Premium Only Content

Earth's Moon - The Secrets hidden from all
Special access program
Special access programs (SAPs) in the U.S. Federal Government are security protocols that provide highly classified information with safeguards and access restrictions that exceed those for regular (collateral) classified information. SAPs can range from black projects to routine but especially-sensitive operations, such as COMSEC maintenance or presidential transportation support. In addition to collateral controls, an SAP may impose more stringent investigative or adjudicative requirements, specialized nondisclosure agreements, special terminology or markings, exclusion from standard contract investigations (carve-outs), and centralized billet systems.[1] Within the Department of Defense, SAP is better known as "SAR" by the mandatory Special Access Required (SAR) markings.
Types and categories.
Two types of SAP exist – acknowledged and unacknowledged. The existence of an acknowledged SAP may be publicly disclosed, but the details of the program remain classified. An unacknowledged SAP (or USAP) is made known only to authorized persons, including members of the appropriate committees of the United States Congress. Waived SAPs are a subset of unacknowledged SAPs in the Department of Defense. These SAPs are exempt by statutory authority of the Secretary of Defense from most reporting requirements and, within the legislative branch, the only persons who are required to be informed of said SAPs are the chairpersons and ranking committee members of the Senate Appropriations Committee, Senate Armed Services Committee, House Appropriations Committee, and the House Armed Services Committee. Oftentimes, this notification is only oral.
Involved individuals.
SAP access ergo policy on classified security categories de facto is understood informally as described as those who need to know have access, access is "on a need to know basis". A SAP can only be initiated, modified, and terminated within their department or agency; the Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense, Secretary of Energy, Secretary of Homeland Security, the Attorney General, the Director of National Intelligence; their principal deputies (e.g. the Deputy Secretary of State in DoS and the Deputy Secretary of Defense in DoD); or others designated in writing by the President. These offices are better known as 'classification authorities.' They retain the right to declassify or revise classification levels.
-
46:18
SB Mowing
2 days agoShe was LOSING HOPE but this SURPRISE CHANGED EVERYTHING
33K41 -
LIVE
ItsLancOfficial
9 hours agoWE LIVE 🔴WE LIVE 🔴 SUNDAY SUNDAYS!!!!!!! TARKOV
449 watching -
4:09:32
EricJohnPizzaArtist
6 days agoAwesome Sauce PIZZA ART LIVE Ep. #59: Are You Ready for some FOOTBALL with GameOn!
30.8K7 -
1:21:43
Jake Shields' Fight Back Podcast
15 hours agoJake Shields and Paul Miller!
65.3K116 -
1:20:41
TRAGIKxGHOST
6 hours agoTrying to get SCARED tonight! | Are You SCARED!? | Screams Beyond Midnight | Grab a Snack
22.9K2 -
5:21:24
StuffCentral
8 hours agoI'm baaack (no you can't play with me.. unless you a healer)
24.1K4 -
2:25:11
TheSaltyCracker
9 hours agoTrump Is Not Dead ReEEeStream 8-31-25
100K140 -
3:09:16
THOUGHTCAST With Jeff D.
7 hours ago $5.10 earnedLabor Day Weekend FORTNITE With THOUGHTCAST Jeff & the squad
26.2K4 -
3:44:05
Rallied
10 hours ago $6.52 earnedSolo Challenges All Day
50K1 -
9:02:14
iCheapshot
10 hours ago $0.52 earnedCall of Duty: Black Ops Campaign
14.3K1