A Q Clearance (or Q-type clearance) is a US Department of Energy (DOE) security clearance that is roughly comparable to the US Department of Defense's highest Secret permit with Sensitive Compartmental Access (TS-SCI). This is the most permissive permission granted by the United States Government, acting as the only means of access to a wide compartmentalization, Confidential Data and Confidential Limited, and the DOE "security" area.
Anyone with active Q permission is always categorized as holding National Security Critical-Sensitive (Level 3). In addition, most of the Q-cleared petahana will have collateral responsibility which sets them as Level 4: Special Personnel-Sensitive National Security. With these two designations standing as the highest level of risk sensitivity, residents of this position have extraordinary accountability, exploiting the potential to cause enormous or unpredictable damage to national security. United States of America.
In addition to the classification level, three categories of confidential material are identified: Limited Data (RD), Restricted Before (FRD), and National Security Information (NSI). Employees must have a security-level license consistent with their duties. The general combination is reflected in the table on the right.
The Department of Energy's security permission required to access Top Secret Restricted Data, Pre-Restricted Data, and National Security Information, as well as Secret Restricted Data, is Clearance Q. Lower level L permits sufficient for access to Forbidden Data National Secret and Information Security , as well as Secret Restricted Data, Previously Restricted Data, and National Security Information. In practice, access to the Restricted Data is provided, based on the need to know, to personnel with the appropriate distance.
Most DOE information at this level requires access to Critical Nuclear Weapon Design Information (CNWDI, pronounced "SIN-widee"). Such information contains pages that mark TOP SECRET//RD-CNWDI and paragraph marks (TS-N). The DOE safety clearance process is overseen by the Department of Energy Hearings and Appeals Office.
DOE clearance applies to special access relating to nuclear or nuclear related materials ("Restricted Data" under the Atomic Energy Act 1954). Permits are issued primarily for non-military personnel. In 1946, US Army Intelligence Corps Count William L. Uanna, in his capacity as Chief of the first Center for Personnel Control in the newly established Atomic Energy Commission, established and established the criteria for Clearance Q. The process of security clearance in the DOE was decided by DOE Office of Hearings and Appeals (OHA) where an individual whose security permit is concerned may seek to appeal the decision of security clearance to an administrative judge and then to the Appeals Panel.
In 1993, Q Clearances required a one-room background investigation of the previous ten years of applicant's life by the Office of Personnel Management and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and in 1998 it cost $ 3,225.
Video Q clearance
In popular culture
- "Q" Clearance is a 1986 novel by Peter Benchley (Random House, ISBN 0-394-55360-8), insinuating the secrecy and politics of the Cold War.
- In the Archer Season 6 Episode 7 "Nellis" event, Sterling Archer uses Q Clearance to gain access to Area 51 after illegally landing on air lanes.
Maps Q clearance
See also
- Confidential information in the United States
- L permissions
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia