Limit access to most secret US documents, Senate intel panel head says
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[April 24, 2023]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Too many people have access to the U.S.
government's closest secrets and a central entity should oversee the
classification process, the chairman of the Senate Intelligence
Committee said on Sunday, addressing leaks of documents in an online
chat group. |
U.S. Senator Mark Warner, Democrat of
Virginia and Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence,
holds a hearing about worldwide threats, on Capitol Hill in Washington,
DC, U.S., April 14, 2021. Saul Loeb/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo |
A
U.S. Air National Guardsman was charged on April 14 with leaking
classified documents online in what is believed to be the most
serious U.S. security breach since more than 700,000 documents,
videos and diplomatic cables appeared on the WikiLeaks website
in 2010.
Senator Mark Warner, a Democrat, told ABC News that "once we get
to that highest level of classification, we maybe have too many
folks taking a look at them, over 4 million people with
clearances."
The Virginia senator's powerful position gives weight to his
recommendations as President Joe Biden's administration examines
the handling of intelligence and looks for ways to clamp down on
future leaks.
The United States has numerous intelligence gathering entities
and Warner said the situation needed to be dealt with.
"We need somebody fully in charge of the whole classification
process and I think for those classified documents there ought
to be a smaller universe," he said.
As an example, Warner said the National Security Agency has
suffered leaks in the past and internal controls limit the
copying of documents.
The Pentagon has called the latest leak a "deliberate, criminal
act."
Warner also said that not everyone handling a document needs to
see the whole document and that just seeing the header could be
enough.
(Reporting by Chris Sanders; editing by Grant McCool)
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