Sequestration Slows Document Declassification
Categories: Secrecy
The process of declassifying national security records,
which is hardly expeditious under the best of circumstances, will become slower
as a result of the mandatory budget cuts known as sequestration.
Due to sequestration, “NARA
has reduced funding dedicated to the declassification of Presidential records,”
the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA )
said in a report last week.
“Instead, NARA
staff will prepare documents for declassification, in addition to their
existing duties. This will slow declassification processes and delay other
work, including FOIA responses and special access requests,” said the
new report, which also identified several other adverse effects of the
across-the-board cuts.
Meanwhile, because of the basic asymmetry between
classification and declassification, there is no particular reason to expect a
corresponding reduction in the rate at which new records are classified.
Classification is an integral part of the production of new
national security information that cannot be deferred, while declassification
is a distinct process that can easily be put on hold.
Likewise, there is no dedicated budget for “classification”
to cut in the way that NARA
has cut declassification spending.
And while Congress has erected barriers to declassification
(such as the Kyl-Lott Amendment to prohibit automatic
declassification of records without review), it has simultaneously allowed
declassification requirements to go overlooked and unenforced.
Some declassification is actually mandated by law. A
1991 statute on the Foreign Relations of the United
States series requires the Department of
State to publish a “thorough, accurate, and reliable documentary record of
major United States
foreign policy decisions” no later than 30 years after the fact, necessitating
the timely declassification of the underlying records. But law or no law,
the government has not complied with this publication schedule.
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