Skip to content
LexBuild

32 CFR § 117.4 - Policy.

---
identifier: "/us/cfr/t32/s117.4"
source: "ecfr"
legal_status: "authoritative_unofficial"
title: "32 CFR § 117.4 - Policy."
title_number: 32
title_name: "National Defense"
section_number: "117.4"
section_name: "Policy."
chapter_name: "OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE"
subchapter_number: "D"
subchapter_name: "PERSONNEL, MILITARY AND CIVILIAN"
part_number: "117"
part_name: "NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL SECURITY PROGRAM OPERATING MANUAL (NISPOM)"
positive_law: false
currency: "2026-03-24"
last_updated: "2026-03-24"
format_version: "1.1.0"
generator: "[email protected]"
authority: "32 CFR part 2004; E.O. 10865; E.O. 12333; E.O. 12829; E.O. 12866; E.O. 12968; E.O. 13526; E.O. 13563; E.O. 13587; E.O. 13691; Public Law 108-458; Title 42 U.S.C. 2011 ; Title 50 U.S.C. Chapter 44; Title 50 U.S.C. 3501"
regulatory_source: "85 FR 83312, Dec. 21, 2020, unless otherwise noted."
cfr_part: "117"
---

# 117.4 Policy.

E.O. 12829 established the NISP to serve as a single, integrated, cohesive industrial security program to protect classified information and preserve our Nation's economic and technological interests.

(a) When contracts, licenses, agreements, and grants to contractors require access to classified information, national security requires that this information be safeguarded in a manner equivalent to its protection within the executive branch of the USG.

(b) National security requires that the industrial security program promote the economic and technological interests of the United States. Redundant, overlapping, or unnecessary requirements impede those interests.