SiteTitle • | Publishing National Security Secrets: the Case for Benign Indeterminacy | [X] |
Organization • | Paul Simon Public Policy Institute | [X] |
| 1: | | Title: | | | | Volume/Number: | 2007 February | | | Issuing Agency: | | | | Description: | Unpopular wars inevitably lead to sharp conflicts between presidents and the press over the control of secret information. National security secrets find their way into print because government officials assigned to carry out questionable policies leak secret documents to reporters. The government responds to publication with threats of civil legal action and criminal prosecution. The Vietnam War produced the Pentagon Papers case in which the government unsuccessfully sought a prior restraint on the publication of a classified history of the Vietnam War. Now, Iraq-related cases have led to jail for some reporters, threats of jail for others and warnings of criminal prosecution for still others. These cases, taken together, threaten to criminalize news gathering of national security secrets. | | | Date Created: | 04-17-2007 | | | Agency ID: | Paper # 6 | | | ISL ID: | 000000054645 Original UID: 176055 FIRST WORD: Publishing | |
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