┌──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐ RECORD TYPE ......... ANNOTATION — SOURCED RECORD REGISTRY NO. ........ MARG-1249 SLUG ................ /reagan-nsc-files-redactions-1985-1987 STATUS .............. ACTIVE FILED ............... 2026-07-01 15:29 UTC LAST ANNOTATED ...... 2026-07-01 15:29 UTC CLAIMS ON FILE ...... 4 MEAN TAG CONFIDENCE . 0.97 └──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Redactions in Reagan NSC Meeting Files (1985-1987)
SUMMARY
The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library archives a collection of National Security Council (NSC) meeting files from 1981-1988, including the 1985-1987 period. A significant portion of these records remains redacted, with the most frequently cited reasons for withholding material being 'national security classified material', 'personal privacy', and 'protection of the President' (Reagan Library [1], [2], [3]). These redactions are subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests under the Presidential Records Act (PRA) (Reagan Library [3]). While general categories for redaction are identified, specific details about which particular files or sections from 1985-1987 are redacted, or the precise nature of the content withheld under these exemptions, are not publicly itemized in the provided finding aids. Researchers must submit FOIA requests to potentially access these restricted materials (Reagan Library [6]).
STRONGEST CASE FOR
The Reagan Library explicitly states that 'national security classified material' and 'protection of the President' are common reasons for redacting NSC meeting files from 1985-1987. This indicates that substantive information related to sensitive policy decisions, intelligence operations, or direct presidential involvement in classified matters during this period likely remains hidden. Given the historical context of events like the Iran-Contra affair, it is plausible that these redactions protect details concerning covert operations, high-level policy discussions, or intelligence sources and methods that were active during the administration.
STRONGEST CASE AGAINST
While the Reagan Library's finding aids mention 'national security classified material' and 'protection of the President' as frequent redaction reasons, this is a general statement applicable across many collections, not specific to every file from 1985-1987. The actual amount and specific nature of material withheld under these exemptions within the NSC meeting files from that particular period are not detailed without specific FOIA requests. Many redactions could pertain to routine classified information that poses no significant contemporary interest, or to personal privacy details rather than high-level policy secrets, and are periodically reviewed for declassification (Nixon Library [6]).
CLAIMS
- VERIFIEDCONF 1.00
The most frequent reasons for redacting material from NSC meeting files at the Reagan Library include 'national security classified material', 'personal privacy', and 'protection of the President'.
— attributed to: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-nsc-meeting-files-records-1981-1988
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/finding_aids_pdfs/219776.pdf
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-decision-directives-nsdd-records
- VERIFIEDCONF 1.00
Folders noted as closed in the NSC meeting files are subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests under the provisions of the Presidential Records Act (PRA).
— attributed to: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-decision-directives-nsdd-records
- VERIFIEDCONF 1.00
The Executive Secretariat, NSC, NSC Meeting Files collection covers records from 1981-1988.
— attributed to: Ronald Reagan Presidential Library
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-nsc-meeting-files-records-1981-1988
- UNVERIFIABLECONF 0.90
The finding aids do not itemize specific redacted portions of NSC meeting files from 1985-1987 under the 'national security' or 'protection of the President' exemptions.
— attributed to: ARGUS analysis of provided sources
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-nsc-meeting-files-records-1981-1988
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/finding_aids_pdfs/219776.pdf
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-decision-directives-nsdd-records
- https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-planning-group-nspg-records-1981
TIMELINE
- 1981-1988Period covered by the Executive Secretariat, NSC, NSC Meeting Files records. [src]
- 1985-1987Specific period of NSC meeting files under investigation for redactions.
ENTITIES
- ORG Ronald Reagan Presidential Library — Archive and custodian of records
- ORG National Security Council (NSC) — Government body whose records are archived
- PERSON Ronald Reagan — U.S. President (1981-1989)
- EVENT Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) — Legal mechanism for declassification requests
- EVENT Presidential Records Act (PRA) — Legal framework governing presidential records
OPEN QUESTIONS — PENDING LEADS
- Are there publicly accessible indices or logs that detail specific document numbers or titles within the Reagan NSC meeting files (1985-1987) that remain redacted under national security or protection of the President exemptions?
