
by Tara Carreon
12
WHAT TO DO?
A GLOBAL STRATEGY
Three years after 9/11, Americans are still thinking and
talking about how to protect our nation in this new era. The national
debate continues.
Countering terrorism has become, beyond any doubt, the
top national security priority for the United States. This shift has
occurred with the full support of the Congress, both major political
parties, the media, and the American people.
The nation has committed enormous resources to national
security and to countering terrorism. Between fiscal year 2001, the last
budget adopted before 9/11, and the present fiscal year 2004, total
federal spending on defense (including expenditures on both Iraq and
Afghanistan), homeland security, and international affairs rose more than
50 percent, from $354 billion to about $547 billion. The United States has
not experienced such a rapid surge in national security spending since the
Korean War.1
This pattern has occurred before in American history.
The United States faces a sudden crisis and summons a tremendous exertion
of national energy. Then, as that surge transforms the landscape, comes a
time for reflection and reevaluation. Some programs and even agencies are
discarded; others are invented or redesigned. Private firms and engaged
citizens redefine their relationships with government, working through the
processes of the American republic.
Now is the time for that reflection and reevaluation.
The United States should consider what to do-the shape and
objectives of a strategy. Americans should also consider how to do it-organizing
their government in a different way.
Defining the Threat
In the post-9/11 world, threats are defined more by the
fault lines within societies than by the territorial boundaries between
them. From terrorism to global disease or environmental degradation, the
challenges have become transnational rather than international. That is
the defining quality of world politics in the twenty-first century.
National security used to be considered by studying
foreign frontiers, weighing opposing groups of states, and measuring
industrial might. To be dangerous, an enemy had to muster large armies.
Threats emerged slowly, often visibly, as weapons were forged, armies
conscripted, and units trained and moved into place. Because large states
were more powerful, they also had more to lose. They could be deterred.
Now threats can emerge quickly. An organization like al
Qaeda, headquartered in a country on the other side of the earth, in a
region so poor that electricity or telephones were scarce, could
nonetheless scheme to wield weapons of unprecedented destructive power in
the largest cities of the United States.
In this sense, 9/11 has taught us that terrorism against
American interests "over there" should be regarded just as we regard
terrorism against America "over here." In this same sense, the American
homeland is the planet.
But the enemy is not just "terrorism," some generic
evil.2 This vagueness blurs the strategy.The catastrophic
threat at this moment in history is more specific. It is the threat posed
by Islamist terrorism-especially the al Qaeda network, its
affiliates, and its ideology.3
As we mentioned in chapter 2, Usama Bin Ladin and other
Islamist terrorist leaders draw on a long tradition of extreme intolerance
within one stream of Islam (a minority tradition), from at least Ibn
Taimiyyah, through the founders of Wahhabism, through the Muslim
Brotherhood, to Sayyid Qutb. That stream is motivated by religion and does
not distinguish politics from religion, thus distorting both. It is
further fed by grievances stressed by Bin Ladin and widely felt throughout
the Muslim world-against the U.S. military presence in the Middle East,
policies perceived as anti-Arab and anti-Muslim, and support of Israel.
Bin Ladin and Islamist terrorists mean exactly what they say: to them
America is the font of all evil, the "head of the snake," and it must be
converted or destroyed.
It is not a position with which Americans can bargain or
negotiate. With it there is no common ground-not even respect for life-on
which to begin a dialogue. It can only be destroyed or utterly isolated.
Because the Muslim world has fallen behind the West
politically, economically, and militarily for the past three centuries,
and because few tolerant or secular Muslim democracies provide alternative
models for the future, Bin Ladin's message finds receptive ears. It has
attracted active support from thousands of disaffected young Muslims and
resonates powerfully with a far larger number who do not actively support
his methods. The resentment of America and the West is deep, even among
leaders of relatively successful Muslim states.4
Tolerance, the rule of law, political and economic
openness, the extension of greater opportunities to women-these cures must
come from within Muslim societies themselves. The United States must
support such developments.
But this process is likely to be measured in decades,
not years. It is a process that will be violently opposed by Islamist
terrorist organizations, both inside Muslim countries and in attacks on
the United States and other Western nations. The United States finds
itself caught up in a clash within a civilization. That clash
arises from particular conditions in the Muslim world, conditions that
spill over into expatriate Muslim communities in non-Muslim countries.
Our enemy is twofold: al Qaeda, a stateless network of
terrorists that struck us on 9/11; and a radical ideological movement in
the Islamic world, inspired in part by al Qaeda, which has spawned
terrorist groups and violence across the globe. The first enemy is
weakened, but continues to pose a grave threat. The second enemy is
gathering, and will menace Americans and American interests long after
Usama Bin Ladin and his cohorts are killed or captured. Thus our strategy
must match our means to two ends: dismantling the al Qaeda network and
prevailing in the longer term over the ideology that gives rise to
Islamist terrorism.
Islam is not the enemy. It is not synonymous with
terror. Nor does Islam teach terror. America and its friends oppose a
perversion of Islam, not the great world faith itself. Lives guided by
religious faith, including literal beliefs in holy scriptures, are common
to every religion, and represent no threat to us.
Other religions have experienced violent internal
struggles. With so many diverse adherents, every major religion will spawn
violent zealots. Yet understanding and tolerance among people of different
faiths can and must prevail.
The present transnational danger is Islamist terrorism.
What is needed is a broad political-military strategy that rests on a firm
tripod of policies to
- attack terrorists and their organizations;
- prevent the continued growth of Islamist terrorism;
and
- protect against and prepare for terrorist attacks.
More Than a War on Terrorism
Terrorism is a tactic used by individuals and
organizations to kill and destroy. Our efforts should be directed at those
individuals and organizations.
Calling this struggle a war accurately describes the use
of American and allied armed forces to find and destroy terrorist groups
and their allies in the field, notably in Afghanistan. The language of war
also evokes the mobilization for a national effort. Yet the strategy
should be balanced.
The first phase of our post-9/11 efforts rightly
included military action to topple the Taliban and pursue al Qaeda. This
work continues. But long-term success demands the use of all elements of
national power: diplomacy, intelligence, covert action, law enforcement,
economic policy, foreign aid, public diplomacy, and homeland defense. If
we favor one tool while neglecting others, we leave ourselves vulnerable
and weaken our national effort.
Certainly the strategy should include offensive
operations to counter terrorism. Terrorists should no longer find safe
haven where their organizations can grow and flourish. America's strategy
should be a coalition strategy, that includes Muslim nations as partners
in its development and implementation.
