Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge GRIFFITH.
Between 1945 and 1962, hundreds of thousands of members of the United States armed forces were allegedly exposed to dangerous levels of atomic radiation: about 220,000 while serving as occupying forces in Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Japan at the end World War II and another 195,000 as a result of their participation in tests conducted more recently by the military closer to home. Many of these soldiers later became sick, and they sought to link their health problems to their military service. But this case is not about whether they should have received Government compensation for their sicknesses. Rather, according to the plaintiffs’ complaint, it is about whether Government officials denied them a constitutional right of meaningful access to administrative proceedings before the Department of Veterans Affairs (‘VA”).
We conclude that the District Court was correct to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims. Plaintiffs cannot prove any set of facts consistent with the allegations of their complaint that will demonstrate that the defendants denied them a meaningful opportunity to pursue their claims for compensation.
I.
Because we are reviewing the District Court’s decision to dismiss the plaintiffs’ complaint, we must presume the allegations in the complaint are true.
Doe v. Dep’t of
Justice,
Following the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, hundreds of thousands of American troops entered Japan as occupying forces. Beginning that same year and continuing through 1962, the United States tested atomic weapons in New Mexico, Nevada, and the Pacific Ocean. One purpose of the tests was to determine the effects of atomic explosions on military operations, personnel, and equipment. Participants were ordered to engage in a series of dangerous activities, without full knowledge of the risks. For example, plaintiffs allege that they were ordered -to “board grossly contaminated naval vessels within a few hours of a nearby underwater atomic detonation; swim and dive in a lagoon ... contaminated with radioactive fallout ...; live and work on *109 ships ... grossly contaminated with radioactive material ...; lie in open trenches within a few hundred yards of an atomic explosion; charge directly towards and through ‘ground zero’ within minutes of an atomic explosion; conduct extended training in areas contaminated by fallout from dozens of atomic detonations; and fly through roiling clouds of radioactive debris within minutes of an atomic detonation.” Both groups — those who served as occupation forces in Japan and those who participated in military tests — were exposed to potentially dangerous levels of atomic radiation.
During this period, the military performed medical tests on many, if not all, of these veterans. Records of these tests accurately describe the levels of radiation to which each veteran was exposed. Sometime after the Government collected the data from these tests — it is unclear from the complaint exactly when — the nine named plaintiffs (or the survivors of these plaintiffs) 1 became sick and eight of the nine filed applications for benefits with the VA 2 . The ninth plaintiff, Kathy Jacobo-vitch, has not yet filed a claim on behalf of her deceased father. Upon receiving plaintiffs’ applications, the VA, in accordance with its regulations, see 38 C.F.R. § 3.311(a)(1), (a)(2)(I), (a)(2)(h), 3 requested the test results for these plaintiffs from the Department of Defense (“DoD”). But DoD never gave these results to the VA. According to the plaintiffs, the defendants intentionally covered them up.
In lieu of the actual test results, the DoD sent the VA “dose reconstructions” for each of the plaintiffs, which it is required to do when records of test results are unavailable. 32 C.F.R. § 218.1(d)(3). The DoD and the VA use dose reconstructions to approximate a veterans’ level of exposure to radiation by estimating the *110 “size, type, design, and yield of the particular atomic device; [the] time, distance, and shielding from the detonation; the decay, distribution, and deposition of over 200 different radionuclides and fission products; and the potential radiation exposure pathways.” Joint Appendix (“J.A.”) 32. According to the plaintiffs, dose reconstructions are seriously flawed. They minimize the veteran’s level of exposure by assuming, for example, that all who worked in contaminated areas wore protective clothing, even though photographs evidence that was not so. Consequently, they “produce[] results having little, if any, relation to the radiation dose actually received by the individual.”
Using these allegedly faulty dose reconstructions, VA officials concluded that six of the eight plaintiffs' who have filed a claim had not demonstrated that their illnesses “resulted from exposure to radiation in service,” 38 C.F.R. § 3.311(c)(1)(I), and, as a result, rejected (or partially rejected) their claims. The VA has yet to rule on the claims of the two other plaintiffs who have filed applications for benefits. As mentioned, the ninth plaintiff, Kathy Jacobovitch, has not yet filed a claim. She intends to do so when she obtains the actual dosage records.
