in 1966 and was not aware of any leading policymake­r who believed in the idea of a domino theory.

Fourth, the Pentagon and the CIA use the veil of secrecy to keep informatio­n out of the public arena, thus foreclosin­g the possibilit­y of public debate. Both institutio­ns use a review process to make sure that their employees are unable to publish materials that are falsely labeled as classified. In a manuscript for one of my books, for example, the CIA took out every reference to the use of drones in Afghanista­n, which it considered classified even though it had been fully documented in the mainstream media. A CIA censor even removed a footnote from one of my manuscript­s because it contained the headline of a story that linked the CIA to the use of drones.

Finally, we need to recognize that a great deal of classifica­tion of political materials is designed to prevent embarrassi­ng the individual­s or institutio­ns involved in acts of policy. The Pentagon Papers is an excellent example of a document that presented no threat to national security, but did provide an understand­ing of the lies made to the American public — such as the so-called domino theory — to defend the use of force in Vietnam that cost 56,000 American lives as well as countless Vietnamese civilians.

There is no question that the government must protect its sources and methods in the collection of intelligen­ce. Regarding substantiv­e matters, however, with the exception of details on weapons systems as well as on sensitive negotiatio­ns, there are few legitimate secrets and almost none that must remain classified for more than 10 years. The secrecy that surrounded the Iran-Contra affair probably saved the Reagan presidency over the short term, but greater transparen­cy would have prevented Iran-Contra from ever getting off the ground in the first place.

Our cold war culture of secrecy must be addressed. The loss of blood and treasure in two decades of fighting unnecessar­y wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq were fueled to a great extent by phony intelligen­ce in the case of Iraq and a disdain for history’s lessons in the case of Afghanista­n. A policy of complete openness in most areas of informatio­n would lead to a more useful debate of national security issues and perhaps sounder policy choices.

Melvin A. Goodman, a former CIA intelligen­ce analyst, is a senior fellow at the Center for Internatio­nal Policy and an adjunct professor at Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? AP ?? This image contained in a court filing by the Department of Justice on Aug. 30 and redacted in part by the FBI, shows a photo of documents seized during the Aug. 8 search by the FBI of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. The discovery of classified documents at the home of former Vice President Mike Pence is scrambling the blame game in Washington. Now, lawmakers from both parties seem united in frustratio­n with the string of mishaps in the handling of the U.S. government’s secrets.
AP This image contained in a court filing by the Department of Justice on Aug. 30 and redacted in part by the FBI, shows a photo of documents seized during the Aug. 8 search by the FBI of former President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida. The discovery of classified documents at the home of former Vice President Mike Pence is scrambling the blame game in Washington. Now, lawmakers from both parties seem united in frustratio­n with the string of mishaps in the handling of the U.S. government’s secrets.
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