Our effort should be accompanied by a preventive
strategy that is as much, or more, political as it is military. The
strategy must focus clearly on the Arab and Muslim world, in all its
variety.
Our strategy should also include defenses. America can
be attacked in many ways and has many vulnerabilities. No defenses are
perfect. But risks must be calculated; hard choices must be made about
allocating resources. Responsibilities for America's defense should be
clearly defined. Planning does make a difference, identifying where a
little money might have a large effect. Defenses also complicate the plans
of attackers, increasing their risks of discovery and failure. Finally,
the nation must prepare to deal with attacks that are not stopped.
Measuring Success
What should Americans expect from their government in
the struggle against Islamist terrorism? The goals seem unlimited: Defeat
terrorism anywhere in the world. But Americans have also been told to
expect the worst: An attack is probably coming; it may be terrible.
With such benchmarks, the justifications for action and
spending seem limitless. Goals are good. Yet effective public policies
also need concrete objectives. Agencies need to be able to measure
success.
These measurements do not need to be quantitative:
government cannot measure success in the ways that private firms can. But
the targets should be specific enough so that reasonable observers-in the
White House, the Congress, the media, or the general public-can judge
whether or not the objectives have been attained.
Vague goals match an amorphous picture of the enemy. Al
Qaeda and its affiliates are popularly described as being all over the
world, adaptable, resilient, needing little higher-level organization, and
capable of anything. The American people are thus given the picture of an
omnipotent, unslayable hydra of destruction. This image lowers
expectations for government effectiveness.
It should not lower them too far. Our report shows a
determined and capable group of plotters. Yet the group was fragile,
dependent on a few key personalities, and occasionally left vulnerable by
the marginal, unstable people often attracted to such causes. The enemy
made mistakes-like Khalid al Mihdhar's unauthorized departure from the
United States that required him to enter the country again in July 2001,
or the selection of Zacarias Moussaoui as a participant and Ramzi
Binalshibh's transfer of money to him. The U.S. government was not able to
capitalize on those mistakes in time to prevent 9/11.
We do not believe it is possible to defeat all terrorist
attacks against Americans, every time and everywhere. A president should
tell the American people:
- No president can promise that a catastrophic attack
like that of 9/11 will not happen again. History has shown that even the
most vigilant and expert agencies cannot always prevent determined,
suicidal attackers from reaching a target.
- But the American people are entitled to expect their
government to do its very best. They should expect that officials will
have realistic objectives, clear guidance, and effective organization.
They are entitled to see some standards for performance so they can
judge, with the help of their elected representatives, whether the
objectives are being met.
The U.S. government, joined by other governments around
the world, is working through intelligence, law enforcement, military,
financial, and diplomatic channels to identify, disrupt, capture, or kill
individual terrorists. This effort was going on before 9/11 and it
continues on a vastly enlarged scale. But to catch terrorists, a U.S. or
foreign agency needs to be able to find and reach them.
No Sanctuaries
The 9/11 attack was a complex international operation,
the product of years of planning. Bombings like those in Bali in 2003 or
Madrid in 2004, while able to take hundreds of lives, can be mounted
locally. Their requirements are far more modest in size and complexity.
They are more difficult to thwart. But the
U.S. government must build the capacities to prevent a
9/11-scale plot from succeeding, and those capabilities will help greatly
to cope with lesser but still devastating attacks.
A complex international terrorist operation aimed at
launching a catastrophic attack cannot be mounted by just anyone in any
place. Such operations appear to require
- time, space, and ability to perform competent
planning and staff work;
- a command structure able to make necessary decisions
and possessing the authority and contacts to assemble needed people,
money, and materials;
- opportunity and space to recruit, train, and select
operatives with the needed skills and dedication, providing the time and
structure required to socialize them into the terrorist cause, judge
their trustworthiness, and hone their skills;
- a logistics network able to securely manage the
travel of operatives, move money, and transport resources (like
explosives) where they need to go;
- access, in the case of certain weapons, to the
special materials needed for a nuclear, chemical, radiological, or
biological attack;
- reliable communications between coordinators and
operatives; and o opportunity to test the workability of the plan.
Many details in chapters 2, 5, and 7 illustrate the
direct and indirect value of the Afghan sanctuary to al Qaeda in preparing
the 9/11 attack and other operations. The organization cemented personal
ties among veteran jihadists working together there for years. It had the
operational space to gather and sift recruits, indoctrinating them in
isolated, desert camps. It built up logistical networks, running through
Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates.
Al Qaeda also exploited relatively lax internal security
environments in Western countries, especially Germany. It considered the
environment in the United States so hospitable that the 9/11 operatives
used America as their staging area for further training and
exercises-traveling into, out of, and around the country and complacently
using their real names with little fear of capture.
To find sanctuary, terrorist organizations have fled to
some of the least governed, most lawless places in the world. The
intelligence community has prepared a world map that highlights possible
terrorist havens, using no secret intelligence-just indicating areas that
combine rugged terrain, weak governance, room to hide or receive supplies,
and low population density with a town or city near enough to allow
necessary interaction with the outside world. Large areas scattered around
the world meet these criteria.5
In talking with American and foreign government
officials and military officers on the front lines fighting terrorists
today, we asked them: If you were a terrorist leader today, where would
you locate your base? Some of the same places come up again and again on
their lists:
- western Pakistan and the Pakistan-Afghanistan border
region
- southern or western Afghanistan
- the Arabian Peninsula, especially Saudi Arabia and
Yemen, and the nearby Horn of Africa, including Somalia and extending
southwest into Kenya
- Southeast Asia, from Thailand to the southern
Philippines to Indonesia
- West Africa, including Nigeria and Mali
- European cities with expatriate Muslim communities,
especially cities in central and eastern Europe where security forces
and border controls are less effective
In the twentieth century, strategists focused on the
world's great industrial heartlands. In the twenty-first, the focus is in
the opposite direction, toward remote regions and failing states. The
United States has had to find ways to extend its reach, straining the
limits of its influence.
Every policy decision we make needs to be seen through
this lens. If, for example, Iraq becomes a failed state, it will go to the
top of the list of places that are breeding grounds for attacks against
Americans at home. Similarly, if we are paying insufficient attention to
Afghanistan, the rule of the Taliban or warlords and narcotraffickers may
reemerge and its countryside could once again offer refuge to al Qaeda, or
its successor.
Recommendation: The U.S. government must
identify and prioritize actual or potential terrorist sanctuaries. For
each, it should have a realistic strategy to keep possible terrorists
insecure and on the run, using all elements of national power. We should
reach out, listen to, and work with other countries that can help.