In 2002, the plaintiffs filed a putative class action lawsuit in the District Court against two groups of Government officials. The first group consisted of officials who allegedly covered up the actual dosage data; Steven M. Younger, the Director of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (“DTRA”), the agency within the Department of Defense with responsibility for preparing the dose reconstructions; Michael Schaeffer, a program manager in the DTRA’s Technology Development Directorate; and other unnamed Government officials. The second group consisted of officials who allegedly assisted in the cover-up and knowingly used the flawed dose reconstructions: Susan Mather, the VA’s Chief Public Health and Environmental Hazards Officer; Neil Otchin, the VA’s Clinical Matters Program Chief; Robert Roswell, the VA’s Under Secretary for Health; and other unnamed Government officials. The complaint alleged that both groups of defendants have violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional right of access to the courts. In the plaintiffs’ view, this right of access extends to veterans benefits proceedings and prohibits officials from acting in a way that either blocks or makes meaningless access to those proceedings. As relief, plaintiffs sought (1) a declaration that the actions taken by the defendants were unconstitutional, (2) immediate release of all relevant records and documents, (3) an injunction prohibiting the defendants from withholding records of actual dosage data, (4) compensatory and punitive damages, (5) costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees, and (6) additional relief as the District Court deemed proper and just.
The defendants moved to dismiss the plaintiffs’ claims and made three arguments relevant here. First, they argued that the District Court did not have jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ claims because 38 U.S.C. § 511(a) provides that only the Board of Veterans’ Appeals, the Court of Appeals for Veterans’ Claims, the Federal Circuit, and the United States Supreme Court have jurisdiction to “review” “deci-siones] of the Secretary [of the VA] as to” any “question of law [or] fact necessary to a decision by the Secretary under a law that affects the provision of benefits.” Second, the defendants argued that a claim for damages against the Government officials under the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
The District Court held it lacked jurisdiction under 38 U.S.C. § 511(a). As an alternative ground, the District Court held that plaintiffs were barred from bringing a Bivens claim for damages against the Government officials.
A few days before the District Court issued its decision, another District Court in this Circuit reached opposite conclusions in a case involving substantially similar facts and legal issues.
Vietnam Veterans of Am., Inc. v. McNamara,
No. 02-2123,
But that was not the end of the matter. After the District Court’s decision on reconsideration, the defendants filed a “Motion for Ruling on Defense of Qualified Immunity” reminding the District Court that the defendants had also sought to dismiss the complaint based upon qualified immunity. Additionally, the defendants argued, for the first time, that they were entitled to absolute immunity. The District Court agreed and dismissed the case, holding that the defendants enjoyed both qualified and absolute immunity: absolute immunity because they “ ‘perform[ed] functions closely associated with the judicial process’ ”
Broudy v. Mather,
Plaintiffs filed a timely notice of appeal. They argue that the defendants were not entitled to either qualified or absolute immunity. The defendants respond that both immunities apply, the District Court did not have jurisdiction to hear the case under 38 U.S.C. § 511(a), and, in any event, the plaintiffs failed to state a claim under Bivens because “special factors counsel hesitation” towards imposing liability for the type of denial of access the plaintiffs allege.
II.
We begin, as we must, with the question whether the District Court had jurisdiction to consider the plaintiffs’ claims.
See Steel Co. v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
*112 The Secretary [of Veterans Affairs] shall decide all questions of law and fact necessary to a decision by the Secretary under a law that affects the provision of benefits by the Secretary to veterans or the dependents or survivors of veterans. Subject to subsection (b), the decision of the Secretary as to any such question shall be final and conclusive and may not be reviewed by any other official or by any court, whether by an action in the nature of mandamus or otherwise.
38 U.S.C. § 511(a). 4
In the defendants’ view, § 511(a) prevents a district court from exercising jurisdiction over any case that would require it to decide a “question of law [or] fact” that arises “under a law that affects the provision of benefits.” Put another way, the defendants argue that § 511(a) gives the Secretary exclusive jurisdiction to decide these questions. Because the plaintiffs’ denial-of-access claims would require the District Court to decide factual and legal issues regarding the provision of veterans benefits, the defendants contend that § 511(a) should have prevented the District Court from exercising jurisdiction over such claims.
