The Washington Post reports that the Bush Administration has created a new category of controlled information — “Controlled Unclassified Information.” The new category will replace “Sensitive but Unclassified.”
Sometime in the next few years, if a memorandum signed by President Bush this month ever goes into effect, one government official talking to another about information on terrorists will have to begin by saying: “What I am about to tell you is controlled unclassified information enhanced with specified dissemination.”
That would mean, according to the memo, that the information requires safeguarding because “the inadvertent or unauthorized disclosure would create risk of substantial harm.” . . .
Such information — though it does not merit the well-known national security classifications “confidential,” “secret” or “top secret” — is nonetheless “pertinent” to U.S. “national interests” or to “important interests of entities outside the federal government,” the memo says. . . .
Left undefined are which laws or policies generated the requirement for protecting such information, and which interests are pertinent. But Bush’s memo does refer to the “global nature of the threats facing the United States” and to the need to ensure that the “entire network of defenders be able to share information more rapidly” while protecting “sensitive information, information privacy, and other legal rights of Americans.”
The president declared that the purpose of the new classification is “to standardize practices and thereby improve the sharing of information, not to classify or declassify new or additional information.” But some critics described it as continuing an expansion of secrecy in government and a potential bureaucratic nightmare.