STEPS WEIGHED TO LIMIT DISCLOSURE OF SECRETS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP91-00561R000100100041-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
February 24, 2012
Sequence Number: 
41
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
May 26, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP91-00561R000100100041-5.pdf136.52 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24: CIA-RDP91-00561 R000100100041-5 . it s r c u NEW YORK TIMES. ON PACE 26 May 1986 Steps Weighed to Limit Disclosure of Secrets memorandum all relate to curbs and By GERALD M. BOYD other steps that would be taken within sp.clal to m. N.w Yak TUm the Administration, the sources said, WASHINGTON, May 25 - The Rea- and do not include recommendations gan Administration is considering for new restrictions on news organiza- reducing the number of officials with tions. access to ass ants as rt But the sources said that the Admin- of a broad effort to control the unau- istration officials regarded the prob- thorized disclosure of sensitive lam of unauthorized disclosures as re. ti ty ormation Adminis- quiring a "dual track" solution in tration sources said today. which efforts would be made to con. dum suggests t at t e tests be used uni- I hope of ending the disclosures of classi- formly, the official said. fied information that officials have as. direction of senior White House offi- cials in response to their increasing concern that efforts to control such dis- closures have been largely unsucess. fW. Other recommendations in the memorandum include an increase in the use of polygraph tests. A similar policy proposed in a security directive Mr. Reagan signed Nov. 1 drew a sharp protest from Secretary of State George P. Shultz. A senior White House official said that some i me t ence officials in the vernment believed that such agen- cies as the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency were administering polygraph tests ad- equate y, while such others as the State Department were no . The memoran- tration was also considering reducing the amount of information that falls within the classified .9ategory in the hope Oat it will then be easier to moni- tor those documents and thus prevent their unauthorized disclosure. The proposals are contained in a memorandum prepared by middle level Administration intelligence offi- cials for review at a meeting this week of President Reagan's top national se- curity advisers, the sources said. It has been presented to Adm. John M. Poin- dexter, Mr. Reagan's national security adviser, they said. This most recent study of unauthor- ized disclosures was undertaken at the The sources said that the Adminis- yen. "Jam odour. the head of-Tit e Nauunal Secur y encv, and De the to House chie o P I SIAM Megan vine news organizations not to report information that jeopardizes national security. They said this would mainly be accomplished by calling upon the media to display more "responsibility" and woWd be used on a "case-by-case basis." White House officials had said Fri- day in announcing that efforts were un- derway to find new ways to prevent dis- closures that the examination was being conducted only to prevent the dis- closure of sensitive national security information and not unflattering sto- ries about the Administration. The irritation over unauthorized dis- closures to the news media is not unique to the Reagan Administration. Mr. Reagan's predecessors were at one time or another exercised over unau- thorized disclosures and moved to pre- vent them. Another proposal urged by the mid- dle-level group calls for an expanded role by the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation in examining unauthorized dis- closures. While the bureau already in- vestigates suspected breaches of espio. nage laws, the sources said that the memorandum suggests creating a spe- cial bureau unit to examine unauthor- ized - ; ' The senior White House official who discussed the policy on polygraph tests said that a special F.B.I. unit would have to be approved by Mr. Reagan and other senior officials. Looking for Discipline The sources said that the recommen- dations were part of an attempt to gen- erate what one called "more disci- pline" in the Administration in the aeverai recommendations could be put into effect by Mr. Reagan through executive orders: cutting the number of officials with access to' classified material, broadening the use of poly- graph tests and setting up a new F.B.I. unit. The memorandum is to be consid,!. bray group t includes Mr. One source stressed that other rrieet- ings of this group might have to be held before final recommendations go to Mr. Reagan. O Another White House official.; std that the thrust of the recommendations were for a more "aggressive" posture by the Administration in trying to curb unauthorized national security leaks. The official said such disclosures had I become a major concern within the Ad- ministration in recent months-because of intelligence disclosures connected with Libya and re ports about a classi- fied intelligence operation involving American submarines. Reports on the ? latter have surfaced in connection with the trial of Ronald W. Peltotl, a former National Security Agency em- ployee, who is accused of spying f~t the Soviet Union. "We have got a situation where eo pie at lower levels have starting blab- bing in an irresponsible way," the offi- cial said. "it is a hindrance in the con- duct of foreign policy as well as It the President's options." Looking for Disclosures The officials described the memo- randum as reflecting a "more aggres- sive" posture in combatting leaks. It urges measures that could make it easier to indentify officials who might engage in such practices, they said,-in- cluding the proposal to reduce the num- ber of employees with access to sensi- tive documents as well as reducing the amount of material in such a category. The recommendation on reducing the number of employees with aecess to classified information is similar, but broader, than efforts taken last June by the Defense Department in the wake-of several espionage cases, including one, that centered on John A. Walker Jr. a retired Navy warrants officer, who has pleaded guilty to espionage charges. In June, the number of officials cleared to handle secret documents at the De- fense Department, more than 4.3 mil- lion, was cut by 10 percent. Some of the recommended meas- ures, such as the use of polygraph tests, have also been attempted in the past. The security directive signed by Mr. Reagan in November called for a "se- lective number" of individuals in high levels with accesss to Governments se- crets to undergo such tests. After a, vigorous protest by Mr. Shultz the White House said in a stnle- ment that such tests were "a limited, though sometimes useful tool when used in conjunction with other investi- gative and security procedures.in :es- pionage cases." Seeking Agreement Officials said that there was- stune concern that the directive left it up to individual department and agencies to determine when such tests should' be given. The latest recommendation would attempt to make the _ "tests mandatory for all parts of Govern- ment, they said: Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2012/02/24: CIA-RDP91-00561 R000100100041-5