Probe unearths secrets of Bulgaria’s assassination bureau. Previously unknown details on Service 7, Bulgaria’s Cold War-era assassination bureau, have been unearthed by one of Bulgaria’s leading newspapers, following a probe into 5,000 pages of declassified archives from the country’s former communist intelligence service, the First Directorate of the Committee on State Security.
US Pentagon bars troops from reading WikiLeaks. Any citizen, any foreign spy, any member of the Taliban, and any terrorist can go to the WikiLeaks web site, and download detailed information. Members of that same military, however, are now banned from looking at those internal military documents, because “doing so would introduce potentially classified information on unclassified networks”.
Analysis: Chasing Wikileaks. “[W]hatever the imperfections of WikiLeaks as a startup, its emergence points to a real shortcoming within our intelligence community. Secrets can be kept by deterrence –that is, by hunting down the people who leak them […]. But there are other methods: keep far fewer secrets, manage them better –and, perhaps, along the way, become a bit more like WikiLeaks. An official government Web site that would make the implementation of FOIA quicker and more uniform, comprehensive, and accessible”.
News you may have missed #409
August 7, 2010 by intelNews Leave a comment
Filed under Expert news and commentary on intelligence, espionage, spies and spying Tagged with 0 Analysis: Chasing Wikileaks, 0 Probe unearths secrets of Bulgaria's assassination bureau, 0 US Pentagon bars troops from reading WikiLeaks, Analysis, assassinations, Bulgaria, Cold War, Committee for State Security (Bulgaria), declassification, FOIA, history, intelligence reform, News, news you may have missed, Service 7 (Bulgaria), United States, US DoD, Wikileaks