National security directive


National security directives are presidential directives issued for the National Security Council. Starting with Harry Truman, every president since the founding of the National Security Council in 1947 has issued national security directives in one form or another, which have involved foreign, military and domestic policies. National security directives are generally highly classified and are available to the public only after "a great many years" have elapsed. Unlike executive orders, national security directives are usually directed only to the National Security Council and the most senior executive branch officials, and embody foreign and military policy-making guidance rather than specific instructions.

Names for national security directives by administration

Presidents have issued such directives under various names.
InitialsFull TitleTime FramePresidential Administration
NSCIDNational Security Council Intelligence Directive1947–1977Truman–Ford
NSAMNational Security Action Memorandum1961–1969Kennedy and Johnson
NSSMNational Security Study Memorandum1969–1977Nixon and Ford
NSDMNational Security Decision Memorandum1969–1977Nixon and Ford
PRMPresidential Review Memorandum1977–1981Carter
PDPresidential Directive1977–1981Carter
NSSDNational Security Study Directive1981–1989Reagan
NSDDNational Security Decision Directive1981–1989Reagan
NSRNational Security Review1989–1993G. H. W. Bush
NSDNational Security Directive1989–1993G. H. W. Bush
PRDPresidential Review Directive1993–2001Clinton
PDDPresidential Decision Directive1993–2001Clinton
NSPDNational Security Presidential Directive2001–2009G. W. Bush
PSDPresidential Study Directive2009–2017Obama
PPDPresidential Policy Directive2009–2017Obama
NSPMNational Security Presidential Memorandum2017–Trump

Truman and Eisenhower administrations

National security directives were quite different in the early period of the Cold War. A 1988 General Accounting Office investigation into national security directives left out the directives from the Truman and Eisenhower years because "they were not structured in a way to allow categorization." The study nevertheless made note of two types of directives. The first was "policy papers" which could contain policy recommendations, in which case the president might decide to approve the policy by writing his signature. A famous example of such a policy paper is NSC 68. GAO also noted another type of directive called "NSC Actions", which were "numbered records of decisions that were reached at NSC meetings.

Kennedy and Johnson administrations

The Kennedy administration which took office in 1961 reorganized the NSC and began issuing National Security Action Memoranda. Many NSAMs were signed in Kennedy's name by National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy, although Kennedy sometimes signed them personally. Lyndon B. Johnson continued issuing NSAMs where Kennedy left off, although issuing only 99 directives as compared to Kennedy's 273.

Reagan administration

A 1986 National Security Decision Directive gave the State Department authority and responsibility to coordinate responses to international terrorism across government agencies including the CIA, DoD, and FBI. This was intended to reduce interagency conflicts which were observed in the response to the hijacking of the Achille Lauro cruise ship. The State Department's Bureau of Counterterrorism continues this coordinating function.

Homeland Security Presidential Directive

After September 11, 2001, George W. Bush issued Homeland Security Presidential Directives, with the consent of the Homeland Security Council. These directives were sometimes issued concurrently as national security directives.

Secrecy

Regarding the secrecy of presidential directives, Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists' Project on Government Secrecy stated in February 2008 that:
Of the 54 National Security Presidential Directives issued by the Bush Administration to date, the titles of only about half have been publicly identified. There is descriptive material or actual text in the public domain for only about a third. In other words, there are dozens of undisclosed Presidential directives that define U.S. national security policy and task government agencies, but whose substance is unknown either to the public or, as a rule, to Congress.

However, in an unprecedented development, the Donald Trump administration ordered their national security directives to be published in the Federal Register.