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Politics : Stockman Scott's Political Debate Porch -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rick Faurot who wrote (31022)11/5/2003 12:02:49 AM
From: Mannie  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 89467
 
Too Much Secrecy

It is a sad thing, but the Bush administration is the most deceptive
(or, if you wish to be generous, the most misinformed and
manipulated) crew that has occupied the White House in the past
few decades.

It is also the most secretive administration.

Let's get down to basics. There are two reasons, and only two
reasons, for classifying any information as secret. One, of course,
is information that would inform an enemy of our military plans and
thus enable the enemy to counter them. The other reason is when
revealing the information would reveal the human source of the
information, such as a spy.

Using those standards, darn little information would be classified,
but the Bush administration seems to want to classify everything.
Why, for example, should the report of David Kay's search for
weapons of mass destruction be classified? There can be nothing in
that report that the Iraqis don't know. One can conclude that the
only harm full publication would cause would be political
embarrassment to the Bush administration.

The fact is, those inspectors work for the American people, the
American people are paying their salaries and expenses, and by
God the American people are entitled to know what they are getting
for their money. No national-security matter is involved whatsoever.

Why classify that part of a report of a congressional inquiry that
involves the Saudis? The Saudi Arabian government publicly
demanded that it be declassified. Why should the American people
be denied the results of their elected officials' work? Just what harm
is going to be caused by letting the American people know what a
number of members of Congress and their staffs already know?

Why should the names of anyone held by the federal government,
in U.S. jails or in Guantanamo, be classified as secret? This is pure
totalitarianism. The ridiculous term "enemy combatant" really
means a person whose rights are being denied. You can't have a
combatant without a war, and when people in a war are captured,
they are prisoners of war, subject to all the rights spelled out by the
Geneva Convention.

Certainly these people have relatives and friends who know they
are being held somewhere and of course know their names. Why
can't those names be published? It's ridiculous. This administration
is paranoid. It is not safe to have mentally unhealthy people
wielding great power.

The American people should be angry. They pay every penny of the
cost of government. It is their government. They have a right to
know anything the government knows and anything the
government does, with the two exceptions cited above. It is not a
foreign enemy the Bush administration fears. It is the American
people.

I read some years ago an estimate that two-thirds of American
history is still classified, and I don't doubt that at all. Stuff going all
the way back to World War II is still classified long after there is
rational reason for it being so.

I hope the American people will realize eventually that people who
lie to them and keep secrets from them are people who consider
them to be enemies. Any politician who fears or dislikes the
American people should be routed out of office immediately.

The Bush administration, for its own private reasons, wanted to go
to war against a country that had not attacked us, had not
threatened to attack us and did not have the capability of attacking
us. Therefore it concocted a lie about non-existent weapons and
nonexistent relationships with al-Qaida. Now, to protect its lies, the
administration wants to classify practically everything that has to do
with the Iraq War and occupation.

I'm sure the president's friends in Texas miss him, and next year,
hopefully, the American people will return him to their bosom. He
is, for all his faults, a decent and affable man who probably knows
less of what's going on in his own administration than we do. At
least some of us are interested; he doesn't seem to be.

reese.king-online.com