This argument misreads the statute. Section 511(a) does not give the VA exclusive jurisdiction to construe laws affecting the provision of veterans benefits or to consider all issues that might somehow touch upon whether someone receives veterans benefits. Rather, it simply gives the VA authority to consider such questions when making a decision about benefits, see § 511(a) (“[t]he Secretary shall decide all questions of law and fact necessary to a decision by the Secretary under a law that affects the provision of benefits by the Secretary to veterans or the dependents or survivors of veterans”), and, more importantly for the question of our jurisdiction, prevents district courts from “review[ing]” the Secretary’s decision once made, see id. (except as provided by subsection (b), “the decision of the Secretary as to any such question shall be final and conclusive and may not be reviewed by any other official or by any court”) (emphasis added).
Our precedent, although not addressed by the plaintiffs, provides as much. In
McKelvey v. Turnage,
We rejected the VA’s argument, holding that § 211(a) did not preclude review because
the VA itself had never decided the question McKelvey’s Rehabilitation Act plea raises .... Section 211(a) preclusion of review depends, at a minimum, on the satisfaction of this condition: the petitioner’s claim must have been resolved by an actual decision of the Administrator. At the time of the initiation of this suit, the Administrator had made no decision concerning the impact of the Rehabilitation Act on McKelvey’s time extension application.
Id. at 198 (emphasis added; quotation marks and citation omitted).
More recently, although again not brought to our attention by the plaintiffs, the Federal Circuit has similarly rejected
the defendants’ argument of exclusive VA jurisdiction where a claim is otherwise properly presented in the District Court but somehow involves a law affecting the provision of benefits. In
Hanlin v. United States,
We do not read the statute to require the Secretary, and only the Secretary, to make all decisions related to laws affecting the provision of benefits. Rather, once the Secretary has been asked to make a decision in a particular case ..., 38 U.S.C. § 511(a) imposes a duty on the Secretary to decide all questions of fact and law necessary to a decision in that case. Although Mr. Hanlin’s claim arises under 38 U.S.C. § 5904(d), which is ‘a law that affects the provision of benefits’ within the *114 meaning of 38 U.S.C. § 511(a), there is no language in 38 U.S.C. § 511(a) requiring an attorney in Mr. Hanlin’s position to file a claim for fees pursuant to 38 U.S.C. § 5904(d) with the VA or to otherwise pursue a remedy through the VA administrative process. Therefore, 38 U.S.C. § 511(a) does not require the Secretary to address such a claim and thus does not provide the VA with exclusive jurisdiction over Mr. Hanlin’s claim.
Id. at 1321 (emphases added and internal citation omitted).
These cases make clear that, while the Secretary is the sole arbiter of benefits claims and issues of law and fact that arise during his disposition of those claims, district courts have jurisdiction to consider questions arising under laws that affect the provision of benefits as long as the Secretary has not actually decided them in the course of a benefits proceeding. As the Federal Circuit stated in
Hanlin,
we “do not read the statute to require the Secretary,
and only the Secretary,
to make all decisions related to laws affecting the provision of benefits.”
Id.
(emphasis added). To the contrary, § 511(a) prevents district courts from hearing a particular question only when the Secretary has “actually] decided]” the question.
McKel-vey,
We are thus left with the question whether the Secretary has made an “actual decision” on any issues that the parties are asking the District Court to decide here. The defendants’ brief points only to two such questions: (1) “whether the information allegedly withheld impaired or foreclosed” the veterans benefits claims, and (2) “whether the radiation dosage exposure estimates produced by the DTRA defendants and relied upon by the VA defendants fail to consider relevant information in the federal government[’s][sic] possession [but that the Secretary did not have] and produce scientifically baseless and erroneous results.” Appellees’ Br. at 25 (quotation marks and citation omitted). But the Secretary has never decided these questions. No one argues that they were briefed and argued before the Secretary. Nor does anyone argue that the Secretary explicitly considered them when he denied the claims of six of the nine plaintiffs. The defendants argue only that the Secretary
should be deemed
to have decided all issues that could have affected the outcome of the underlying benefits proceeding, even if those issues were not explicitly raised before him. To support their argument, the defendants rely on statements taken from two of our cases,
Price v. United States,
In
Price,
a veteran alleged that the VA had “wrongfully failed to reimburse him for certain medical expenses.”
