phil_20686, on 2010-December-03, 11:20, said:
From what i have gathered from news outlets, it seems to be American policy that you can see all documents at your security rating or below, irrespective of the filed that they are in. So military analysts have access to diplomata tic data etc. This does not seem like an efficient system. Best to keep information in as small cells as possible.
After 9/11 there was immediate hue and cry that the attacks we preventable if only information weren't siloed...
There were all sorts of hearings discussing how the competing intelligence services weren't able to share information, that the FBI wasn't able to cross-index information with the CIA, and that no one had a clue what the NSA was up to.
An enomrous amount of time and effort was spent flattening silos and making information more open and accessible (within the intelligence community). They suceeded so well that individuals soldiers were able to access a wide variety of sensitive information - and, subsequently, do whatever they damn well wanted with it...
What we're witnessing is a feature, not a bug... (More precisely, we're seeing folks whipsaw between one extreme and the other).
Personally, I don't find any of this at all surprising.
Off hand, does anyone know how old the expression "Generals fighting the last war" is?