SECRECY NEWS
from the FAS Project on Government Secrecy
Volume 2005, Issue No. 80
August 16, 2005
** IT'S EASY FOR TERRORISTS
** PENTAGON ISSUES DOCTRINE ON HOMELAND SECURITY
** JASON ON TACTICAL INFRASOUND
** ABLE DANGER: WELDON UNLEASHED
** NRC ADOPTS POLICY ON DISCLOSURE OF SECURITY INFORMATION
** DECLASSIFICATION AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
** SELECTED CRS REPORTS
** SUPPORT SECRECY NEWS
IT'S EASY FOR TERRORISTS
"To attack [America's electrical] grid, a terrorist need only study
publicly available trade journals, which explain where new
facilities are constructed," according to an op-ed in the New York
Times on August 13. "A terrorist could then disable a particular
system by destroying the computers and relays housed in the poorly
protected building."
The New York Times op-ed editor has an affinity for such claims
about the simplicity of perpetrating a disastrous act of terrorism.
On May 30, the Times published an op-ed article asserting that "a
terrorist," using a 27 page manual found online, could manufacture
gram quantities of botulinum toxin and cause tens or hundreds of
thousands of casualties. No lab scientist familiar with the
procedures involved would endorse that scenario, presented by a
Stanford business professor.
The notion of a hyper-competent terrorist who can easily overcome
the physical and technical obstacles that perplex and detain
ordinary mortals has become a common rhetorical trope in public
discussions of terrorism.
George Smith of GlobalSecurity.org conducted a Nexis search for the
phrase "easy for a terrorist" (and similar formulations) and found
about one hundred mainstream media citations over the past two
years.
Judging from press reports, nearly everything comes "easy" to
terrorists:
"From food terror, to manipulating the flu virus, to blowing up
chemical plants, to getting driver's licenses, to coming across the
Mexican border, to buying large caliber guns, to shooting down
planes with ground-to-air missiles, to spreading hoof-and-mouth
disease and destroying the cattle industry, to paralyzing Los
Angeles by attacking power stations, to causing major blackouts, to
putting anthrax in bagged rice," Smith found. "There really is no
end to it. It's stupefying in its universality."
Such glib assessments of terrorist capabilities are worse than
simply wrong. They spread fear and a sense of helplessness, doing
the work of the terrorists, and they threaten to dissipate limited
security and financial resources in a hundred different directions.
PENTAGON ISSUES DOCTRINE ON HOMELAND SECURITY
A new Department of Defense publication spells out official doctrine
for the conduct of military operations in defense of homeland
security.
The military has two "distinct but interrelated" homeland security
missions, the new publication explains: homeland defense and civil
support.
Homeland Defense is "the protection of US sovereignty, territory,
domestic population, and critical infrastructure against external
threats and aggression or other threats as directed by the
President."
Civil Support refers to "support to US civil authorities for
domestic emergencies, and for designated law enforcement within the
scope of restrictions required by the Posse Comitatus Act and other
support approved by the SecDef."
The new publication "describes the homeland security framework,
mission areas, missions and related supporting operations and
enabling activities. It also discusses legal authorities; joint
force, multinational, and interagency relationships; command and
control; planning and execution; and training and resource
considerations," the preface states.
The new doctrinal publication is "Homeland Security," Joint
Publication 3-26, dated 2 August 2005 (flagged by docuticker.com).
A copy is posted here (117 pages, 4 MB PDF file):
http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/dod/jp3_26.pdf
JASON ON TACTICAL INFRASOUND
The military and intelligence value of monitoring "infrasound" --
inaudible sound waves of a frequency less than 20 Hertz -- is the
subject of a new report from the secretive JASON advisory group on
military science and technology.
"Using sound as a source of intelligence in a tactical setting has a
long military tradition. Our study was undertaken to assess how
this technique might be exploited in contemporary settings, in
particular at tactical infrasound arrays," the JASON authors write.
"An array of low power robust sensors could be used to monitor
diverse activities from a distance. Sonic data could provide
strategic information to corroborate rocket launches that are
detected by other means, including perhaps location information for
mobile launch vehicles. Activity levels at military airfields
could be monitored from a safe distance. Real time bomb damage
assessments could be augmented with sonic data; particularly when
attacking targets below the surface, listening for the explosions
can help identify instances when the ordinance fails to detonate.
These are but a few examples of the potential utility of sonic
monitoring in the intelligence arena," the report stated.
The JASON report was prepared for the Army's National Ground
Intelligence Center.
A copy was obtained by Secrecy News.
See "Tactical Infrasound," May 2005 (72 pages, 1.4 MB PDF file):
http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/dod/jason/infrasound.pdf
ABLE DANGER: WELDON UNLEASHED
Rep. Curt Weldon (R-PA) caused a stir lately by alleging that a
classified military intelligence data mining program codenamed ABLE
DANGER had identified September 11 hijacker Mohammed Atta as a
threat as early as summer of 2000 and that the 9/11 Commission had
been so informed but had chosen to suppress the information.
