Top Secret
by
Charley
Reese
by Charley Reese
I wish to announce
that I have taken actions that have saved hundreds of American lives.
What kinds
of actions?
That's classified.
But since
you write columns for a living, you must have dealt with some organizations.
Who are they?
That's
classified.
When did you
take those actions?
That's
classified. Listen, I'm not going to discuss intelligence matters
except to say that I am simultaneously smiting the enemies of America
and protecting Americans' civil liberties, obeying the law and saying
my prayers every night.
With all due
respect, sir, how do we know you're doing that if every aspect of
it is classified?
Trust me.
Well, if you
trust George W. Bush, I have a bridge in Brooklyn that's just come
on the market at an amazingly low price. Some secrecy in government
is necessary. We don't need to publish directions for making hydrogen
bombs or announce in advance troop actions in a war zone. We shouldn't
reveal the identities of our covert agents or their sources. But
beyond these obvious few things, very little in government really
deserves to be kept secret.
Classifying
stuff as "secret" is a farce and quite often a deliberate
cover-up. A friend who served in Army intelligence recalls clipping
stories from mass-circulation newspapers in Tokyo and stamping them
"Top Secret." Another friend who finally got his FBI dossier
after a two-year fight with the FBI by using the Freedom of Information
Act discovered there was nothing in this "classified"
dossier except newspaper clippings. These are true stories.
When I was
in my last hitch in the Army, I had a secret clearance. One day,
however, I had to type a report that was Top Secret. I can assure
you that nothing in our unit was worth keeping secret. At any rate,
I typed it and put the Top Secret cover on it and gave it to the
commanding officer.
In a few minutes,
he said he wanted to make some minor changes. "Fine,"
I said, "give them to me, and I'll retype it." "I
can't do that," he said, "because you don't have a Top
Secret clearance." I kid you not, he really said that. "Sir,"
I reminded him, "I just typed the whole report." "Yes,"
he replied with an "aha" tone of voice, "but that
was before the Top Secret cover was put on it."
You might
suppose I reminded him that it was I who put the cover on, but I
didn't. One thing I learned in the Army is that it is futile to
attempt to reason with a bureaucratic mind, especially one that
outranks you. Excuse me for not sharing the general enthusiasm for
all things military and governmental, but I have been too close
to both. It's my belief that wars are contests to see which side
makes fewer blunders. So far, we've been lucky in our choice of
opponents.
The current
Bush administration is easily the most secretive, classified-happy
administration in history, and probably with good reason, given
its cronyism, incompetent appointments, blunders, corruption and
deceptions. Compared with George W. Bush, Richard Nixon is beginning
to look normal.
Bush's outrage
about being exposed for breaking the law in regard to National Security
Agency surveillance domestically shows how arbitrary and stupid
this administration is. The law says you must get a warrant from
a secret intelligence court. These courts have almost never rejected
a request for a warrant. Therefore, the same people Bush ordered
spied on without a warrant could have been spied on legally, except
for Bush's Caesar complex. Except for the kinky sex, Bush far more
resembles Caligula than either Julius or Octavius Caesar.
Bush
is absolutely convinced he's right, doesn't want to hear any dissent
and thinks people who disagree with him are disloyal enemies. If
those aren't the mental characteristics of a wannabe dictator, then
let's nominate Saddam Hussein as humanitarian of the year.
December
28, 2005
Charley
Reese [send
him mail] has been a journalist for 49 years.
©
2005 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.
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