News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Vietnam, LSD and Reds |
Title: | US: Vietnam, LSD and Reds |
Published On: | 2006-12-22 |
Source: | Guardian, The (UK) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 19:02:41 |
VIETNAM, LSD AND REDS
US Opens 25-Year-Old Files on State Secrets
Some secrets, it turns out, are too old or too big to keep - even for
the Bush administration, which has made a crusade of rooting out leaks
and clamping down on information on the inner workings of government.
In the new year, the CIA, FBI, state department and more than 80 other
government agencies that handle state secrets will declassify hundreds
of millions of pages of documents under a new policy that institutes
an automatic release of material after 25 years.
Within those documents lie the most turbulent episodes of the 20th
century: the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Vietnam war,
the CIA's unauthorised experiments with LSD and its internal thinking
on a raft of investigations into coups and assassinations overseas,
and the FBI's hunt for communist sympathisers on US soil.
The release, awaited by scholars and journalists, goes against the
grain for the president, George Bush, and the vice-president, Dick
Cheney, who has argued that the disclosure of information from the
White House erodes presidential power.
The decision to release documents after 25 years was made in 1995
under President Bill Clinton, although the Bush administration managed
to delay it. "I was pleasantly surprised," said Steven Aftergood, who
runs a project on government secrecy for the Federation of American
Scientists. "I could have easily imagined this administration saying:
'Oh, no we can't possibly adopt an automatic declassification policy.
That will only assist the terrorists'."
Until now, material could remain secret indefinitely unless
researchers lodged a specific request under freedom of information
regulations. But declassification does not guarantee documents will be
made public. Government agencies can withhold them on privacy grounds,
to protect an intelligence source, or to avoid compromising an ongoing
investigation.
The FBI has been notoriously stringent about exercising that
prerogative, refusing to release documents on the assassination in
Washington of the Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier by agents of the
Pinochet regime on the grounds that investigators were still pursuing
leads.
However, advocates of greater government accountability say an
automatic release of documents remains an important step forward.
US Opens 25-Year-Old Files on State Secrets
Some secrets, it turns out, are too old or too big to keep - even for
the Bush administration, which has made a crusade of rooting out leaks
and clamping down on information on the inner workings of government.
In the new year, the CIA, FBI, state department and more than 80 other
government agencies that handle state secrets will declassify hundreds
of millions of pages of documents under a new policy that institutes
an automatic release of material after 25 years.
Within those documents lie the most turbulent episodes of the 20th
century: the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the Vietnam war,
the CIA's unauthorised experiments with LSD and its internal thinking
on a raft of investigations into coups and assassinations overseas,
and the FBI's hunt for communist sympathisers on US soil.
The release, awaited by scholars and journalists, goes against the
grain for the president, George Bush, and the vice-president, Dick
Cheney, who has argued that the disclosure of information from the
White House erodes presidential power.
The decision to release documents after 25 years was made in 1995
under President Bill Clinton, although the Bush administration managed
to delay it. "I was pleasantly surprised," said Steven Aftergood, who
runs a project on government secrecy for the Federation of American
Scientists. "I could have easily imagined this administration saying:
'Oh, no we can't possibly adopt an automatic declassification policy.
That will only assist the terrorists'."
Until now, material could remain secret indefinitely unless
researchers lodged a specific request under freedom of information
regulations. But declassification does not guarantee documents will be
made public. Government agencies can withhold them on privacy grounds,
to protect an intelligence source, or to avoid compromising an ongoing
investigation.
The FBI has been notoriously stringent about exercising that
prerogative, refusing to release documents on the assassination in
Washington of the Chilean diplomat Orlando Letelier by agents of the
Pinochet regime on the grounds that investigators were still pursuing
leads.
However, advocates of greater government accountability say an
automatic release of documents remains an important step forward.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...