News

USIS Washington 
File

16 July 1999

Text: Tougher Rules for Foreign Visitors to U.S. Energy Dept. Labs

(Richardson strengthening security at DOE facilities) (660)

Washington -- In a move to strengthen the security at U.S. weapons
laboratories, Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson announced tougher
requirements for visits and assignments by foreign nationals to the
Department of Energy's (DOE) national laboratories and other
facilities. Such visits and assignments "will be closely monitored,"
he said July 14.

The action is part of a package of sweeping security reforms announced
May 11, which overhauled DOE's security management and oversight
process and instituted new counterintelligence and cyber-security
measures, cyber-threat training, and a zero-tolerance security policy.

Richardson stressed that the policy covers only citizens of foreign
countries. He said he would "not tolerate" having the loyalty and
patriotism of Asian Pacific Americans questioned as a group "in the
wake of recent espionage allegations," and noted that the new order
does not apply to U.S. citizens of foreign extraction or naturalized
U.S. citizens.
 
Following is the text of a DOE press release:

(begin text)

U.S. Department of Energy
July 14, 1999

RICHARDSON TOUGHENS REQUIREMENTS FOR UNCLASSIFIED FOREIGN VISITS AND
ASSIGNMENTS

Policy Directive Strengthens Controls Over Foreign Nationals at DOE
Facilities

Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson today formally issued revised
procedures for visits and assignments by foreign nationals to the
Department of Energy's (DOE) national laboratories and other
facilities. The new requirements implement recommendations in DOE's
Counterintelligence Implementation Plan and President Clinton's
Presidential Decision Directive, (PDD) 61. Secretary Richardson has
already implemented these measures at the department's most sensitive
facilities. Major changes include:

-- involving counterintelligence, nonproliferation, export control and
security officials at the national laboratories in the review process
authorizing visits and assignments from foreign nationals;

-- extending security oversight measures to DOE headquarters and
DOE-sponsored off-site visits and assignments;

-- granting the Secretary of Energy sole authority to approve visits
and assignments from terrorist-list countries such as Sudan, Iraq and
Libya.

-- removing authority for facility directors to grant waivers of the
DOE security requirements. Only the Secretary of Energy can approve
such waivers.

"Unclassified foreign visits and assignments to Department of Energy
national laboratories are vital to keep U.S. scientists abreast of
developments throughout the scientific world," said Secretary
Richardson. "Today's directive formalizes actions I have been taking
for several months to strengthen security at our national
laboratories. Despite the interest of science in a free flow of
information, from now on foreign national visits and assignments will
be closely monitored so that they are consistent with United States
foreign, nonproliferation, international energy and national security
policies and agreements."

Today's action is part of Secretary Richardson's sweeping security
reforms announced May 11, which overhauled the department's security
management and oversight process and instituted new
counterintelligence and cyber-security measures, cyber-threat training
and a zero-tolerance security policy. One element of the May 11 change
was the establishment of an Office of Foreign Visits and Assignments
Policy reporting to the new office of Security and Emergency
Operations headed by DOE's Security Czar, retired Air Force General
Eugene E. Habiger.

The Visits and Assignments Policy Office will act as a central
accounting center to track and analyze the details of foreign visits
and assignments to DOE facilities to ensure that these are conducted
in a secure manner. The office will ensure that foreign nationals and
non-U.S. citizens working with the department on contract are approved
to visit DOE facilities.

Secretary Richardson emphasized that this policy covers only citizens
of foreign countries, not naturalized U.S. citizens or U.S. citizens
of foreign extraction. "While U.S. national security is a top priority
at the labs," Secretary Richardson said, "I am also concerned that
Asian Pacific Americans as a group are finding their loyalty and
patriotism questioned in the wake of recent espionage allegations.
This behavior is unacceptable and I will not tolerate it. The new
order makes clear that 'foreign nationals' does not include any U.S.
citizens regardless of their heritage."

(end text)