We offer three illustrations that are particularly
applicable today, in 2004: Pakistan, Afghanistan, and Saudi Arabia.
Pakistan
Pakistan's endemic poverty, widespread corruption, and
often ineffective government create opportunities for Islamist
recruitment. Poor education is a particular concern. Millions of families,
especially those with little money, send their children to religious
schools, or madrassahs. Many of these schools are the only opportunity
available for an education, but some have been used as incubators for
violent extremism. According to Karachi's police commander, there are 859
madrassahs teaching more than 200,000 youngsters in his city alone.6
It is hard to overstate the importance of Pakistan in
the struggle against Islamist terrorism. Within Pakistan's borders are 150
million Muslims, scores of al Qaeda terrorists, many Taliban fighters,
and-perhaps-Usama Bin Ladin. Pakistan possesses nuclear weapons and has
come frighteningly close to war with nuclear-armed India over the disputed
territory of Kashmir. A political battle among anti-American Islamic
fundamentalists, the Pakistani military, and more moderate mainstream
political forces has already spilled over into violence, and there have
been repeated recent attempts to kill Pakistan's president, Pervez
Musharraf.
In recent years, the United States has had three basic
problems in its relationship with Pakistan:
- On terrorism, Pakistan helped nurture the Taliban.
The Pakistani army and intelligence services, especially below the top
ranks, have long been ambivalent about confronting Islamist extremists.
Many in the government have sympathized with or provided support to the
extremists. Musharraf agreed that Bin Ladin was bad. But before 9/11,
preserving good relations with the Taliban took precedence.
- On proliferation, Musharraf has repeatedly said that
Pakistan does not barter with its nuclear technology. But proliferation
concerns have been long-standing and very serious. Most recently, the
Pakistani government has claimed not to have known that one of its
nuclear weapons developers, a national figure, was leading the most
dangerous nuclear smuggling ring ever disclosed.
- Finally, Pakistan has made little progress toward the
return of democratic rule at the national level, although that turbulent
process does continue to function at the provincial level and the
Pakistani press remains relatively free.
Immediately after 9/11, confronted by the United States
with a stark choice, Pakistan made a strategic decision. Its government
stood aside and allowed the U.S.-led coalition to destroy the Taliban
regime. In other ways, Pakistan actively assisted: its authorities
arrested more than 500 al Qaeda operatives and Taliban members, and
Pakistani forces played a leading part in tracking down KSM, Abu Zubaydah,
and other key al Qaeda figures.7
In the following two years, the Pakistani government
tried to walk the fence, helping against al Qaeda while seeking to avoid a
larger confrontation with Taliban remnants and other Islamic extremists.
When al Qaeda and its Pakistani allies repeatedly tried to assassinate
Musharraf, almost succeeding, the battle came home.
The country's vast unpoliced regions make Pakistan
attractive to extremists seeking refuge and recruits and also provide a
base for operations against coalition forces in Afghanistan. Almost all
the 9/11 attackers traveled the north-south nexus of
Kandahar-Quetta-Karachi. The Baluchistan region of Pakistan (KSM's ethnic
home) and the sprawling city of Karachi remain centers of Islamist
extremism where the U.S. and Pakistani security and intelligence presence
has been weak. The U.S. consulate in Karachi is a makeshift fortress,
reflecting the gravity of the surrounding threat.8
During the winter of 2003-2004, Musharraf made another
strategic decision. He ordered the Pakistani army into the frontier
provinces of northwest Pakistan along the Afghan border, where Bin Ladin
and Ayman al Zawahiri have reportedly taken refuge. The army is
confronting groups of al Qaeda fighters and their local allies in very
difficult terrain. On the other side of the frontier,
U.S. forces in Afghanistan have found it challenging to
organize effective joint operations, given Pakistan's limited capabilities
and reluctance to permit U.S. military operations on its soil. Yet in
2004, it is clear that the Pakistani government is trying harder than ever
before in the battle against Islamist terrorists.9
Acknowledging these problems and Musharraf's own part in
the story, we believe that Musharraf's government represents the best hope
for stability in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
- In an extraordinary public essay asking how Muslims
can "drag ourselves out of the pit we find ourselves in, to raise
ourselves up," Musharraf has called for a strategy of "enlightened
moderation." The Muslim world, he said, should shun militancy and
extremism; the West-and the United States in particular-should seek to
resolve disputes with justice and help better the Muslim world.10
- Having come close to war in 2002 and 2003, Pakistan
and India have recently made significant progress in peacefully
discussing their long-standing differences. The United States has been
and should remain a key supporter of that process.
- The constant refrain of Pakistanis is that the United
States long treated them as allies of convenience. As the United States
makes fresh commitments now, it should make promises it is prepared to
keep, for years to come.
Recommendation: If Musharraf stands for
enlightened moderation in a fight for his life and for the life of his
country, the United States should be willing to make hard choices too, and
make the difficult long-term commitment to the future of Pakistan.
Sustaining the current scale of aid to Pakistan, the United States should
support Pakistan's government in its struggle against extremists with a
comprehensive effort that extends from military aid to support for better
education, so long as Pakistan's leaders remain willing to make difficult
choices of their own.
Afghanistan
Afghanistan was the incubator for al Qaeda and for the
9/11 attacks. In the fall of 2001, the U.S.-led international coalition
and its Afghan allies toppled the Taliban and ended the regime's
protection of al Qaeda. Notable progress has been made. International
cooperation has been strong, with a clear UN mandate and a NATO-led
peacekeeping force (the International Security Assistance Force, or ISAF).
More than 10,000 American soldiers are deployed today in Afghanistan,
joined by soldiers from NATO allies and Muslim states. A central
government has been established in Kabul, with a democratic constitution,
new currency, and a new army. Most Afghans enjoy greater freedom, women
and girls are emerging from subjugation, and 3 million children have
returned to school. For the first time in many years, Afghans have reason
to hope.11
But grave challenges remain. Taliban and al Qaeda
fighters have regrouped in the south and southeast. Warlords control much
of the country beyond Kabul, and the land is awash in weapons. Economic
development remains a distant hope. The narcotics trade-long a massive
sector of the Afghan economy- is again booming. Even the most hardened aid
workers refuse to operate in many regions, and some warn that Afghanistan
is near the brink of chaos.12
Battered Afghanistan has a chance. Elections are being
prepared. It is revealing that in June 2004, Taliban fighters resorted to
slaughtering 16 Afghans on a bus, apparently for no reason other than
their boldness in carrying an unprecedented Afghan weapon: a voter
registration card.
