http://www.aolnews.com/2011/01/02/donald-rumsfeld-memoir-highlights-vip-access-to-government-files/Two days after WikiLeaks began publishing classified diplomatic cables, former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld stepped forward to condemn the massive leak, declaring on his Twitter feed, "I was a co-sponsor of
in 1966. There is an appropriate, lawful process for declassifying material. It's not #Wikileaks."
To emphasize that "lawful process," Rumsfeld then added that his soon-to-be released book, "Known and Unknown," would be accompanied by hundreds of supporting documents -- some once secret -- and that all of them would be cleared by the U.S. government.
Except that to obtain those formerly classified documents, Rumsfeld didn't have to rely solely on the Freedom of Information Act, a process that can take years, and even decades, to wrest documents free of government files. Like other former senior presidential appointees, Rumsfeld can -- and did -- take advantage of a little known presidential order that allows him to request access to specific declassified and unclassified government documents.
Bryan Whitman, a Pentagon spokesman, confirmed that Rumsfeld, as a former presidential appointee, has the right to request certain records separate from the FOIA process, although that access is "limited to records they originated, reviewed, signed or received during their tenure, regardless of classification," Whitman told AOL News.
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So, Rummy, in addition to the knowns and unknowns, there are the little knowns, too. Democracy is messy, n'est-ce pas?