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Raptorman
07-13-2004, 08:30
Haole, is this data classified for missiles? If not, can you give me the values for the AIM7,9,120?

Haole
07-14-2004, 09:32
Haole, is this data classified for missiles? If not, can you give me the values for the AIM7,9,120?
Sorry, no can do:beer: Wish I could help ya!

Richard_H
02-09-2006, 20:15
Haole, is this data classified for missiles? If not, can you give me the values for the AIM7,9,120?

they burn long enough to shoot the enemy aircraft down lol

flyboy22
02-09-2006, 21:10
Haole, I've always been kinda curious... how do you keep it straight exactly WHAT is classified and WHAT isn't??

It seems like there are so many details, some of which are classified, some of which aren't. Do you just err on the side of caution?

grab
02-10-2006, 00:00
If it kills the enemy, classified, if it keeps our guys from getting killed, classified, not kidding

Hacker
02-10-2006, 06:19
Haole, I've always been kinda curious... how do you keep it straight exactly WHAT is classified and WHAT isn't??

It seems like there are so many details, some of which are classified, some of which aren't. Do you just err on the side of caution?

Documents which contain classified are labeled at the top and bottom of the page, on both sides, with the highest classification of any item in the document. In addition, each paragraph is individually noted as the classification of information in that paragraph.

Take a look at something like the Abu Graib prison abuse investigation

http://www.thesmokinggun.com/graphics/pdf/0505041report.pdf

This was a classified document leaked to the press, and it has the individual paragraph classification notations in parentheses.

So, whenever you are reading documents, it is very easy to keep straight what is classified and what is not.