We used that language again last year in
Thomas.
Thomas claimed that the VA had “failed to render [to him] appropriate medical care services” and had also “den[ied][him] needed ... medical care treatment ... [,] caus[ing][him] severe emotional distress.”
Thomas,
The defendants, trying to claim the benefit of our decisions in Price and Thomas, argue that if the District Court exercises jurisdiction here, it would need to determine whether the VA “acted properly” in handling the claims of at least those plaintiffs who were denied full benefits, something forbidden by § 511(a). Not so. In Price and Thomas, if the District Court had exercised jurisdiction, it would have needed to “review” the Secretary’s “actual decisions” that veterans were not entitled to the benefits they sought. Here, by contrast, no such “review” is required. Unlike the plaintiffs in Price and Thomas, the plaintiffs in this case are not asking the District Court to decide whether any of the veterans whose claims the Secretary rejected are entitled to benefits. Nor are they asking the District Court to revisit any decision made by the Secretary in the course of making benefits determinations. The Secretary never considered or decided the two issues the defendants focus upon— “whether the information allegedly withheld impaired or foreclosed” the veterans benefits claims and “whether the radiation dosage exposure estimates ... fail to consider relevant information” that the Secretary did not have. It can therefore hardly be said that these issues were “necessary to a decision by the Secretary.” 38 U.S.C. § 511(a). The “acted properly” language in Price and Thomas upon which the defendants rely cannot apply where the Secretary has not “acted” at all on the issues before us. Thus, the District Court properly exercised jurisdiction over the claims of the nine named plaintiffs in this case.
III.
Having satisfied ourselves that the District Court had federal subject matter jurisdiction to hear the plaintiffs’ claims, we turn to the merits of the plaintiffs’ claims, which the District Court dismissed on the grounds of absolute and qualified immunity. Because it believed that the defendants “perform[ed] functions closely associated with the judicial process,”
see Cleavinger,
On appeal, the plaintiffs challenge the District Court’s determination that the defendants enjoyed both absolute and qualified immunity. They argue first that the defendants are not entitled to absolute immunity because they do not “perform functions closely associated with the judicial process.” They argue that the defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity because even assuming arguendo that a denial-of-access claim cannot be based on a post-filing cover-up, their complaint did in fact allege that the cover-up took place before the plaintiffs filed their claims. Specifically, they point to one of the plaintiffs, Kathy Jacobovitch, who had not yet filed a claim, but who nonetheless alleged that she “ha[d] been hampered in her efforts to file for benefits” based on the defendants’ allegedly unlawful conduct. In response, the defendants retreat from the District Court’s conclusion and do not argue, as the District Court held, that the plaintiffs failed to make this assertion in their complaint. Instead, the defendants argue, among other things, that the District Court correctly dismissed the complaint on other grounds' — specifically, that plaintiffs failed to state a claim for denial of access because their right.to meaningful access has not, in fact, been completely foreclosed.
We review the grant of a motion to dismiss
de novo
and “may affirm the dismissal of a complaint on different grounds than those relied upon by the district court.”
Amgen, Inc. v. Smith,
In reviewing the dismissal of a complaint under Rule 12(b)(6), we are to “accept the allegations of the complaint as true, draw[ ] all inferences in the plaintiffs favor, and [] affirm ‘only if it is clear that no relief could be granted under any set of facts that could be proved consistent with the allegations.’ ”
Croixland Properties Ltd. P’ship v. Corcoran,
A. The Elements of a Denial-of-Aceess Claim.
The Supreme Court has long recognized that citizens have a right of access to the courts.
See Chambers v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R. Co.,
“[T]wo categories” of “denial of access” cases emerge from the case law of the Supreme Court and the Courts of Appeals.
Harbury III,
the essence of the access claim is that official action is presently denying an opportunity to litigate for a class of potential plaintiffs. The opportunity has not been lost for all time, however, but only in the short term; the object of the denial-of-access suit, and the justification for recognizing the claim, is to place the plaintiff in a position to pursue a separate claim for relief once the frustrating condition has been removed.
Id.