Afghanistan's president, Hamid Karzai, is brave and
committed. He is trying to build genuinely national institutions that can
overcome the tradition of allocating powers among ethnic communities. Yet
even if his efforts are successful and elections bring a democratic
government to Afghanistan, the United States faces some difficult choices.
After paying relatively little attention to rebuilding
Afghanistan during the military campaign, U.S. policies changed noticeably
during 2003. Greater consideration of the political dimension and
congressional support for a substantial package of assistance signaled a
longer-term commitment to Afghanistan's future. One Afghan regional
official plaintively told us the country finally has a good government. He
begged the United States to keep its promise and not abandon Afghanistan
again, as it had in the 1990s.Another Afghan leader noted that if the
United States leaves, "we will lose all that we have gained."13
Most difficult is to define the security mission in
Afghanistan. There is continuing political controversy about whether
military operations in Iraq have had any effect on the scale of America's
commitment to the future of Afghanistan. The United States has largely
stayed out of the central government's struggles with dissident warlords
and it has largely avoided confronting the related problem of
narcotrafficking.14
Recommendation: The President and the Congress
deserve praise for their efforts in Afghanistan so far. Now the United
States and the international community should make a long-term commitment
to a secure and stable Afghanistan, in order to give the government a
reasonable opportunity to improve the life of the Afghan people.
Afghanistan must not again become a sanctuary for international crime and
terrorism. The United States and the international community should help
the Afghan government extend its authority over the country, with a
strategy and nation-by-nation commitments to achieve their objectives.
- This is an ambitious recommendation. It would mean a
redoubled effort to secure the country, disarm militias, and curtail the
age of warlord rule. But the United States and NATO have already
committed themselves to the future of this region-wisely, as the 9/11
story shows-and failed half-measures could be worse than useless.
- NATO in particular has made Afghanistan a test of the
Alliance's ability to adapt to current security challenges of the
future. NATO must pass this test. Currently, the United States and the
international community envision enough support so that the central
government can build a truly national army and extend essential
infrastructure and minimum public services to major towns and regions.
The effort relies in part on foreign civil-military teams, arranged
under various national flags. The institutional commitments of NATO and
the United Nations to these enterprises are weak. NATO member states are
not following through; some of the other states around the world that
have pledged assistance to Afghanistan are not fulfilling their pledges.
- The U.S. presence in Afghanistan is overwhelmingly
oriented toward military and security work. The State Department
presence is woefully understaffed, and the military mission is narrowly
focused on al Qaeda and Taliban remnants in the south and southeast. The
U.S. government can do its part if the international community decides
on a joint effort to restore the rule of law and contain rampant crime
and narcotics trafficking in this crossroads of Central Asia.15
We heard again and again that the money for assistance
is allocated so rigidly that, on the ground, one U.S. agency often cannot
improvise or pitch in to help another agency, even in small ways when a
few thousand dollars could make a great difference.
The U.S. government should allocate money so that
lower-level officials have more flexibility to get the job done across
agency lines, adjusting to the circumstances they find in the field. This
should include discretionary funds for expenditures by military units that
often encounter opportunities to help the local population.
Saudi Arabia
Saudi Arabia has been a problematic ally in combating
Islamic extremism. At the level of high policy, Saudi Arabia's leaders
cooperated with American diplomatic initiatives aimed at the Taliban or
Pakistan before 9/11. At the same time, Saudi Arabia's society was a place
where al Qaeda raised money directly from individuals and through
charities. It was the society that produced 15 of the 19 hijackers.
The Kingdom is one of the world's most religiously
conservative societies, and its identity is closely bound to its religious
links, especially its position as the guardian of Islam's two holiest
sites. Charitable giving, or zakat, is one of the five pillars of
Islam. It is broader and more pervasive than Western ideas of charity-
functioning also as a form of income tax, educational assistance, foreign
aid, and a source of political influence. The Western notion of the
separation of civic and religious duty does not exist in Islamic cultures.
Funding charitable works is an integral function of the governments in the
Islamic world. It is so ingrained in Islamic culture that in Saudi Arabia,
for example, a department within the Saudi Ministry of Finance and
National Economy collects zakat directly, much as the
U.S. Internal Revenue Service collects payroll
withholding tax. Closely tied to zakat is the dedication of the government
to propagating the Islamic faith, particularly the Wahhabi sect that
flourishes in Saudi Arabia.
Traditionally, throughout the Muslim world, there is no
formal oversight mechanism for donations. As Saudi wealth increased, the
amounts contributed by individuals and the state grew dramatically.
Substantial sums went to finance Islamic charities of every kind.
While Saudi domestic charities are regulated by the
Ministry of Labor and Social Welfare, charities and international relief
agencies, such as the World Assembly of Muslim Youth (WAMY), are currently
regulated by the Ministry of Islamic Affairs. This ministry uses zakat and
government funds to spread Wahhabi beliefs throughout the world, including
in mosques and schools. Often these schools provide the only education
available; even in affluent countries, Saudi-funded Wahhabi schools are
often the only Islamic schools. Some Wahhabi-funded organizations have
been exploited by extremists to further their goal of violent jihad
against non-Muslims. One such organization has been the al Haramain
Islamic Foundation; the assets of some branch offices have been frozen by
the U.S. and Saudi governments.
Until 9/11, few Saudis would have considered government
oversight of charitable donations necessary; many would have perceived it
as interference in the exercise of their faith. At the same time, the
government's ability to finance most state expenditures with energy
revenues has delayed the need for a modern income tax system. As a result,
there have been strong religious, cultural, and administrative barriers to
monitoring charitable spending. That appears to be changing, however, now
that the goal of violent jihad also extends to overthrowing Sunni
governments (such as the House of Saud) that are not living up to the
ideals of the Islamist extremists.16
The leaders of the United States and the rulers of Saudi
Arabia have long had friendly relations, rooted in fundamentally common
interests against the Soviet Union during the Cold War, in American hopes
that Saudi oil supplies would stabilize the supply and price of oil in
world markets, and in Saudi hopes that America could help protect the
Kingdom against foreign threats.
In 1990, the Kingdom hosted U.S. armed forces before the
first U.S.-led war against Iraq. American soldiers and airmen have given
their lives to help protect Saudi Arabia. The Saudi government has
difficulty acknowledging this. American military bases remained there
until 2003, as part of an international commitment to contain Iraq.
