Tuesday, October 14, 2014

FAS Roundup: October 14, 2014

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From the Blogs


Transcript of 1954 Oppenheimer Hearing Declassified in Full: The transcript of the momentous 1954 Atomic Energy Commission hearing that led the AEC to revoke the security clearance of J. Robert Oppenheimer, the physicist who had led the Manhattan Project to produce the first atomic bomb, has now been fully declassified by the Department of Energy. The Oppenheimer hearing was a watershed event that signaled a crisis in the nuclear weapons bureaucracy and a fracturing of the early post-war national security consensus.

W80-1 Warhead Selected For New Nuclear Cruise Missile: The U.S. Nuclear Weapons Council has selected the W80-1 thermonuclear warhead for the Air Force’s new nuclear cruise missile (Long-Range Standoff, LRSO) scheduled for deployment in 2027. The W80-1 warhead is currently used on the Air Launched Cruise Missile (ALCM), but will be modified during a life-extension program and de-deployed with a new name: W80-4. Under current plans, the ALCM will be retired in the mid-2020s and replaced with the more advanced LRSO, possibly starting in 2027. The estimated cost of the program is between $10-20 billion, but the military argues that a new nuclear standoff weapon is needed to spare a new penetrating bomber from enemy air-defense threats.

Insider Threat Program May Not Be Ready by 2017:  Security policies in the executive branch are being overhauled in response to a potential “insider threat.” But while some progress is being made, the intended functionality will not be available for several more years to come. The insider threat includes “the threat of those insiders who may use their authorized access to compromise classified information.” Last week, the Department of Defense finally issued an internal directive establishing department policy on the subject. However, the timetable for achieving a government-wide insider threat program does not envision an Initial Operating Capability until January 2017.

Ebola Outbreak: Select Legal Issues and More from CRS: Secrecy News has obtained recently released CRS reports on topics such as legal issues related to the Ebola outbreak and the basics of the disease, inspectors general with guns and Syria's chemical weapons. 

Report on Disclosures to the Media is Classified: A report to Congress on authorized disclosures of classified intelligence to the media — not unauthorized disclosures — is classified and is exempt from disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act, per the National Security Agency. Steven Aftergood writes that the notion of an authorized disclosure of classified information is close to being a contradiction in terms. If something is classified, how can its disclosure be authorized (without declassification)? And if something is disclosed by an official who is authorized to do so, how can it still be classified?

 

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