The Court calls these “forward-looking claims.”
Id.
at 414 n. 11,
“The second category covers claims not in aid of a class of suits yet to be litigated, but of specific cases
that cannot now be tried
(or tried with all material evidence), no matter what official action may be in
*118
the future.”
Id.
at 413-14,
These cases do not look forward to a class of future litigation, but backward to a time when specific litigation ended poorly, or could not have commenced, or could have produced a remedy subsequently unobtainable. The ultimate object of these sorts of access claims, then, is not the judgment in a further lawsuit, but simply the judgment in the access claim itself, in providing relief obtainable in no other suit in the future.
Id.
at 414,
Although the plaintiffs use the bulk of their arguments on appeal to discuss backward-looking claims, they appear to have brought both forward-looking and backward-looking claims against the defendants. We say “appear” because neither the plaintiffs’ complaint nor the briefs follow the approach of the Supreme Court in
Harbury III
to specifically identify claims as “backward-looking” or “forward-looking.” But the complaint does seek the “immediate[ ] release ... [of] all records and documents, of whatever type or classification and wherever located, that in any way contain information regarding the radiation exposure received by any Atomic Veteran, or that could be used to produce a realistic and scientifically-valid reconstruction of such exposure.” This seems to raise what
Harbury III
would call a forward-looking claim. By retrieving these documents, the plaintiffs hope to be able to meaningfully “pursue a separate claim for relief once the frustrating condition has been removed.”
Harbury III,
The complaint also alleges that the cover-up denied six of the nine plaintiffs a meaningful opportunity to seek benefits on their underlying claims. In the view of the plaintiffs, these opportunities have now been permanently lost. These allegations seem to raise what Harbury III would call backward-looking claims. The “ultimate object” of these claims appears to be “judgment in the access claim itself, in providing relief obtainable in no other suit in the future.” Id. Because plaintiffs’ complaint and briefs focus primarily on these backward-looking claims, we look first to their necessary elements.
1. Backward-looking claims.
The only case in our Circuit to address a backward-looking denial-of-access claim is
Harbury I,
In Harbury I Jennifer Harbury, a United States citizen and the widow of a murdered Guatemalan citizen, claimed that officials from the State Department and the National Security Council denied her meaningful access to the courts. She alleged that these officials intentionally deceived her about what they knew about her husband, who had been kidnapped by Guatemalan army forces affiliated with the Central Intelligence Agency. Before her husband’s death, Harbury repeatedly contacted State Department and National
*119
Security Council officials to try to obtain information about his condition. According to Harbury, even though these officials knew that her husband had been captured alive, they “intentionally misled [her, by making] deceptive statements and omissions, into believing that concrete information about her husband’s fate did not exist.”
Harbury I,
On appeal, we reversed and held that Harbury had alleged a violation of a clearly established constitutional right because she alleged that the defendants’ actions prevented her from obtaining an injunction “in time to save her husband’s life.”
Har-bury I,
On review in
Harbury III,
The Court found Harbury’s complaint deficient in yet another way. Her complaint did not seek a particular type of remedy that the Court concluded is essential to a backward-looking denial-of-access claim:
[T]he complaint must identify a remedy that may be awarded as recompense but *120 not otherwise available in some suit that may yet be brought. There is, after all, no point in spending time and money to establish the facts constituting denial of access when a plaintiff would end up just as well off after litigating a simpler case without the denial-of-access element.
Id.
at 415,
Harbury failed to seek any remedy “that could not be obtained on an existing claim.”
Id.
at 421,
Harbury III,
and the portions of our decisions in
Harbury I
and
II
which have not been disturbed,
8
evidence at least three elements necessary to prove a backward-looking denial-of-access claim: an arguable underlying claim, complete foreclosure, and causation. First, to state a denial-of-access claim, plaintiffs must identify “in the complaint” a “non-frivolous,” “arguable” underlying claim.
Id.
at 415,
2. Forward-looking claims.
The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on forward-looking claims reveals at
*121
least two necessary elements: an arguable underlying claim and present foreclosure of a meaningful opportunity to pursue that claim. First, just as with backward-looking claims, a plaintiff who alleges a forward-looking claim must plead a non-frivolous, arguable underlying claim.