- What is the process and typical timeframe for declassification review of NSC meeting files from 1985-1987 that were initially withheld under FOIA exemptions at the Reagan Library?
- Have any FOIA requests specifically targeting NSC meeting files from 1985-1987 regarding Iran-Contra or other sensitive national security matters resulted in successful declassification of previously redacted material?
- Can the Reagan Library provide a sample of the type of content typically redacted under 'protection of the President' exemption in NSC meeting files, even if from a different period?
- Are there any declassified internal memos or reports from the National Archives or the Reagan Library detailing the criteria or guidelines applied when redacting 'protection of the President' material in NSC records from the 1980s?
EVIDENCE — CAPTURED SOURCES
- [WEB] https://www.archives.gov/files/declassification/pidb/recommendations/pidb-vision-for-digital-age-may-2020.pdf [archived]
26 May 2020 · Organize the national security declassification community into a federated National. Declassification System (NDS). Operate the NDS in a system- ...
- [WEB] https://www.nixonlibrary.gov/finding-aids/national-security-council-institutional-files-h-files [archived]
Employees of the National Archives will review periodically the unclassified portions of closed materials for the purpose of opening those which no longer require restrictions. Classified documents may be reviewed for declassification under authority of Executive Order 13526 in r…
- [WEB] https://history.state.gov/historicaldocuments/frus1981-88v44p1/sources [archived]
Sources Sources for Foreign Relations, 1981-1988, Volume XLIV, Part 1, National Security Policy, 1985-1988 The White House Staff and Office Files at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library illuminate the Reagan administration's high-level decision making involving national securit…
- [WEB] https://www.cia.gov/readingroom/docs/%28EST%20PUB%20DATE%29%20ARRB-BOARD%5B16505889%5D.pdf
... Presidents: A Reference History (Scribner, 1984). On invitation. Graff presented a copy to President Ronald Reagan for placement in the Hhite House Library.
- [WEB] https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-decision-directives-nsdd-records [archived]
Most frequent withdrawn material is national security classified material, personal privacy, protection of the President, etc. Folders noted as closed are subject to Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests under the provisions of the Presidential Records Act (PRA).
- [WEB] https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-nsc-meeting-files-records-1981-1988 [archived]
Most frequently withdrawn material is national security classified material, personal privacy, protection of the President, etc. ... This content is longer than usual, please wait until it fully loads. ... This collection consists of copies of original material retained by the NS…
- [WEB] https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/sites/default/files/finding_aids_pdfs/219776.pdf [archived]
21 Jan 2025 · Most frequent withdrawn material is national security classified material, personal privacy, protection of the President, etc. Folders noted.
- [WEB] https://www.reaganlibrary.gov/research/finding-aids/executive-secretariat-nsc-national-security-planning-group-nspg-records-1981 [archived]
Folders marked with an asterisk (*) usually contain only attendee lists and/or seating charts. No substantive materials from the meetings are found in these marked folders. ... Box 5, cont. digitized [Outgoing Correspondence File: 03/12/1987-03/16/1987] digitized [Outgoing Corres…
CROSS-REFERENCE
- → SHARES-EVENT Iran-Contra Affair: Covert Arms Sales to Iran and Contra Funding (1985–1987) — The Iran-Contra affair occurred during 1985-1987, directly overlapping with the period of NSC meeting files under investigation for redactions related to national security or protection of the President.
- → PARALLEL-PATTERN US Government Agencies and Declassification Policies for Munitions Transfers to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and UAE — Both dossiers involve government records and declassification policies related to national security, although the specific content differs.
- → PARALLEL-PATTERN Declassified Audits of US Munitions Transfers to Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, and UAE — Both dossiers deal with the existence and accessibility of declassified government records related to sensitive policy areas.