CIA Inspector General Can't Find A Single Example Of CIA Overclassification
from the oh-really? dept
A few days ago, we wrote about the CIA redacting information regarding the price it paid for a single Amiga computer back in 1987. After such news reports came out, the CIA admitted that this was an error and shouldn't have been redacted. Of course, the only reason the documents with that information came out in the first place was because of the efforts of former CIA agent Jeffrey Scudder, who had come across a bunch of classified documents internally that he realized should no longer be classified. Based on that, he filed a FOIA request for those documents -- leading the FBI to come after him and end his CIA career (despite his actions being entirely legal).It's hard not to see all of that as evidence that the CIA has a pretty serious overclassification problem. But don't tell that to the CIA. A newly (yes) declassified report from the CIA's Inspector General reveals that they could not find a single example of overclassification by the CIA. None. Nada. The CIA has a perfect score, apparently. They do admit to finding errors in how some information was recorded, but not a single case of overclassification:
We found no instance of over-classification in the sample of [REDACTED] finished intelligence reports that we reviewedAdmittedly, the number of reports reviewed is classified here, so perhaps the Inspector General just reviewed one. Or zero. But, uh, wait a second... why is the number of reports reviewed classified in the first place? The number is listed as (b)(3) exemption, which tells you basically nothing. It just incorporates things exempted by other statutes. Basically, it's saying there's some law out there that forbids us from revealing this. Of course, one could argue that this seems like a case of overclassification... in the report that insists that the Inspector General couldn't find any examples of overclassification.
Still, it seems like it should raise some alarm bells when they can't find a single example. It's like cheating students, with poor test-taking history, who suddenly get all the answers correct. It should make the teacher more skeptical. Cheating students often know to at least get one or two answers wrong on purpose, and it's fairly amazing that the CIA couldn't find any examples of overclassification just to keep the red flags from being raised. But, then again, who are we kidding? This is the CIA and it's never been concerned with red flags. It throws them up left and right and no one seems to care.
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Filed Under: cia, overclassification
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Somebody mail them with this very document and label the envelope "EXAMPLE OF OVERCLASSIFICATION".
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I believe the word "Zero"...
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Fake
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We can't confirm or deny any of this "overclassification" business
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The head of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, Dianne Feinstein, disagrees with this assessment. When the captain of the Intelligence Committe cheerleading squad complains about overclassification. You know there's a serious problem.
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Re: CIA Inspector General Can't Find A Single Example Of CIA Overclassification
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This comic gem stands on its own.
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New Dictionary
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Inside the box there's no perspective.
So, in the next iteration (because we can't change the CIA without breaking it) the people in charge of declassification need to be in a committee outside of the CIA.
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This is called "zero accountability"
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If anyone read the intercept today
Even external investigations can be suspect and problematic, never mind internal ones that do not and maybe have never turned up any problems.
People lie a lot, all of the articles over that past decade about white lies, and how that is good for human interaction... Sociopaths take this and use it as a basis and justification of Really Really big Lies, ones that harm people many orders of magnitude more than telling your wife she isn't fat.
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When someone say they are perfect = Very shady
Now I can respect peoples opinions, even if they are very opposite mine, but don't insult our intelligence and say that you are perfect, because it will damage your cause when people start to question your sense of reality.
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It's the second and third redactions that were unintentional:
The second redaction was supposed to read "'Submit an Article' page at Cracked.com."
The third redaction was supposed to read "Onion"
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Of course
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Probably should have taken the blind fold off first, huh
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Everything was classified just as much as it needed to be.
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