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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rick McDougall who wrote (504404)12/5/2003 3:02:31 PM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Speaking of secret....THE FAVORITE WORD OF THE FAUX PATRIOTS IN THE WHITE HOUSE
Secrecy vs. Security
Federal agencies like the CIA and FBI vigilantly
guarded their secrets during the Cold War, in part
fearing one another's leakers and moles. But sometimes
information is just a source of power, as were J. Edgar
Hoover's vast files on the personal habits of elected
officials. Internal secrecy still exists in Washington, and
it is sabotaging the mission of the Homeland Security
Department.


That's the scary warning in a report from the Markle
Foundation. The blue-chip group that produced the
study included, in addition to privacy experts, Wesley
K. Clark, the Democratic presidential candidate and
retired general; former Republican Sen. Slade Gorton;
and Morton H. Halperin, a former Clinton
administration official.

This isn't the first indication that the department, a
mammoth post-9/11 melding of several government
agencies, is more bureaucratic shuffler than effective
response to global perils. The General Accounting Office stated in August that
poor coordination of information by various levels of government could cause
vital clues of an impending attack to be overlooked. It found that information was
not reaching states and cities as it should. The emphasis, the GAO said, is on
supplying information to senior federal officials — the people who control the
purse strings and promotions.

A 50-state study by the U.S. Conference of Mayors in September added another
piece to the puzzle, asserting that 90% of cities had not obtained promised federal
funds to assist police, local officials and other first responders. State and local law
enforcement agencies are the first that must learn of an impending attack, whether
it be a truck bomb or a cyber plot. In turn, they need a fast, effective way to send
warnings up the chain — and have them taken seriously.

One example of problems below the federal level: A state's investigators often
have difficulty getting access to other states' driver's license records.

The federal government's obsession with classifying even innocuous materials also
stymies local officials. The GAO says that with sufficient training, state and local
officials, who daily handle confidential information on crimes, "could handle other
categories of sensitive information." Individual privacy doesn't have to be at risk if
the rules are clear. The Markle report, for instance, says the government should
not be able to use health records or credit data unless it can show a strong link to
a threat.

No matter how much information the feds collect, it's little help if it's not shared.
The clues to preventing a new attack are as likely to come from a vigilant cop on
the beat as from a CIA agent.



To: Rick McDougall who wrote (504404)12/5/2003 3:32:04 PM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
shining up the tinfoil early today are you?