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Writer's pictureKen Larson

Pentagon Proposes Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) Restriction Again – Industry Objects


THE PROJECT ON GOVERNMENT OVERSIGHT


“The Honorable Jack Reed

Chairman, Senate Armed Services Committee

728 Hart Senate Office Building

Washington, DC 20510


The Honorable Adam Smith

Chairman, House Armed Services Committee

2264 Rayburn House Office Building

Washington, DC 20515


The Honorable James Inhofe

Ranking Member, Senate Armed Services Committee

205 Russell Senate Office Building

Washington, DC 20510The Honorable Mike Rogers

Ranking Member, House Armed Services Committee

2469 Rayburn House Office Building

Washington, DC 20515



Dear Chairman Reed, Ranking Member Inhofe, Chairman Smith, and Ranking Member Rogers:


The undersigned organizations urge you to oppose the Department of Defense’s proposal to alter the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) through the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2022. The Pentagon’s proposed language would undermine FOIA by creating an unnecessary and overbroad secrecy provision at odds with the law’s goal of transparency and accountability to the public. The department’s proposal to exempt from disclosure unclassified information on “military tactic, technique, or procedure,” and on military “rule of engagement or rule for the use of force” would create an unnecessary and broad carve-out to public disclosure laws.1 Accountability and transparency are particularly important for the Pentagon, the largest executive branch agency with the largest discretionary budget. Because of the potential long-lasting effects on the public’s access to information, we urge you to reject this proposal.


This is now the seventh time the Pentagon has attempted to include this exemption, in various forms, since 2011.2 Each time, our community has sounded the alarm and pointed out that the department’s justification for the exemption does not include any indication that the language is necessary or that existing limits on disclosure have not sufficiently protected the effectiveness of military operations. This holds true for the Pentagon’s current attempt as well.


Moreover, the department continues to propose these fundamental changes to FOIA despite not seeking input and concerns from the committees with jurisdiction over FOIA and FOIA-related issues.4 Input from those committees is necessary to ensure that any changes to FOIA promote consistent transparency and public accountability while allowing the government to withhold information that truly requires protection. A massive authorization bill, which has in previous years been marked up in secret in the Senate, is not the proper vehicle to amend FOIA for the largest executive branch agency.


FOIA already exempts “properly classified” national defense information from disclosure, which addresses concerns from the Department of Defense that it would be required to disclose information that would give potential adversaries advance knowledge of certain military tactics, techniques, and procedures.


When pressed by congressional staffers and members of the open government community in years past, Pentagon representatives admitted that the department has never had to release information pursuant to a FOIA request that it would be able to withhold under this proposed exemption.6 Further, the department’s proposed language has no clear limits on what kinds of information could be concealed, meaning it could be used to conceal information about the military’s interrogation and treatment of prisoners; the department’s response to the January 6 insurrection at the Capitol; its handling of sexual assault complaints; its oversight of contractors; and other matters of compelling public interest.


The Department of Defense and all other federal agencies already have broad authority to withhold classified information under FOIA exemption one, and to withhold unclassified information under a variety of other statutes. According to Department of Justice FOIA data, the Department of Defense is already performing poorly by almost any metric. In fiscal year 2020, the Pentagon’s FOIA backlog was at an 11-year high. FOIA request denials that cite exemptions for why information is being withheld are at a five-year high. Recent analysis has shown a wave of increased secrecy at the Pentagon, with both an increase in information-withholding in response to FOIA requests and a large spike in administrative appeals resulting in a total reversal of the agency’s initial decision to conceal information from the public.


Excessive, reflexive secrecy about completed military operations could also harm the troops, as exemplified by news reports that show soldiers’ health care was compromised by the military’s failure to acknowledge their exposure to chemical weapons in Iraq.10 The FOIA exemption in the Pentagon’s current legislative proposal appears intended to effectively overturn the 2011 Supreme Court decision in Milner v. Navy, which properly narrowed the interpretation of FOIA’s second exemption to cover only information about internal personnel rules and practices of an agency. This forced agencies to stop using that exemption to over-withhold information simply because it was used to instruct agency employees in the course of their jobs.


Although the Department of Defense has assured Congress that the exemption would not be used indiscriminately, there is no way to wholly prevent this department or another agency from interpreting this exemption in the future to withhold other kinds of information from public disclosure. The department’s inconsistent and unreliable implementation of FOIA should not continue through the addition of this unnecessary and overbroad exemption.


Our community is sensitive to the goal of ensuring that information that needs to be withheld to protect the safety of our troops and strategy of our military operations is not disclosed, but the Pentagon’s current proposal is not the way to do so. We cannot support the proposed language, but we encourage the Department of Defense to work with the committees of jurisdiction over FOIA to address the outstanding concerns without codifying language that could be easily abused to keep the public and Congress in the dark about our military.


Sincerely,


ACORN8 American Civil Liberties Union Center for International Policy Center on Conscience and War Centro de Periodismo Investigativo Church of the Brethren, Office of Peacebuilding and Policy Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) Citizens for Safe Water Around Badger (CSWAB) CODEPINK Common Defense Demand Progress Eisenhower Media Network Electronic Frontier Foundation Endangered Species Coalition Federation of American Scientists George AFB – HTRW Government Accountability Project Government Information Watch Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action Hero’s Journey Content Malu Aina Massachusetts Peace Action National Freedom of Information Coalition National Security Archive National Security Counselors National Taxpayers Union Okinawa Times Open The Government Peaceful Skies Coalition Project On Government Oversight (POGO) Property of the People Public Citizen Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press Sage Information Services SF Bay View Taxpayers Protection Alliance The Digital Democracy Project The Komisar Scoop The United Methodist Church – General Board of Church and Society Transparency International – U.S. Office Transparency International Defence and Security Washington Coalition for Open Government Whistleblowers of America Win Without War Women’s Action for New Directions


Cc: House Committee on Oversight and Reform Chairwoman Carolyn B. Maloney

House Committee on Oversight and Reform Ranking Member James Comer

Senate Committee on the Judiciary Chair Dick Durbin

Senate Committee on the Judiciary Ranking Member Chuck Grassley”





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