See Lewis v. Casey,
Second, a plaintiff who alleges a forward-looking claim must be “presently den[ied] an opportunity to litigate.”
Harbury III,
B. Whether the Plaintiffs Can Prove Denial of Access.
We turn now to whether the plaintiffs can show they have been, and are currently being, denied meaningful access to the courts.
1. Backward-looking claims.
As mentioned, to state a backward-looking denial-of-access claim, plaintiffs must show, among other things, that they have been “completely foreclosed” from meaningfully pursuing their underlying claims. Plaintiffs’ complaint looks backward to just one group of underlying claims: the claims of six of the nine plaintiffs that were rejected by the VA. Because these underlying claims have not been “completely foreclosed,” however, plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for denial of access. 11
Plaintiffs cannot show, consistent with the allegations of the their complaint, that no avenue exists through which they can meaningfully pursue their underlying benefits claims. Consequently, they cannot show that the relief they seek is not available in a “suit that may yet be brought,”
Harbury III,
Once plaintiffs obtain the records, VA regulations allow them to “reopen a finally adjudicated claim by submitting new and material evidence.” 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(a). Under the regulations, “new evidence” is “existing evidence not previously submitted to agency decisionmakers” and “material evidence” is “existing evidence that, by itself or when considered with previous evidence of record, relates to an unestablished fact necessary to substantiate the claim.”
Id.
If these covered-up documents are what plaintiffs say they are, this provision would undoubtedly allow plaintiffs to reopen their earlier claims. Once the claims are reopened, if the new and material evidence supports a finding that the plaintiffs’ illnesses are service-connected, benefits will be awarded retroactive to the date of original filing. 38 C.F.R. § 3.156(c). Plaintiffs therefore will be in the same position they would have been in had there been no cover-up at all.
See Harbury
III,
None of the plaintiffs in this case have suggested that this avenue for relief is foreclosed. Plaintiffs did file a FOIA request with the VA, DoD, and other Government agencies, but they have not challenged in any court these agencies’ failure or refusal to provide the requested documents. Given plaintiffs’ failure to exhaust FOIA remedies and seek a reopening of them benefits’ claims, plaintiffs cannot show that their underlying claims have been “completely foreclosed.”
Harbury I,
As a fallback, at oral argument plaintiffs’ counsel suggested that the complaint also looks backward to a second category of underlying claims: claims for veterans benefits that the plaintiffs did not file because the defendants’ cover-up kept them from knowing that they had been subjected to dangerous levels of radiation while in military service. We have reviewed the complaint, however, and its four counts do not come close to identifying such a category of underlying claims.
See Harbury III,
The only statement in the complaint which even arguably looks backward to underlying claims that the plaintiffs did not file is the following confusing statement: “Plaintiffs have suffered a permanent loss of financial compensation and opportunities for medical benefits ... because VA regulations prohibit awarding Plaintiffs financial and medical benefits lost because of the denials of past benefit claims and permanently lost opportunities to file benefits claims even if those claims are filed or reopened in the future.” J.A. 54. But this statement tells us nothing about which, if any, of the named plaintiffs “permanently lost” specific claims in this way, nor does it tell us anything about the nature of these supposedly “permanently lost” claims — certainly not enough to give the defendants, let alone the Court, “fair notice” of these claims or to allow us to decide if these claims are “nonfrivolous.”
See Harbury III,
2. Forward-looking claims.
As noted, plaintiffs also appear to bring forward-looking denial-of-access claims, seeking release of the covered-up documents so that they can meaningfully “pursue a separate claim for relief once the frustrating condition has been removed.”
Harbury III,
IV.
Plaintiffs have failed to state a claim for denial of access to the courts. They cannot show, under any set of facts consistent with the allegations of their complaint, that the defendants completely foreclosed their opportunity to meaningfully pursue underlying benefits claims before the VA. The decision of the District Court is therefore affirmed.
So ordered.
Notes
. The complaint named ten plaintiffs, but one, Theodore J. Dvorak, did not file a notice of appeal and his claims are not before us.
