Today's Article
A recent Joint Chiefs
directive apparently
recognizes that some
Bush officials may
think of 'losing' data
on Iraq before leaving
the White House.
The American Spark
Joint Chiefs Advise Pentagon Personnel To Preserve Iraq
Documents

By Cliff Montgomery - Mar. 24th, 2008

A little-noticed Joint Chiefs of Staff directive was put into force on Jan. 31st, 2008. It deserves greater
attention.

The top brass at Defense normally are known to follow the will of a commander-and-chief to a fault. But the
January directive is a hint they know that some in the Bush Administration may care more about protecting
their Master's image than they do about preserving all data concerning Bush's occupation of Iraq.

The directive, penned by Col. Marlon Beck, a secretary to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, is entitled,
Preservation of
Historical Records of Operations Enduring Freedom And Noble Eagle And Pertaining To Iraq
.

"Operations ENDURING FREEDOM and NOBLE EAGLE and current operations pertaining to Iraq are a
prominent part of American and world history," states the directive.

"It is important that we preserve the historical records of these continuing operations and we obtain
information and lessons that can be applied in planning, shaping, and implementing our national defense in
the future.

"The Deputy Secretary of Defense has requested...that appropriate action be taken to identify and preserve all
documentary materials pertaining to the entire ENDURING FREEDOM and NOBLE EAGLE operations and
Iraq (e.g., supporting and implementing documents, case management files, procurement records,
transportation records, and financial accounting records).

"All elements of the Department of Defense should identify, collect, organize, and preserve documents, to
include records pertaining to intelligence and documents in special control channels...both paper and
electronic, pertinent to their activities in connection with these operations," said the Beck directive.

"These programs are of vital importance for recording the history of ENDURING FREEDOM, NOBLE EAGLE,
and Iraq," added Beck, "and facilitating the preparation of studies and analyses of policies, plans, operations,
technology, logistics, and personnel.

"The benefits to be derived from this documentation of our experience may be invaluable," the Beck directive
correctly stated.

That the reasons for the Iraq War were proven utterly false by a handful of reporters like this one has been
clear for years; but just how high up those lies go is still an open question.

Some in the Bush crowd may wish to keep it that way. Top Pentagon brass apparently are aware of this
fact--as well as of what the loss of such information may mean, both for lingering questions about our Iraq
occupation and for our nation's history.

The data concerning all presidential and Executive Branch decisions rightly and legally belong to the American
people.

The Presidential Records Act (PRA), enacted in 1978, "mandates that the Presidential records of an
Administration be transferred to the legal and physical custody of the National Archives and Records
Administration (NARA) immediately upon the end of the President's last term of office," acknowledged
then-U.S. Archivist John Carlin to a House subcommittee on November 6th, 2001.

Normally a departing administration properly follows laws and etiquette here, and maintaining all data is no
great concern. But the Bush Administration is no ordinary White House.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff tacitly admits this by the recent enactment of this information-protecting directive.



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