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Kronologi over fredssagen og international politik 21. April 2011 / Time Line April 21, 2011

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20. April 2011, 22. April 2011


04/21/2011
Nobelfredspristageren Fredrik Bajer fødes, 1837.

04/21/2011
Danmarks Naturfredningsforening stiftes i København, 1911.

04/21/2011
National Security Archive Update, April 21, 2011
THE LAST NSAM STANDING
Deconstructing a Secrecy Blunder: A Study in Dysfunction
Washington, D.C., April 21, 2011 - The last remaining secret national security directive from the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, a National Security Action Memorandum on Laos, has finally been declassified, nearly fifty years after it was first issued, and was posted today on the Web site of the National Security Archive.
Today's posting is a case study of sorts--a selection of documents which are analyzed not so much for their historical value as for what the materials show about operation of the declassification system. This inquiry has its origins in a quest by Archive senior fellow Jeffrey T. Richelson to obtain the declassification of presidential national security directives issued since President Harry S. Truman. During the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, the highest level directives that flowed from the White House were called National Security Action Memoranda (NSAMs). President John F. Kennedy issued 173 NSAMs during his time in office. Reaching the point where only NSAM-29, on Laos, dated March 9, 1961, remained secret, Richelson finally obtained the declassification of this directive on October 29, 2010, almost fifty years after it was issued.
As the "last NSAM standing," NSAM 29 received significant attention inside the National Security Archive. But to the present author, the Archive's project director on Vietnam war records, it immediately seemed familiar. A search for related records produced a number of other items (also posted today) which provide the context for discussion of NSAM-29's release. More importantly, however, the search disclosed that the document, far from being the last NSAM standing, was already in the public domain, in multiple versions, some more than a decade old. Given present controversies over secrecy in America, the case of the last NSAM illuminates the enormous problems that are endemic in the declassification system.
Continue reading at the National Security Archive's Web site: http://www.nsarchive.org

04/21/2011

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