Army Blocks Guardian Website
30 June 13
he Army admitted Thursday to not only restricting access to The Guardian news website at the Presidio of Monterey, as reported in Thursday's Herald, but Armywide.
Presidio employees said the site had been blocked
since The Guardian broke stories on data collection by the National
Security Agency.
Gordon Van Vleet, an Arizona-based spokesman for
the Army Network Enterprise Technology Command, or NETCOM, said in an
email the Army is filtering "some access to press coverage and online
content about the NSA leaks."
He wrote it is routine for the Department of
Defense to take preventative "network hygiene" measures to mitigate
unauthorized disclosures of classified information.
"We make every effort to balance the need to
preserve information access with operational security," he wrote,
"however, there are strict policies and directives in place regarding
protecting and handling classified information."
In a later phone call, Van Vleet said the filter
of classified information on public websites was "Armywide" and did not
originate at the Presidio.
Presidio employees described how they could access the U.S. site, www.guardiannews.com, but were blocked from articles, such as those about the NSA, that redirected to the British site.
Sources at the Presidio said Jose Campos, the
post's information
assurance security officer, sent an email to employees early Thursday
saying The Guardian's website was blocked by Army Cyber Command "in
order to prevent an unauthorized disclosure of classified information."
NETCOM is a subordinate to the Army Cyber Command, based in Fort Belvoir, Va., said its website.
Campos wrote if an employee accidentally
downloaded classified information, it would result in "labor intensive"
work, such as the wipe or destruction of the computer's hard drive.
He wrote that an employee who downloads
classified information could face disciplinary action if found to have
knowingly downloaded the material on an unclassified computer.
The Guardian's website has classified documents
about the NSA's program of monitoring phone records of Verizon
customers, a project called Prism which gave the agency "direct access"
to data held by Google, Facebook, Apple and others, and more.
The source of the leaks, 29-year-old Edward
Snowden, is on the run from American authorities. He is a former
contractor for the agency.
Van Vleet said the department does not determine
what sites its personnel can choose to see on the DOD system, but
"relies on automated filters that restrict access based on content
concerns or malware threats."
He said it would not block "websites from the
American public in general, and to do so would violate our highest-held
principle of upholding and defending the Constitution and respecting
civil liberties and privacy."
The Guardian declined to comment, but its editor-in-chief, Alan Rusbridger, sent a link to The Herald's story on Twitter.
Army Cyber Command: www.arcyber.army.mil/
The Guardian's "The NSA Files" page: www.guardian.co.uk/world/the-nsa-files.
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