In an official statement on the matter, former Commission Chair and
Vice Chair Thomas Kean and Lee Hamilton disputed Weldon's account,
and Weldon himself has begun to backtrack, stating that he is no
longer certain that a chart he obtained from the military in 2001
actually named Atta.
A copy of the August 12 Kean-Hamilton statement is here:
http://www.fas.org/irp/news/2005/08/pdp081205.pdf
Rep. Weldon has a history of making inflammatory allegations that
later proved to be unfounded.
On June 7, 1999 he stood on the House floor and accused the Clinton
Administration of leaking the design of the W87 nuclear warhead to
U.S. News and World Report. It was a charge he repeated several
times, referring to an artist's rendering of the W87 warhead which
appeared in the magazine's July 31, 1995 edition.
"This administration leaked this document to U.S. News & World
Report, giving the entire populace of the world... access to the
design of the W87 nuclear warhead," he alleged.
"I have been told... that it was [Secretary of Energy] Hazel O'Leary
herself who gave U.S. News & World Report the actual diagram of the
W87 nuclear warhead in 1995," he said.
On June 8, 1999 he stated flatly: "Hazel O'Leary leaked the plans,
which are in this magazine, for the W87 nuclear warhead."
None of this was true.
No government diagram of the W87 warhead was given to U.S. News.
The artist's rendering of the weapon was a conceptual drawing, not
a design. It was explicitly credited by the magazine to the
Natural Resources Defense Council. An NRDC analyst confirmed that
he had supplied the information to the graphic artist, and that it
was based on informed speculation, not classified information.
In accordance with the political tactics used to attack the
Clinton-Gore Administration throughout much of the 1990s, Rep.
Weldon never retracted or apologized for his unfounded accusations.
See:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/bulletin/sec80.html#weldon
According to an August 10 story in The Hill, Rep. Weldon said House
Speaker Dennis Hastert will support his potential bid to become the
next chairman of the House Armed Services Committee in 2008.
NRC ADOPTS POLICY ON DISCLOSURE OF SECURITY INFORMATION
Following a dispute with the National Academy of Sciences over the
release of security-related information in an NAS report on spent
nuclear fuel, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission undertook a review
of its policy regarding public disclosure of such information.
An NRC Task Force prepared a report on the subject, and the NRC
recently approved a new statement of disclosure policy.
"The task force has concluded that the Commission has considerable
authority to withhold from public disclosure information that could
be useful, or could reasonably be expected to be useful, to a
terrorist, provided that the information is not readily available
to the public already," the report stated.
The resulting NRC policy concluded generally that "to the extent
practicable," the withholding of sensitive information from public
disclosure should conform to Freedom of Information Act principles
for withholding security-related information.
See "NRC Task Force Report on Public Disclosure of Security-Related
Information," Nuclear Regulatory Commission, May 18, 2005 (approved
June 30, 2005) (thanks to MJR):
http://www.fas.org/sgp/othergov/nrc-disc.pdf
DECLASSIFICATION AT THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES
A proposed rule on declassification of national security information
at the National Archives (NARA) would update current policy to
reflect President Bush's March 2003 amendments to classification
policy.
The proposed rule, published for public comment in the Federal
Register on August 12, also sets forth procedures for automatic
declassification and for reclassification of information that has
been previously declassified.
The Federal Register notice presents a useful and informative series
of questions and answers regarding classification and
declassification policy. (It mistakenly continues to refer to the
"Director of Central Intelligence," a position that no longer
exists.)
Thus: "Can previously released White House-originated information be
reclassified or have its classification restored?"
The answer: "An agency or an entity within the Executive Office of
the President that solely advises and assists the President, may
ask NARA to temporarily close, review, and possibly reclassify or
restore the classification of White House-originated information
that has been declassified and previously released."
See the Proposed Rule on Declassification of National Security
Information, Federal Register, August 12:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/news/2005/08/nara081205.html
SELECTED CRS REPORTS
The Congressional Research Service does not make its publications
directly available to the public. The following CRS reports were
obtained by Secrecy News.
"Missile Survey: Ballistic and Cruise Missiles of Selected Foreign
Countries," updated July 26, 2005:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/weapons/RL30427.pdf
"Iran's Nuclear Program: Recent Developments," updated August 2,
2005:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/nuke/RS21592.pdf
"'Bunker Busters': Robust Nuclear Earth Penetrator Issues, FY2005
and FY 2006," updated August 2, 2005:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/nuke/RL32347.pdf
"Black Members of the United States Congress: 1870-2005," updated
August 4, 2005:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/RL30378.pdf
"Cambodia: Background and U.S. Relations," July 8, 2005:
http://www.fas.org/sgp/crs/row/RL32986.pdf
_______________________________________________
Secrecy News is written by Steven Aftergood and published by the
Federation of American Scientists.