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From the Blogs
The Meaning of Transparency:
President Obama’s declared goal of making his “the most transparent
Administration in history” generated successive waves of enthusiasm,
perplexity, frustration, and mockery as public expectations of increased
openness and accountability were lifted sky high and then — often, not
always — thwarted. Steven Aftergood writes that every Administration
including this one presides over the release of more government
information than did its predecessors, if only because more information
is created with the passage of time and there is
more that can be released. But President Obama seemed to promise more
than this. What was it?
Germany and the B61 Bomb Modernization:
In a new post on the Strategic Security Blog, Hans Kristensen discusses
his recent trip to Germany where he testified before the Disarmament
Subcommittee of the German Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee on the
future of U.S. B61 nuclear bombs in Europe. One of the B61 bombs
currently deployed in Europe is scheduled for an upgrade to extend its
life and add new military capabilities and use-control features. The
work has hardly begun but the project is already behind schedule and the
cost has increased by more than 150 percent in two
years, from $4 billion to $10.4 billion. View Mr. Kristensen's remarks here.
Academy Report on National Grid Withheld for Five Years:
Over the objections of its authors, the Department of Homeland Security
classified a 2007 report from the National Academy of Sciences on the
potential vulnerability of the U.S. electric power system until most of
it was finally released on November 14. The report generally concluded,
as other reports have, that the electric grid is lacking in resilience
and is susceptible to disruption not only from natural disasters but
also from deliberate attack.
Eavsdropping Statutes and More from CRS:
Secrecy News has obtained recently released CRS reports on topics such
as federal laws on cybersecurity, medical marijuana, privacy laws, and veterans affairs.
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