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Declassification spending was cut from an average of $224 million annually in the last four years of the Clinton administration to only $47 million a year during the last four years of the Bush administration. Today, the problem is not much closer to being solved than it was in the 1990s. Under the terms of Bush's extension, sensitive information in hundreds of millions of pages of historical documents will be declassified automatically on Dec. 31 unless Obama acts. "If the agencies haven't found the sensitive old documents after nine years, that's some indication those records don't deserve being secret anymore," said Tom Blanton, director of the National Security Archive. Obama's order probably will centralize the review process for old records, having all agencies look at the same classified documents at the same time through the new National Declassification Center. Michael Kurtz, who has been with the National Archives for the past 35 years, has been chosen as the center's acting director. Much of the work of a National Declassification Center probably would be conducted at the National Archives facility in College Park, Md., where many of the documents are housed and many of the agency declassifiers already spend a great deal of time. Critics say Obama should do more than the upcoming executive order is likely to. They note that Clinton ordered a "bulk declassification" of millions of records from World War II and before; they want Obama to do the same with Cold War-era records. The premise of bulk declassification is that "we're not going to spend taxpayer dollars to go through these records one by one," said William Leonard, Bosanko's predecessor as Information Security Oversight Office director. And the planned National Declassification Center, said Leonard, should have authority to decide the status of millions of classified records on its own. "We shouldn't need multiple opinions from multiple agencies," said Leonard. But intelligence agencies have resisted surrendering their authority over secrets to an interagency group. ___ On the Net: Information Security Oversight Office: Project on Government Secrecy: National Security Archive: White House background:
http://www.archives.gov/isoo/
http://www.fas.org/sgp/
http://tinyurl.com/a8dwh
http://tinyurl.com/ylap898
[Associated
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