. A veteran who becomes ill can file an application for benefits with the VA. Sections 1110 and 1131 of Title 38, United States Code, provide that, subject to certain conditions not relevant here, the VA will pay compensation to veterans "[f]or disability resulting from personal injury suffered or disease contracted in line of duty, or for aggravation of a preexisting injury suffered or disease contracted in line of duty.” 38 U.S.C. § 1110 (emphasis added) (describing the Government's obligation to compensate wartime veterans), § 1131 (emphasis added) (describing the Government’s obligation to compensate peacetime veterans). The standard for determining whether a veteran's survivor is entitled to benefits is similar: "When any veteran dies after December 31, 1956, from a service-connected or compensable disability, the Secretary shall pay dependency and indemnity compensation to such veteran’s surviving spouse, children, and parents.” Id. § 1310(a) (emphasis added).
. These subsections provide, in relevant part:
(a) Determinations of exposure and dose —
(1) Dose assessment. In all claims in which it is established that a radiogenic disease first became manifest after service and was not manifest to a compensable degree within any applicable presumptive period as specified in § 3.307 or § 3.309, and it is contended the disease is a result of exposure to ionizing radiation in service, an assessment will be made as to the size and nature of the radiation dose or doses....
(2) Request for dose information. Where necessary pursuant to paragraph (a)(1) of this section, dose information will be requested as follows:
(i) Atmospheric nuclear weapons test participation claims. In claims based upon participation in atmospheric nuclear testing, dose data will in all cases be requested from the appropriate office of the Department of Defense.
(ii) Hiroshima and Nagasaki occupation claims. In all claims based on participation in the American occupation of Hiroshima or Nagasaki, Japan, prior to July 1, 1946, dose data will be requested from the Department of Defense.
. Subsection (b) provides four exceptions, none of which would allow a federal district court to review the kind of decisions of the Secretary at issue here. The first exception gives the Federal Circuit jurisdiction over Administrative Procedure Act review of VA rule-making. 38 U.S.C. § 511(b)(1). The second gives federal district courts jurisdiction over suits involving Veterans' Group Life Insurance, National Service Life Insurance, and U.S. Government life insurance. Id. § 511(b)(2). The third gives federal district courts jurisdiction over suits involving VA housing and small business loans. Id. § 511(b)(3). The fourth, id. § 511(b)(4), allows veterans or their dependents or survivors to appeal adverse decisions to the Board, of Veterans’ Appeals, id. § 7104(a), then to the Court of Appeals for Veterans’ Claims, id. § 7252(a), and then to the Federal Circuit, id. § 7292(c). Finally, if the Federal Circuit denies their claims, veterans or their depen-dants can petition the Supreme Court for certiorari. Id.
. Section 211(a), formerly codified at 38 U.S.C. § 211(a) (1982), read in pertinent part:
[T]he decisions of the Administrator [of the Veteran’s Administration] on any question of law or fact under any law administered by the Veteran’s Administration providing benefits for veterans and their dependants or survivors shall be final and conclusive *113 and no other official or any court of the United States shall have power or jurisdiction to review any such decision by an action in the nature of mandamus or otherwise.
. The plaintiffs argue that the constitutional right of access to the courts extends to administrative proceedings.
Cf. California Motor Transp. Co. v. Trucking Unlimited,
.
See also Harbury III,
.
See Action Alliance of Senior Citizens of Greater Philadelphia v. Sullivan,
. Although Harbury I and II discussed this requirement in the context of a backward-looking claim, nothing in these cases or Har-bury III, suggests that a forward-looking claim can proceed if a plaintiff can still meaningfully pursue the underlying claim.
. Our discussion of the elements of forward-looking and backward-looking claims is not intended to be exhaustive. We have discussed only those' elements necessary to resolve this dispute.
. Because we conclude that plaintiffs cannot show other elements of a denial-of-access claim, we do not address whether the complaint describes the underlying claims of these six plaintiffs "well enough to apply the 'nonfrivolous' test and to show that the 'arguable' nature of the underlying claim is more than hope.”
Harbury III,
. Plaintiffs have not shown that the exceptions to FOIA described in 5 U.S.C. § 552(b) would allow these agencies to withhold these documents. In any event, we have reviewed those exceptions and have not found any exception that would so clearly apply as to relieve plaintiffs of the obligation of exhausting their FOIA remedies. See 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6) (providing an exception for medical records but only where "the disclosure of [the records] would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy”).
