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Secret knowledge

The Army has picked Lockheed Martin to manage its massive intranet, called Army Knowledge Online. The service started the thing a few years ago to provide soldiers with an Internet portal that offered e-mail, easy access to records and other information. In recent years, though, it’s become somewhat difficult to manage, so the service is switching gears, choosing Lockheed Martin to integrate it all.
ako_logo.gifAKO has a dark side, though. Since 9/11, especially, it’s become an easy place for the service to keep information from the prying eyes of reporters and the public. And we’re not talking top-secret or even sensitive stuff, either; routine, even mundane info often gets locked away.
Take this site, for example. It’s the home page for the branch of the Army responsible for buying weapons and other stuff with the billions of taxpayer dollars provided the service each year.
Right in the middle of the page you’ll see a list of documents that appear about as sensitive as the average dry-cleaning ticket. But most are behind the AKO firewall. And way down on the left, there’s something called a “PEO-PM” list — the names and numbers of the program managers who steer Army weapon systems. That was publicly available for years, but now can’t be seen by anyone without a .mil IP address.
Also available for years was a monthly Army acquisition newsletter containing routine announcements; that’s gone, too. (I read it every month when it was accessible, and I can attest it was the exact opposite of sensitive.)
There are countless other examples, including this one, noted by estimable Steve Aftergood. And perhaps the biggest loss to the public were countless documents — all unclassified — once available via the Center for Army Lessons Learned.
The Army’s not alone, of course; the other services and the Pentagon in general are keeping far more information behind electronic firewalls than ever before. And it’s not all post-9/11, either; even under Clinton, the Internet was treated by the military as a whole new ballgame, where even unclassified information was suddenly deemed sensitive and pulled from view.
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The most egregious example is the annual report of the Defense Department’s top testers. The director of operational test and evaluation is charged by law with holding the Pentagon’s feet to the fire when it comes to testing the military equipment it fields. And the annual report — which is unclassified and available in hard copy to anyone who asks for it — is chock-full of information on the status of every major system the military develops, buys and fields. But after 2001, the Pentagon decided it couldn’t be put online. (The latest can be found here, with a price tag.)
“This kind of secrecy doesn’t have anything to do with protecting national security,” says Aftergood. “It’s all about the military’s bureaucratic desire to evade outside scrutiny. So while spending keeps going up, oversight is coming down.“
– posted by Dan Dupont

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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Tom July 15, 2005 at 4:04 pm

This does seem bad – but is it any worse than normal European (especially British) information availability?

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anonymous troll July 17, 2005 at 7:12 am

Still waiting for the DoD sanctioned P2P network to counter those See-What-You-Share type of disclosures. The Air Force is trying the same thing with their portal as well, but after the rank and file see a few those standing around them go down in flames after doing something stupid in one of the “authorized” web based chat rooms… well, let’s just say that uptake has slowed down.

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David Howard July 17, 2005 at 7:30 pm

Arrest Bush 41 to prevent “another 9/11″ … Google and type in “The FBI uses polygraphs to eliminate suspects”

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JSAllison July 18, 2005 at 9:18 am

Sorry but I’m not seeing any there there on this one. I’d say that the military has as much right to OPSEC measures as Burger King, even in the presence of public funding. There are other avenues by which interested outside parties can acquire info that has been cleared for release.

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David Howard January 13, 2007 at 12:36 pm

Google Search: Abolish the Federal Reserve

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David Howard January 18, 2007 at 2:20 pm
David Howard July 10, 2008 at 1:56 pm

For now, think about this: the people dying of radiation-induced cancers …
http://www.911researchers.com/node/917

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David Howard September 21, 2008 at 10:50 am

THE LATE, GREAT PETER KAWAJA STORY EVERYONE NEEDS TO KNOW
http://www.precioustimeradio.com/peterkawaja.html

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David Howard December 26, 2008 at 9:47 pm

google: Quadri-Track ZCT

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David Howard March 14, 2009 at 10:47 am
David Howard July 10, 2009 at 2:28 pm

New York Senator Kirsten Gillibrand Supports New 9/11 Investigation – http://www.anonymousphysicist.com

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David Howard January 10, 2010 at 12:34 am

Another No Planes Video on 9/11

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJkO26ZGNZY

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David Howard March 5, 2011 at 4:05 pm

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