For many years, leaders on both sides preferred to keep
their ties quiet and behind the scenes. As a result, neither the U.S. nor
the Saudi people appreciated all the dimensions of the bilateral
relationship, including the Saudi role in
U.S. strategies to promote the Middle East peace
process. In each country, political figures find it difficult to publicly
defend good relations with the other.
Today, mutual recriminations flow. Many Americans see
Saudi Arabia as an enemy, not as an embattled ally. They perceive an
autocratic government that oppresses women, dominated by a wealthy and
indolent elite. Saudi contacts with American politicians are frequently
invoked as accusations in partisan political arguments. Americans are
often appalled by the intolerance, anti-Semitism, and anti-American
arguments taught in schools and preached in mosques.
Saudis are angry too. Many educated Saudis who were
sympathetic to America now perceive the United States as an unfriendly
state. One Saudi reformer noted to us that the demonization of Saudi
Arabia in the U.S. media gives ammunition to radicals, who accuse
reformers of being U.S. lackeys. Tens of thousands of Saudis who once
regularly traveled to (and often had homes in) the United States now go
elsewhere.17
Among Saudis, the United States is seen as aligned with
Israel in its conflict with the Palestinians, with whom Saudis ardently
sympathize. Although Saudi Arabia's cooperation against terrorism improved
to some extent after the September 11 attacks, significant problems
remained. Many in the Kingdom initially reacted with disbelief and denial.
In the following months, as the truth became clear, some leading Saudis
quietly acknowledged the problem but still did not see their own regime as
threatened, and thus often did not respond promptly to U.S. requests for
help. Though Saddam Hussein was widely detested, many Saudis are
sympathetic to the anti-U.S. insurgents in Iraq, although majorities also
condemn jihadist attacks in the Kingdom.18
As in Pakistan, Yemen, and other countries, attitudes
changed when the terrorism came home. Cooperation had already become
significant, but after the bombings in Riyadh on May 12, 2003, it improved
much more. The Kingdom openly discussed the problem of radicalism,
criticized the terrorists as religiously deviant, reduced official support
for religious activity overseas, closed suspect charitable foundations,
and publicized arrests-very public moves for a government that has
preferred to keep internal problems quiet.
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is now locked in mortal
combat with al Qaeda. Saudi police are regularly being killed in shootouts
with terrorists. In June 2004, the Saudi ambassador to the United States
called publicly-in the Saudi press-for his government to wage a jihad of
its own against the terrorists. "We must all, as a state and as a people,
recognize the truth about these criminals," he declared,"[i]f we do not
declare a general mobilization-we will lose this war on terrorism."19
Saudi Arabia is a troubled country. Although regarded as
very wealthy, in fact per capita income has dropped from $28,000 at its
height to the present level of about $8,000. Social and religious
traditions complicate adjustment to modern economic activity and limit
employment opportunities for young Saudis. Women find their education and
employment sharply limited.
President Clinton offered us a perceptive analysis of
Saudi Arabia, contending that fundamentally friendly rulers have been
constrained by their desire to preserve the status quo. He, like others,
made the case for pragmatic reform instead. He hopes the rulers will
envision what they want their Kingdom to become in 10 or 20 years, and
start a process in which their friends can help them change.20
There are signs that Saudi Arabia's royal family is
trying to build a consensus for political reform, though uncertain about
how fast and how far to go. Crown Prince Abdullah wants the Kingdom to
join the World Trade Organization to accelerate economic liberalization.
He has embraced the Arab Human Development Report, which was
highly critical of the Arab world's political, economic, and social
failings and called for greater economic and political reform.21
Cooperation with Saudi Arabia against Islamist terrorism
is very much in the U.S. interest. Such cooperation can exist for a time
largely in secret, as it does now, but it cannot grow and thrive there.
Nor, on either side, can friendship be unconditional.
Recommendation: The problems in the U.S.-Saudi
relationship must be confronted, openly. The United States and Saudi
Arabia must determine if they can build a relationship that political
leaders on both sides are prepared to publicly defend-a relationship about
more than oil. It should include a shared commitment to political and
economic reform, as Saudis make common cause with the outside world. It
should include a shared interest in greater tolerance and cultural
respect, translating into a commitment to fight the violent extremists who
foment hatred.
In October 2003, reflecting on progress after two years
of waging the global war on terrorism, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
asked his advisers: "Are we capturing, killing or deterring and dissuading
more terrorists every day than the madrassas and the radical clerics are
recruiting, training and deploying against us? Does the US need to fashion
a broad, integrated plan to stop the next generation of terrorists? The US
is putting relatively little effort into a long-range plan, but we are
putting a great deal of effort into trying to stop terrorists. The
cost-benefit ratio is against us! Our cost is billions against the
terrorists' costs of millions."22
These are the right questions. Our answer is that we
need short-term action on a long-range strategy, one that invigorates our
foreign policy with the attention that the President and Congress have
given to the military and intelligence parts of the conflict against
Islamist terrorism.
Engage the Struggle of Ideas
The United States is heavily engaged in the Muslim world
and will be for many years to come. This American engagement is resented.
Polls in 2002 found that among America's friends, like Egypt-the recipient
of more U.S. aid for the past 20 years than any other Muslim country-only
15 percent of the population had a favorable opinion of the United States.
In Saudi Arabia the number was 12 percent. And two-thirds of those
surveyed in 2003 in countries from Indonesia to Turkey (a NATO ally) were
very or somewhat fearful that the United States may attack them.23
Support for the United States has plummeted. Polls taken
in Islamic countries after 9/11 suggested that many or most people thought
the United States was doing the right thing in its fight against
terrorism; few people saw popular support for al Qaeda; half of those
surveyed said that ordinary people had a favorable view of the United
States. By 2003, polls showed that "the bottom has fallen out of support
for America in most of the Muslim world. Negative views of the U.S. among
Muslims, which had been largely limited to countries in the Middle East,
have spread.. . . Since last summer, favorable ratings for the U.S. have
fallen from 61% to 15% in Indonesia and from 71% to 38% among Muslims in
Nigeria."24
Many of these views are at best uninformed about the
United States and, at worst, informed by cartoonish stereotypes, the
coarse expression of a fashionable "Occidentalism" among intellectuals who
caricature U.S. values and policies. Local newspapers and the few
influential satellite broadcasters-like al Jazeera-often reinforce the
jihadist theme that portrays the United States as anti-Muslim.25
The small percentage of Muslims who are fully committed
to Usama Bin Ladin's version of Islam are impervious to persuasion. It is
among the large majority of Arabs and Muslims that we must encourage
reform, freedom, democracy, and opportunity, even though our own promotion
of these messages is limited in its effectiveness simply because we are
its carriers. Muslims themselves will have to reflect upon such basic
issues as the concept of jihad, the position of women, and the place of
non-Muslim minorities. The United States can promote moderation, but
cannot ensure its ascendancy. Only Muslims can do this.
