Information classified since created; generally referring to nuclear weapons
"Born secret" and "born classified" are both terms which refer to a policy under the system of law in the United States of information being classified from the moment of its inception, usually regardless of where it was created, and usually in reference to specific laws in the United States that are related to information that describes the operation of nuclear weapons.[1] The concept is not limited to nuclear weapons, and other ideas and technologies may be considered as born secret under law.[2] There are no other areas of United States law where it is illegal to discuss publicly-available information.[3] In 2006, the United States Department of Energy themselves noted that the born secret/classified doctrine was controversial.[4]
History
Historically, the Born Secret concept applied to any data related to nuclear technologies, regardless of whether or not the given specific technologies were developed by the United States government or other parties.[1]Howard Morland, writing in Cardozo Law Review, equated the Born Secret doctrine to a permanent gag order on nuclear ideas and concepts.[5] It has been extensively used in reference to a clause in the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, which specified that all information about nuclear weapons and nuclear energy was to be considered "Restricted Data" (RD) until it had been officially declassified. In the 1954 revision of the Act, the United States Atomic Energy Commission was given the power to declassify entire categories of information. The "born secret" policy was created under the assumption that nuclear information could be so important to national security that it would need classification before it could be formally evaluated. The wording of the 1954 act specified as secret:
United States government scientists who work on nuclear-related matters historically were issued Q clearance, due partly to the born secret or classified doctrine, and is required to access Top SecretRestricted Data, Formerly Restricted Data, and National Security Information, as well as Secret Restricted Data. Restricted Data (RD) is defined in the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 and covers nuclear weapons and related materials.[7][8][9] In 2006, the United States Department of Energy (DOE) themselves noted that the born secret/classified doctrine was controversial.[4] In 2006, the DOE acknowledged that the born secret/classified doctrine was very controversial.[4] Writing for the Department, Nick Prospero highlighted concerns related to constitutionality; the stifling of scientific research and advancement; and that public pressure for open access to data in the areas of "health, safety and the environment" fueled this historic controversy, back to the days of the predecessors of the DOE such as the United States Atomic Energy Commission and the Energy Research and Development Administration.[4]
Legality and challenges
The constitutionality of declaring entire categories of information preemptively classified has not been definitively tested in the courts.[6] The legality of the "born secret" doctrine was directly challenged in a freedom of the press case in 1979 (United States v. The Progressive).[5] In that case, the magazine The Progressive attempted to publish an account of the so-called "secret of the hydrogen bomb" (the Teller–Ulam design), which was apparently created without recourse to classified information.[5] Many analysts predicted that the United States Supreme Court would, if it heard the case, reject the "born secret" clause as being an unconstitutional restraint on speech.[5] However, the government dropped the case as moot before it was resolved.[10] The concept of born secret is reported as the only area of United States law where discussion of data and information already in the public sphere is defined as illegal.[3] Writing for Cardoza Law Review, Aviam Soifer argues that the application of classification can even apply retroactively, to the original conception or germination of a related idea or concept, under the born secret doctrine.[11] In Security Classification of Information, Volume 1. Introduction, History, and Adverse Impacts, Arvin Quist, in materials prepared for Oak Ridge National Laboratory, notes that the concept is unique to nuclear restricted data, but has been attempted to be extended beyond nuclear technologies toward cryptography by the National Security Agency (NSA).[6] However, the NSA attempted this not through legislative means, but by voluntary agreements with stakeholders.[12] Quist, writing in 2002, notes that per Federal Register notices in 1967 and 1972, there exists only one known 'loophole' around nuclear technologies and born secret doctrines:
According to current DOE procedures, research and development on methods of isotope separation other than gaseous diffusion or gas centrifuge can be carried out on an unclassified basis until that research shows a “reasonable potential for the separation of practical quantities of special nuclear material.” Thus, this area of atomic-energy information is not “born classified” but is classified only when it reaches “adolescence.” [6][13][14]
In the early days of the American nuclear programs, a noted concern of scientists was fear of accidental violations of the Atomic Energy Act.[15] Given how rare declassifications of nuclear related topics were in the era, scientists and researchers had difficulty knowing what could be publicized or even discussed.[15] As a result, recommendations were issued for the Atomic Energy Commission to clearly "publish explicit and detailed catalogues of types of data not included in the restricted category," so that those working on nuclear matters were no longer subject to "...the intolerable fear that publication of every research finding is a violation of the [Atomic Energy Act of 1946]."[15][16]
In 1976, Princeton University student John Aristotle Phillips designed, on paper, a working nuclear weapon to show how easily such technologies could fall into the hands of American adversaries, and was later nicknamed the "A-Bomb Kid" by the media in response.[3][22][23]Nuclear physicist Frank Chilton evaluated Phillips design as "very likely to work".[24] Phillips stated, "Its very simple. Any undergraduate physics major could have done what I did."[24] Despite all his work having been created with information available to the general public, the entirety of what Phillips produced would be considered classified information upon creation and thus illegal to share or discuss within the United States of America.[3] Phillips later wrote, summarizing the situation:
Suppose an average—or below-average in my case—physics student at a university could design a workable atomic bomb on paper. That would prove the point dramatically and show the federal government that stronger safeguards have to be placed on the manufacturing and use of plutonium. In short, if I could design a bomb, almost any intelligent person could.[2]
^Alexander De Volpi; Jerry Marsh; Ted Postol & George Stanford (1981). Born secret: the H-bomb, the Progressive case and national security. New York: Pergamon Press. ISBN0-08-025995-2.
^Soifer, Aviam (2024). "Born Classified, Born Free: An Essay for Henry Schwarzschild". Cardozo Law Review. 19: 16. Archived from the original on September 1, 2024. Retrieved August 20, 2024. The Born Classified rationale could apply from the moment of the germination of these ideas and could even be applied retroactively. In fact, the Progressive litigation exemplified this point. The decision by Government officials to label a publication as a national security risk moved the dispute outside the usual legal rules and beyond the ken of regular judicial processes.
^Bok, Sissela (1982). Secrets. On the Ethics of Concealment and Revelation. Pantheon Books. p. 166.
^Atomic Energy Commission (November 28, 1967). "Restricted Data, Notice of Proposed Rule Making". Federal Register. 32 (250): 20868–20880. 32 FR20869
^Atomic Energy Commission (August 1, 1972). "Novel Methods of Isotope Separation, Procedures for Reports on Research". Federal Register. 32 (148): 15393.
37 FR15393