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  1. WorldClockTools
  2. Countdowns
  3. United States
  4. NARA 25-Year Auto-Declassification: 2001 Records

Countdown

NARA 25-Year Auto-Declassification: 2001 Records

Thursday, December 31, 2026 · 251 days away

United StatesDeclassificationscheduled

Countdown

NARA 25-Year Auto-Declassification: 2001 Records

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Event overview

Pre-9/11-era classified records automatically declassified under Executive Order 13526.

Date
2026-12-31
Country / jurisdiction
US
Region
United States
Category
Declassification
Status
scheduled

What this countdown tracks

At the close of December 31, 2026, classified federal records dated 2001 that were marked "Confidential" or "Secret" reach the 25-year automatic declassification threshold under Executive Order 13526 and 32 CFR §2001.30. The tranche covers the final pre-9/11 months of the Clinton-era transition and the first eight-plus months of the George W. Bush administration, making it one of the most politically sensitive calendar-year blocks in recent memory.

Background

Executive Order 13526, signed by President Obama in December 2009 and still in force, maintains a rule originally established in Clinton's EO 12958 (1995): permanent classified records of the US government are automatically declassified at 25 years unless specifically exempted. Implementation is governed by 32 CFR §2001.30, which directs agencies of origin to complete referral and review by December 31 of the 25th year. Records that remain classified past that date must be exempted by the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel (ISCAP) under one of nine narrow categories in §3.3(b) of EO 13526 — weapons design, HUMINT sources, war-plan details, and so forth. The 2001 tranche includes records from the final days of the Clinton White House (through January 20, 2001), the early Bush administration, the buildup of counterterrorism intelligence through summer 2001, and — most notably — records generated on and after September 11, 2001 through year-end. Pre-9/11 Presidential Daily Briefs, FAA and NORAD air-defense records, and FBI field-office counterterrorism files are among the document classes researchers will be watching. The August 6, 2001 PDB titled "Bin Ladin Determined To Strike in US" was declassified in 2004 by the 9/11 Commission, but many underlying drafting and distribution records remain classified. The National Declassification Center at College Park is the principal processing hub and coordinates with the CIA's Information Management Services office on referred HUMINT material.

Why the date matters

The 25-year trigger is statutory in the sense that EO 13526 has force of law over executive-branch classification and §2001.30 fixes December 31 of the 25th calendar year as the moving deadline. Agencies must complete review before that date or the records declassify automatically, with narrow exceptions. For 2001 records, that deadline is December 31, 2026. Historically, high-profile calendar years generate heavy exemption filings, and ISCAP appeals have continued into the following spring. Researchers schedule their FOIA follow-ups for January of the subsequent year. The 1976 and 1986 25-year releases, processed under predecessor frameworks, demonstrated that a single calendar year with a defining national-security event — Vietnam escalation, Iran-Contra, September 11 — typically draws three to five times the exemption filings of an ordinary year.

What to watch for

  • National Declassification Center's end-of-year backlog reports and disposition statistics.
  • Which pre-9/11 PDBs are released in full versus withheld under §3.3(b)(1).
  • FAA air-traffic and NORAD records from September 11 morning timelines.
  • CIA HUMINT-source redactions in Counterterrorist Center files.
  • State Department cables from the Clinton-to-Bush transition.
  • Any ISCAP appeals filed by outside requesters including the National Security Archive.
  • FOIA request queues at CIA, DOD, and FBI for the newly unclassified tranche.
  • Treatment of FISA-related records and the pre-PATRIOT Act surveillance framework.
  • Release of the October 2001 Presidential Finding authorizing covert action against al-Qaeda.

Processing mechanics

The NDC operates a tiered workflow: records are received from agencies of origin, indexed in the Archival Records Management System, and scanned for referred equities. Records containing material originated by a second agency are referred under 32 CFR §2001.34, and that second agency has 180 days to process before default declassification applies. Referral chains involving three or more agencies frequently extend past the 25-year trigger, producing a backlog that the NDC publishes in its annual report to the President. For 2001 records, the CIA–FBI–NSA referral triangle is expected to generate the largest backlog, and researchers typically cross-check NDC statistics against corresponding FOIA queues at each agency.

Related events to track

The 2001 tranche is the first of a three-year sequence of pre-and-post-9/11 releases, continuing with the NARA 25-year auto-declass of 2002 records and NARA 25-year auto-declass of 2003 records. For a related transparency milestone, the FBI MLK surveillance files consent-decree expiry opens the following summer.

FAQ

When exactly does the 25-year declassification take effect? At the close of business on Thursday, December 31, 2026 for records dated 2001, with the clock running to midnight Eastern time.

Is the declassification confirmed or expected? Confirmed under EO 13526 and 32 CFR §2001.30, subject to narrow ISCAP exemptions that must be individually justified by the agency of origin.

Who is responsible for processing? The National Declassification Center under the National Archives and Records Administration, supported by referral processing at each originating agency.

Where can I read the governing regulation? The full rule is at https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-32/subtitle-B/chapter-XX/part-2001/subpart-D/section-2001.30.

Source

https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-32/subtitle-B/chapter-XX/part-2001/subpart-D/section-2001.30

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