The setting is difficult. The combined gross domestic
product of the 22 countries in the Arab League is less than the GDP of
Spain. Forty percent of adult Arabs are illiterate, two-thirds of them
women. One-third of the broader Middle East lives on less than two dollars
a day. Less than 2 percent of the population has access to the Internet.
The majority of older Arab youths have expressed a desire to emigrate to
other countries, particularly those in Europe.26
In short, the United States has to help defeat an
ideology, not just a group of people, and we must do so under difficult
circumstances. How can the United States and its friends help moderate
Muslims combat the extremist ideas?
Recommendation: The U.S. government must define
what the message is, what it stands for. We should offer an example of
moral leadership in the world, committed to treat people humanely, abide
by the rule of law, and be generous and caring to our neighbors. America
and Muslim friends can agree on respect for human dignity and opportunity.
To Muslim parents, terrorists like Bin Ladin have nothing to offer their
children but visions of violence and death. America and its friends have a
crucial advantage-we can offer these parents a vision that might give
their children a better future. If we heed the views of thoughtful leaders
in the Arab and Muslim world, a moderate consensus can be found.
That vision of the future should stress life over death:
individual educational and economic opportunity. This vision includes
widespread political participation and contempt for indiscriminate
violence. It includes respect for the rule of law, openness in discussing
differences, and tolerance for opposing points of view.
Recommendation: Where Muslim governments, even
those who are friends, do not respect these principles, the United States
must stand for a better future. One of the lessons of the long Cold War
was that short-term gains in cooperating with the most repressive and
brutal governments were too often outweighed by long-term setbacks for
America's stature and interests.
American foreign policy is part of the message.
America's policy choices have consequences. Right or wrong, it is simply a
fact that American policy regarding the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and
American actions in Iraq are dominant staples of popular commentary across
the Arab and Muslim world. That does not mean U.S. choices have been
wrong. It means those choices must be integrated with America's message of
opportunity to the Arab and Muslim world. Neither Israel nor the new Iraq
will be safer if worldwide Islamist terrorism grows stronger.
The United States must do more to communicate its
message. Reflecting on Bin Ladin's success in reaching Muslim audiences,
Richard Holbrooke wondered, "How can a man in a cave outcommunicate the
world's leading communications society?" Deputy Secretary of State Richard
Armitage worried to us that Americans have been "exporting our fears and
our anger," not our vision of opportunity and hope.27
Recommendation: Just as we did in the Cold War,
we need to defend our ideals abroad vigorously. America does stand up for
its values. The United States defended, and still defends, Muslims against
tyrants and criminals in Somalia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
If the United States does not act aggressively to define itself in the
Islamic world, the extremists will gladly do the job for us.
- Recognizing that Arab and Muslim audiences
rely on satellite television and radio, the government has begun some
promising initiatives in television and radio broadcasting to the Arab
world, Iran, and Afghanistan. These efforts are beginning to reach large
audiences. The Broadcasting Board of Governors has asked for much larger
resources. It should get them.
- The United States should rebuild the
scholarship, exchange, and library programs that reach out to young
people and offer them knowledge and hope. Where such assistance is
provided, it should be identified as coming from the citizens of the
United States.
An Agenda of Opportunity
The United States and its friends can stress educational
and economic opportunity. The United Nations has rightly equated "literacy
as freedom."
- The international community is moving toward setting
a concrete goal-to cut the Middle East region's illiteracy rate in half
by 2010, targeting women and girls and supporting programs for adult
literacy.
- Unglamorous help is needed to support the basics,
such as textbooks that translate more of the world's knowledge into
local languages and libraries to house such materials. Education about
the outside world, or other cultures, is weak.
- More vocational education is needed, too, in trades
and business skills. The Middle East can also benefit from some of the
programs to bridge the digital divide and increase Internet access that
have already been developed for other regions of the world.
Education that teaches tolerance, the dignity and value
of each individual, and respect for different beliefs is a key element in
any global strategy to eliminate Islamist terrorism.
Recommendation: The U.S. government should offer
to join with other nations in generously supporting a new International
Youth Opportunity Fund. Funds will be spent directly for building and
operating primary and secondary schools in those Muslim states that commit
to sensibly investing their own money in public education.
Economic openness is essential. Terrorism is not caused
by poverty. Indeed, many terrorists come from relatively well-off
families. Yet when people lose hope, when societies break down, when
countries fragment, the breeding grounds for terrorism are created.
Backward economic policies and repressive political regimes slip into
societies that are without hope, where ambition and passions have no
constructive outlet.
The policies that support economic development and
reform also have political implications. Economic and political liberties
tend to be linked. Commerce, especially international commerce, requires
ongoing cooperation and compromise, the exchange of ideas across cultures,
and the peaceful resolution of differences through negotiation or the rule
of law. Economic growth expands the middle class, a constituency for
further reform. Successful economies rely on vibrant private sectors,
which have an interest in curbing indiscriminate government power. Those
who develop the practice of controlling their own economic destiny soon
desire a voice in their communities and political societies.
The U.S. government has announced the goal of working
toward a Middle East Free Trade Area, or MEFTA, by 2013.The United States
has been seeking comprehensive free trade agreements (FTAs) with the
Middle Eastern nations most firmly on the path to reform. The U.S.-Israeli
FTA was enacted in 1985, and Congress implemented an FTA with Jordan in
2001. Both agreements have expanded trade and investment, thereby
supporting domestic economic reform. In 2004, new FTAs were signed with
Morocco and Bahrain, and are awaiting congressional approval. These models
are drawing the interest of their neighbors. Muslim countries can become
full participants in the rules-based global trading system, as the United
States considers lowering its trade barriers with the poorest Arab
nations.
Recommendation: A comprehensive U.S. strategy to
counter terrorism should include economic policies that encourage
development, more open societies, and opportunities for people to improve
the lives of their families and to enhance prospects for their children's
future.
Turning a National Strategy into a Coalition
Strategy
Practically every aspect of U.S. counterterrorism
strategy relies on international cooperation. Since 9/11, these contacts
concerning military, law enforcement, intelligence, travel and customs,
and financial matters have expanded so dramatically, and often in an ad
hoc way, that it is difficult to track these efforts, much less integrate
them.
