WASHINGTON Newly disclosed documents have shed a crack of light on secret executive branch plans for apocalyptic scenarios like the aftermath of a nuclear attack when the president may activate wartime powers for national security emergencies. Until now, public knowledge of what the government put into those classified directives, which invoke emergency and wartime powers granted by Congress or otherwise claimed by presidents, has been limited to declassified descriptions of those developed in the early Cold War. In that era, they included steps like imposing martial law, rounding up people deemed dangerous and censoring news from abroad.
It has not been clear what is in the modern directives known as presidential emergency action documents because under administrations of both parties, none have been made public or shown to Congress. But the newly disclosed documents, which relate to the George W. Bush administrations efforts to revise the draft orders after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, offer clues.
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