The Senate Intelligence Committee this week proposed 12 provisions to the 2013 intelligence authorization bill intended to make what government does at the federal level even more secretive than it already is.

Among other proposals, the measures would establish formal procedures for the investigation of leaks, prohibit personnel with clearances from serving as paid consultants or commentators for media organizations, and perhaps most threateningly, require that government employees sign an agreement to forfeit their pensions if they disclose classified information without authorization.

In many respects, the proposals “are not a dramatic departure from the status quo,” writes government secrecy researcher Steven Aftergood. Unauthorized disclosures or contacts are already discouraged or prohibited, and the office of the Director of National Intelligence has already set up a program designed to recognize probable and committed leakers.

The provisions would not penalize the publication of leaked information by members of the media or legally limit their ability to receive classified information. But they do confirm a disturbing trend in the government’s attitude toward leaks in general, some of which have proven historically necessary to the exposure of wrongdoing in the executive and legislative branches.

— Posted by Alexander Reed Kelly.