Recommendation: The United States should engage
other nations in developing a comprehensive coalition strategy against
Islamist terrorism. There are several multilateral institutions in which
such issues should be addressed. But the most important policies should be
discussed and coordinated in a flexible contact group of leading coalition
governments. This is a good place, for example, to develop joint
strategies for targeting terrorist travel, or for hammering out a common
strategy for the places where terrorists may be finding sanctuary.
Presently the Muslim and Arab states meet with each
other, in organizations such as the Islamic Conference and the Arab
League. The Western states meet with each other in organizations such as
NATO and the Group of Eight summit of leading industrial nations. A recent
G-8 summit initiative to begin a dialogue about reform may be a start
toward finding a place where leading Muslim states can discuss-and be seen
to discuss-critical policy issues with the leading Western powers
committed to the future of the Arab and Muslim world.
These new international efforts can create durable
habits of visible cooperation, as states willing to step up to their
responsibilities join together in constructive efforts to direct
assistance and coordinate action.
Coalition warfare also requires coalition policies on
what to do with enemy captives. Allegations that the United States abused
prisoners in its custody make it harder to build the diplomatic,
political, and military alliances the government will need. The United
States should work with friends to develop mutually agreed-on principles
for the detention and humane treatment of captured international
terrorists who are not being held under a particular country's criminal
laws. Countries such as Britain, Australia, and Muslim friends, are
committed to fighting terrorists. America should be able to reconcile its
views on how to balance humanity and security with our nation's commitment
to these same goals.
The United States and some of its allies do not accept
the application of full Geneva Convention treatment of prisoners of war to
captured terrorists. Those Conventions establish a minimum set of
standards for prisoners in internal conflicts. Since the international
struggle against Islamist terrorism is not internal, those provisions do
not formally apply, but they are commonly accepted as basic standards for
humane treatment.
Recommendation: The United States should engage
its friends to develop a common coalition approach toward the detention
and humane treatment of captured terrorists. New principles might draw
upon Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions on the law of armed conflict.
That article was specifically designed for those cases in which the usual
laws of war did not apply. Its minimum standards are generally accepted
throughout the world as customary international law.
Proliferation of Weapons of Mass Destruction
The greatest danger of another catastrophic attack in
the United States will materialize if the world's most dangerous
terrorists acquire the world's most dangerous weapons. As we note in
chapter 2, al Qaeda has tried to acquire or make nuclear weapons for at
least ten years. In chapter 4, we mentioned officials worriedly
discussing, in 1998, reports that Bin Ladin's associates thought their
leader was intent on carrying out a "Hiroshima."
These ambitions continue. In the public portion of his
February 2004 worldwide threat assessment to Congress, DCI Tenet noted
that Bin Ladin considered the acquisition of weapons of mass destruction
to be a "religious obligation." He warned that al Qaeda "continues to
pursue its strategic goal of obtaining a nuclear capability." Tenet added
that "more than two dozen other terrorist groups are pursuing CBRN
[chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear] materials."28
A nuclear bomb can be built with a relatively small
amount of nuclear material. A trained nuclear engineer with an amount of
highly enriched uranium or plutonium about the size of a grapefruit or an
orange, together with commercially available material, could fashion a
nuclear device that would fit in a van like the one Ramzi Yousef parked in
the garage of the World Trade Center in 1993. Such a bomb would level
Lower Manhattan.29
The coalition strategies we have discussed to combat
Islamist terrorism should therefore be combined with a parallel, vital
effort to prevent and counter the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction (WMD).We recommend several initiatives in this area.
Strengthen Counterproliferation Efforts.
While efforts to shut down Libya's illegal nuclear program have been
generally successful, Pakistan's illicit trade and the nuclear smuggling
networks of Pakistani scientist A.Q. Khan have revealed that the spread of
nuclear weapons is a problem of global dimensions. Attempts to deal with
Iran's nuclear program are still underway. Therefore, the United States
should work with the international community to develop laws and an
international legal regime with universal jurisdiction to enable the
capture, interdiction, and prosecution of such smugglers by any state in
the world where they do not disclose their activities.
Expand the Proliferation Security Initiative.
In May 2003, the Bush administration announced the Proliferation Security
Initiative (PSI): nations in a willing partnership combining their
national capabilities to use military, economic, and diplomatic tools to
interdict threatening shipments of WMD and missile-related technology.
The PSI can be more effective if it uses intelligence
and planning resources of the NATO alliance. Moreover, PSI membership
should be open to non-NATO countries. Russia and China should be
encouraged to participate.
Support the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program.
Outside experts are deeply worried about the U.S. government's commitment
and approach to securing the weapons and highly dangerous materials still
scattered in Russia and other countries of the Soviet Union. The
government's main instrument in this area, the Cooperative Threat
Reduction Program (usually referred to as "Nunn-Lugar," after the senators
who sponsored the legislation in 1991), is now in need of expansion,
improvement, and resources. The U.S. government has recently redoubled its
international commitments to support this program, and we recommend that
the United States do all it can, if Russia and other countries will do
their part. The government should weigh the value of this investment
against the catastrophic cost America would face should such weapons find
their way to the terrorists who are so anxious to acquire them.
Recommendation: Our report shows that al Qaeda
has tried to acquire or make weapons of mass destruction for at least ten
years. There is no doubt the United States would be a prime target.
Preventing the proliferation of these weapons warrants a maximum effort-by
strengthening counterproliferation efforts, expanding the Proliferation
Security Initiative, and supporting the Cooperative Threat Reduction
program.
Targeting Terrorist Money
The general public sees attacks on terrorist finance as
a way to "starve the terrorists of money." So, initially, did the U.S.
government. After 9/11, the United States took aggressive actions to
designate terrorist financiers and freeze their money, in the United
States and through resolutions of the United Nations. These actions
appeared to have little effect and, when confronted by legal challenges,
the United States and the United Nations were often forced to unfreeze
assets.
The difficulty, understood later, was that even if the
intelligence community might "link" someone to a terrorist group through
acquaintances or communications, the task of tracing the money from that
individual to the terrorist group, or otherwise showing complicity, was
far more difficult. It was harder still to do so without disclosing
secrets.
These early missteps made other countries unwilling to
freeze assets or otherwise act merely on the basis of a U.S. action.
Multilateral freezing mechanisms now require waiting periods before being
put into effect, eliminating the element of surprise and thus virtually
ensuring that little money is actually frozen. Worldwide asset freezes
have not been adequately enforced and have been easily circumvented, often
within weeks, by simple methods.
