Source: Carnegie
Reprinted with permission from iMP
Magazine, July 2001
A spate of high profile incidents of espionage over recent years, including
the Robert Hanssen, Aldrich Ames and John Walker cases, has rightly concerned
many Americans about the sanctity of official secrets. But although dangerous
breaches such as these demand a crackdown on imperfect security practices, changes
in the global information and communications environment make it more important
than ever before that all government agencies, including the FBI, CIA and State
Department, learn to operate in an open and transparent manner. In a world increasingly
influenced by interactive mass media, the overall benefits of greater openness
far outweigh the very serious cost of these high profile lapses. This will only
become more true to 2015 and beyond, as the information revolution continues
to influence the development of global consciousness and public participation
in affairs of state. The U.S. government must find a more appropriate balance
between vigorously protecting a limited field of state secrets and fostering
a culture of public accountability, transparency and openness appropriate for
a networked information age.
Information is power, and governments have always safeguarded their own secrets
and sought to uncover those of competing states. In the United States, the 1917
Espionage Act, the 1947 National Security Act and a host of Executive Orders
have tightened a secrecy regime inspired by the challenges of two world wars,
the Cold War and the nuclear arms race. The bureaucratic structures put in place
to ensure high levels of official secrecy have also spawned a government culture
of excessive secrecy.
Secrecy and compartmentalized information by definition hamper internal government
and public discussion and debate. Because standards for classification are not
clearly articulated by statute, and because institutional prudence encourages
officials to over-classify materials, the torrent of classified materials continues.
In 1999 alone, an estimated eight million new secrets were classified, a ten
percent increase the previous year.
These high levels of secrecy have become a national liability in the information
age. With massive amounts of relevant information on most topics now available
on the Internet and elsewhere, relevance does not come from hoarding information.
Instead, it comes from developing and identifying appropriate filters to sort
through masses of data, and by building relationships with those, often outside
of government, who have the most immediate access to relevant information.
Although extensive official secrecy was empowering when governments had more
information than non-governmental actors, it now often amplifies intelligence
shortfalls and prevents governments from partnering with and fully engaging
non-state actors in open knowledge networks. In a networked information environment,
we can learn more by developing close and cooperative links with the thousands
of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) operating throughout Africa, for example,
than by relying on a small number of political and intelligence officers reporting
from African capitals. The secrecy that interferes with developing these types
of relationships harms critical public outreach and makes government agencies
less able to attract young people and private-sector specialists who live, work
and breathe in open and free communications environment.
Thinking differently about official secrecy will require a long overdue shift
in the way the U.S. government views itself and understands the source of its
global power. Openness is a key element of national power and influence in an
information age. A nation's foreign policy is today played out on every level
of society. Cities, states, NGOs, corporations, private associations, global
news organizations and others have multiple contacts around the globe and interact
with increasingly sophisticated foreign counterparts. A nation?s ability to
promote its values and policies and the relevance of its institutions now rests
on government participation alongside such actors in a multi-dimensional global
dialogue. As one voice among many, governments that maintain transparent processes
and carefully explain and justify their actions to these domestic and foreign
constituencies will be far more able to advance policies and principles than
those who do not. Excessive secrecy harms the national interest of the United
States as much as compromised secrecy.
Initial steps have been taken to address this problem. Following a series of
high-level studies and commissions on over-classification, the Public Interest
Declassification Act now before the Senate calls for the establishment of a
board to advise the President on declassification issues. This important but
pedestrian legislation replaces the abandoned and more ambitious Government
Secrecy Act of 1997, which had called for a new federal statute on document
classification and a national declassification center to streamline the declassification
process. Ambitious measures such as those in the 1997 act will be needed to
transform a government culture of secrecy to a culture of openness, with clearly
articulated, limited areas where secrecy is appropriate and necessary.
As long as rogue nations seek to build nuclear, chemical and biological weapons,
terrorist groups plan deadly attacks and international criminal organization
construct global crime networks, America will still need to define and protect
essential secrets and severely punish those who compromise secret materials.
A more focused classification system would allow for a stronger but limited
protective system based on clear statutory guidelines.
As we protect legitimate secrets, however, we must remember that a culture
of secrecy hampers our overall interests far more than a more open system. Only
by building a narrow classification system that defines a limited field of materials
for classification can we begin to discuss official secrecy in the context of
our overriding national interest in a more open, transparent and popularly interactive
government. The U.S. government must shed all but the most critical secrecy
components of its post-War architecture and institutional culture if its foreign
policy institutions are to maintain their relevance in a networked world.