Behind the Homefront
A daily chronicle of news in homeland security and military operations affecting newsgathering, access to information and the public's right to know.
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On Jan. 24, 2003, a new law enforcement and investigatory agency whose duties include functions taken from as many as 22 other federal agencies came into existence. The reorganization of these operations reportedly marks the biggest government bureaucratic shake-up since the creation of the Department of Defense half a century ago.
Even before the new Department of Homeland Security opened its doors, controversies arose over not just how it would operate and exercise its powers, but what level of access to information it would allow, and how it would respond to news media requests. Will new exemptions be carved out of the FOI Act, either by law or by practice? Will officials and agents feel free to tap phones of journalists, or subpoena their records during investigations? Will the new director consider procedural safeguards, like those adopted years ago by the Department of Justice, to ensure that freedom of the press will not be denied? And will those practices be followed?

But "homeland" security is not the only concern for journalists covering anti-terrorism initiatives; military actions abroad often present a greater challenge, as questions over disclosure of information, access to troops, and restraints on reporting seem to resurface anew with each conflict.

Questions and issues like these led the Reporters Committee to launch this "weblog," so that there will be a centralized site on the Internet for journalists who want to follow these issues and pass along information they learn while covering — or worse, being covered by — the new department and other anti-terrorism actions. Please submit comments and pass along tips to make this project as useful, thorough and up-to-date as possible.

A few words about what this project will not do. We do not intend to cover many of the issues that will undoubtedly come up as the Department takes shape, even if those issues are the ones generating headlines. We will cover information access and free press issues, but will not follow debates over many civil liberties issues that, while important, are outside of our domain.

Funding for the launch of this site was provided by The Robert R. McCormick Tribune Foundation.

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May. 21, 2003
FREE FOI OP-ED PIECES AVAILABLE TO NEWSPAPERS. The Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service has begun offering opinion pieces free of charge to all newspapers, including those that do not subscribe to the KRT News Service, to address Freedom of Information issues. An FOI op-ed will move weekly.
— Posted at 12:05 pm  [link]
May. 16, 2003
ARMY EDITS MOSUL TV. In an article about military efforts to bring stability to Mosul, Iraq's third largest city, Washington Post foreign service reporter Scott Wilson looks into events at the city's only television station, which has been a U.S. Army post for almost a month. The station manager, who had never been able to select news stories in the past, is still not completely free to do so. Ahmed Jasim said U.S. Marines seized a videotape of Mishaan Jabouri, the returned exile claiming authority, while it was on the air after riots last month. Wilson wrote that Maj. Gen. David H. Patraeus more recently told Jasim to give fair access to all political parties, not just Jabouri's, and to censor anti-American messages.

Petraeus said, according to the report, that his next step would be to review material before it airs. "I am the occupying power, make no mistake," Petraeus said, adding that censorship to preserve public order was his "obligation" under the Geneva Conventions. "I am responsible for this place."

— Posted at 6:27 pm  [link]
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