You Only File FOIA Requests Twice

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BAGHDAD -- So. I filed a FOIA request on myself a while back with the CIA. Yesterday my brother received a letter that says that after an exhaustive search they found "one document that we have determined must be withheld in its entirety" based on exemptions to the FOIA and Privacy Act laws. The exemptions cover disclosure of CIA "intelligence sources and methods, as well as the organization functions, names" etc of personnel employed by "the Agency" and "material which is properly classified pursuant to an Executive order in the interest of national defense or foreign policy."

On the one hand, I think, "Hm. What the hell does the CIA have on me, anyway?" On the other, I think, "Bitchin'! The CIA has spook stuff on me! Who's the spy in my circle of friends?" Looks like someone in Langley's getting another FOIA-gram from me...

Seriously, how common is it for a journalist to have a document about him that can't be released for "national security reasons"? Anyone from the CIA reading this site -- and server logs don't lie, yo -- want to chime in and explain? And don't worry about me blowing your cover. I don't work for the Bush administration.

UPDATE 23 March 2006 at 1231 +0200 GMT: A copy of the two page letter is available here (page 1) and here (page 2). I wonder if this is part of President Bush's wiretapping scheme or if the CIA has been employing journalists again, which is supposed to be a no-no.

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7 Comments

eheheh!!! For the last sentence of the post, genial.

We’re on to you, Allbritton.

Actually, apart from a brief flirtation with the US Marines last year, which we won’t discuss, your Blog has been pretty consistent in disclosing the extent of US folly, misconceptions, abuses etc in Iraq. You certainly have been no friend of the Bush Administration, and your writing must have influenced many hundreds or thousands of Blog readers to develop negative attitudes towards this whole ridiculous fandango. Your Blog has essentially been subversive of the whole US war effort. The fact that the CIA seem to have only one incriminating document on you surely speaks volumes about their inadequacy and inefficiency. They should have a whole dossier by now - subversive unembedded reporter, suspected Democrat, etc … Or is it about that little hotel incident with the two waitresses, the shoeshine boy and his dog?

“Or is it about that little hotel incident with the two waitresses, the shoeshine boy and his dog?”

Yes we all got a good chuckle listening to the audio from that one. It’s on a lot of ipods around Langley.

Peace to you and Yours. Ever heard of Operation Mockingbird?

The first thing to do is size you up. Rank you on a scale of “friendly” and “Foe like”, this from a “personality” profile. Gauge such things as gullibilty and career tract.

Yes I know Op Mockingbird was long ago. The names changed. The game goes on. The file could of been generated long ago. You know, when you were young. Peace.

WHAT HAS GOP DONE FOR WORKERS?

Not too long ago, my wife and I attended a TV football party in south Tulsa. With a lopsided score, the conversation turned to a livelier subject — politics. The crowd was, of course, top-heavy with Republicans. With each point expressed their faces became more flushed, eyes bulging a little more and veins popping in their foreheads as they railed against the liberal programs.

Finally a lone, liberal voice asked: “Will you people name me one bill your party ever passed to help the working man of this country?” The question created much din and clamor, and someone sputtered, “Well, what have the Democrats done?”

The liberal responded with a few programs and was interrupted by howling and disdain. He noted that he had not promised they would like the programs and he asked to complete his statement — a difficult task to ask of Republicans.

He spoke of FDR’s New Deal programs ( Father of modern liberalism) and other subsequent democratic programs by LBJ and JKF, ie: Social Security; Medicare-Medicaid; Peace Corps; unemployment insurance; welfare (for the poor and corporate); civil rights; student grant and loan programs; safety laws (OSHA); environmental laws; prevailing wage laws; right to collective bargaining (which brought about paid medical insurance, paid vacations, pensions, etc.); workers’ compensation; Marshall Plan; flood-disaster insurance; School Lunch Program; women’s rights.

He spoke of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which established a minimum wage, instituted child labor laws, and set up time-and-a-half pay for over a 40-hour week.

He mentioned FHA-HUD with its public housing, urban renewal and 44 million residential homes (before WWII almost 70 percent of our nation were renters; by the 1970s this had been reversed). And farm-conservation subsidies — USDA programs, Farmers Home Administration (the bankers didn’t want to make rural loans), small flood-control lakes (more than 3,000 in Oklahoma alone), rural water districts, rural electricity (REA).

The GI Bill was passed, which the Republicans at the time bitterly opposed. They were salivating over millions of returning veterans to hire as cheap labor. More than 8 million have used college benefits, creating millions of entrepreneurs; most of us had never dreamed of college. For the unemployed GI, there was $20 a week for 52 weeks to help get started (a lot of money in those days). The Veterans Administration provided more than 2 million home loans.

For the bankers at the football party, it was pointed out that the liberals saved their industry with the creation of FDIC and FSLIC, insuring their deposits, and saved Wall Street with the establishment of the Securities Exchange Commission.

The oil men came on bended knees to FDR at a time when East Texas oil was 4 cents a barrel and begged him to save their industry. He did; prorationing overturned the rule of capture and the days of flush production were over. Prorating has served this great industry (and nation) well.

And the list went on and on, but of course this group didn’t let him get halfway through. He noted they were weary, inattentive, so again he challenged them to offer up any Republican legislation examples.

“I’m sure your party has authored one or two comparable bills from time to time, but I can’t think of any, and apparently you can’t either. What it boils down to is this: the liberals dragged you into the 20th century scratching and screaming with your heels in the mud, fighting anything that’s progressive, everything that’s made this country great. You Republicans have never understood that the spending power of blue-collar workers, obtained through Democrats and unions, is what really made this country great. You really believe “The Good Life” was obtained from your own endeavors. You cloak your greed in religion and patriotism, railing against any form of tax, never comprehending that these programs have benefited all of us and our country.”

Well, I almost didn’t make it out of the house. My wife and I didn’t even get to see the end of the football game.

Total BS; There was never a football party !!!

If it means anything, this is the first I’ve seen this blog, so you haven’t done anything to influence my opinion about the whole fandango. War effort? WMD’s? War on terrorists? Or is about rich oil corporations lining who’s pockets? Form my own opinions, thank you.

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About me


Hi there! Thanks for stopping in. I'm Christopher Allbritton, former AP and New York Daily News reporter. In 2002, I went stumbling around Iraqi Kurdistan, the northern part of Iraq outside Saddam's direct control, looking for stories. (Some might call it "looking for trouble.") In March 2003, I made it back in time for the war, becoming the Web's first fully reader-funded journalist-blogger. With the support of thousands of readers, we raised almost $15,000. You can read my dispatches here. It was one of the moments in journalism when everything worked. It was a grand -- and successful -- experiment in independent journalism. In 2004, I moved to Iraq, where I would spend the next two years. It was a raucous, scary and exciting place with a lot of news going on. But I've since moved on to Beirut and the wider region. I now report for a variety of outlets.

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