Originally posted by: blackangst1
Got it
I hate (despise) the unPatriot Act, and have since its inception, and have never apologized for it. But, for the sake of maybe playing devil's advocate, there is something that nags me. No one knows whats in the intel briefings (nor should we). There *is* the possibility that all *is* necessary.
Actually, we do have *some* idea. If I recall, one was declassified (the one with the 'Al Queda determined to strike in US' one), and other info has come out, if you look.
But the larger point is that in a democracy, the public needs information to make good choices, and the government withholding that information is the road to tyranny.
The idea of Congress being 'completely wrong' poses its own problems.
So, what's appropriate to be confidential from the public? There are occassionally some short-term items, which the President should release before long when the need for secrecy is over. The PDB doesn't typically have - if I understand correctly - operational details much at all, but if it had some, those could need confidentiality. Information that could reveal sources needs to be released delicately without threatening the sources if at all possible, but with the obligation to meet the public's need to be informed prioritized.
Secrecy is an incubator for mischief and corruption and mistakes. There must not be an excess of it for our nation to work.
There's no way the PDB can contain info to contradict 'all the info Obama thinks he has' as a Senator. That's clearly hyperbole. Of course, *some* things would come to light.
Time and again, history shows that the hidden information is less 'legitimate secrets the President needed for basing decisions that turned out to be right', and more things that were secret for the reasons listed above, good or bad. For just one example of a 'Presidential secret' that's all too typical, for decades the story was that on Ford and Kissinger's visit to Indonesia, the fact that the day after they left Indonesia invaded East Timor (using US-supplied weapons with a Congressional ban on that use) was just a coincidence. Kissinger specifically said there was no discussion on the visit, and no approval by the US.
Recently, the documents finally came out - they lied. On the visit, the planned invasion was discussed, and Kissinger and Ford gave them a green light - but with instructions on strict secrecy because of the President approving what Congress had outlawed. Kissinger told them to not start until they'd left - and they waited, hours.
Err on the side of less secrecy, and don't fall victim to the myth of the President and holder of the secrets the nation must not know. On policy issues, he needs to be able to articulate the case, without revealing secrets. Look at how much secret information was revealed on the WMD case, and they still got it wrong, even though less secrecy would have expsed that better - such as the *only source* for the key facts being the unreliable Curveball who the US had never spoken to - and some did come out accidentally, like the Yellowcake falsehoods because an insider, Joe Wilson, unexpectedly went public to expose what he knew was wrong (and was savaged by the right for his patriotic act).
The legitmate need for secrets is not usually at the policy level - 'we have to go to war with this nation, but don't ask why' is a problem, and that's how it should be.