But trying to starve the terrorists of money is like
trying to catch one kind of fish by draining the ocean. A better strategy
has evolved since those early months, as the government learned more about
how al Qaeda raises, moves, and spends money.
Recommendation: Vigorous efforts to track
terrorist financing must remain front and center in U.S. counterterrorism
efforts. The government has recognized that information about terrorist
money helps us to understand their networks, search them out, and disrupt
their operations. Intelligence and law enforcement have targeted the
relatively small number of financial facilitators-individuals al Qaeda
relied on for their ability to raise and deliver money-at the core of al
Qaeda's revenue stream. These efforts have worked. The death or capture of
several important facilitators has decreased the amount of money available
to al Qaeda and has increased its costs and difficulty in raising and
moving that money. Captures have additionally provided a windfall of
intelligence that can be used to continue the cycle of disruption.
The U.S. financial community and some international
financial institutions have generally provided law enforcement and
intelligence agencies with extraordinary cooperation, particularly in
supplying information to support quickly developing investigations.
Obvious vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system have been corrected.
The United States has been less successful in persuading other countries
to adopt financial regulations that would permit the tracing of financial
transactions.
Public designation of terrorist financiers and
organizations is still part of the fight, but it is not the primary
weapon. Designations are instead a form of diplomacy, as governments join
together to identify named individuals and groups as terrorists. They also
prevent open fundraising. Some charities that have been identified as
likely avenues for terrorist financing have seen their donations diminish
and their activities come under more scrutiny, and others have been put
out of business, although controlling overseas branches of Gulf-area
charities remains a challenge. The Saudi crackdown after the May 2003
terrorist attacks in Riyadh has apparently reduced the funds available to
al Qaeda-per-haps drastically-but it is too soon to know if this reduction
will last.
Though progress apparently has been made, terrorists
have shown considerable creativity in their methods of moving money. If al
Qaeda is replaced by smaller, decentralized terrorist groups, the premise
behind the government's efforts-that terrorists need a financial support
network-may become outdated. Moreover, some terrorist operations do not
rely on outside sources of money and may now be self-funding, either
through legitimate employment or low-level criminal activity.30
In the nearly three years since 9/11,Americans have
become better protected against terrorist attack. Some of the changes are
due to government action, such as new precautions to protect aircraft. A
portion can be attributed to the sheer scale of spending and effort.
Publicity and the vigilance of ordinary Americans also make a difference.
But the President and other officials acknowledge that
although Americans may be safer, they are not safe. Our report shows that
the terrorists analyze defenses. They plan accordingly.
Defenses cannot achieve perfect safety. They make
targets harder to attack successfully, and they deter attacks by making
capture more likely. Just increasing the attacker's odds of failure may
make the difference between a plan attempted, or a plan discarded. The
enemy also may have to develop more elaborate plans, thereby increasing
the danger of exposure or defeat.
Protective measures also prepare for the attacks that
may get through, containing the damage and saving lives.
Terrorist Travel
More than 500 million people annually cross U.S. borders
at legal entry points, about 330 million of them noncitizens. Another
500,000 or more enter illegally without inspection across America's
thousands of miles of land borders or remain in the country past the
expiration of their permitted stay. The challenge for national security in
an age of terrorism is to prevent the very few people who may pose
overwhelming risks from entering or remaining in the United States
undetected.31
In the decade before September 11, 2001, border
security-encompassing travel, entry, and immigration-was not seen as a
national security matter. Public figures voiced concern about the "war on
drugs," the right level and kind of immigration, problems along the
southwest border, migration crises originating in the Caribbean and
elsewhere, or the growing criminal traffic in humans. The immigration
system as a whole was widely viewed as increasingly dysfunctional and
badly in need of reform. In national security circles, however, only
smuggling of weapons of mass destruction carried weight, not the entry of
terrorists who might use such weapons or the presence of associated
foreign-born terrorists.
For terrorists, travel documents are as important as
weapons. Terrorists must travel clandestinely to meet, train, plan, case
targets, and gain access to attack. To them, international travel presents
great danger, because they must surface to pass through regulated
channels, present themselves to border security officials, or attempt to
circumvent inspection points.
In their travels, terrorists use evasive methods, such
as altered and counterfeit passports and visas, specific travel methods
and routes, liaisons with corrupt government officials, human smuggling
networks, supportive travel agencies, and immigration and identity fraud.
These can sometimes be detected.
Before 9/11, no agency of the U.S. government
systematically analyzed terrorists' travel strategies. Had they done so,
they could have discovered the ways in which the terrorist predecessors to
al Qaeda had been systematically but detectably exploiting weaknesses in
our border security since the early 1990s.
We found that as many as 15 of the 19 hijackers were
potentially vulnerable to interception by border authorities. Analyzing
their characteristic travel documents and travel patterns could have
allowed authorities to intercept 4 to 15 hijackers and more effective use
of information available in U.S. government databases could have
identified up to 3 hijackers.32
Looking back, we can also see that the routine
operations of our immigration laws-that is, aspects of those laws not
specifically aimed at protecting against terrorism-inevitably shaped al
Qaeda's planning and opportunities. Because they were deemed not to be
bona fide tourists or students as they claimed, five conspirators that we
know of tried to get visas and failed, and one was denied entry by an
inspector. We also found that had the immigration system set a higher bar
for determining whether individuals are who or what they claim to be-and
ensuring routine consequences for violations-it could potentially have
excluded, removed, or come into further contact with several hijackers who
did not appear to meet the terms for admitting short-term visitors.33
Our investigation showed that two systemic weaknesses
came together in our border system's inability to contribute to an
effective defense against the 9/11 attacks: a lack of well-developed
counterterrorism measures as a part of border security and an immigration
system not able to deliver on its basic commitments, much less support
counterterrorism. These weaknesses have been reduced but are far from
being overcome.
Recommendation: Targeting travel is at least as
powerful a weapon against terrorists as targeting their money. The United
States should combine terrorist travel intelligence, operations, and law
enforcement in a strategy to intercept terrorists, find terrorist travel
facilitators, and constrain terrorist mobility.
Since 9/11, significant improvements have been made to
create an integrated watchlist that makes terrorist name information
available to border and law enforcement authorities. However, in the
already difficult process of merging border agencies in the new Department
of Homeland Security-"changing the engine while flying" as one official
put it34-new insights into terrorist travel have not yet been
integrated into the front lines of border security.
The small terrorist travel intelligence collection and
analysis program currently in place has produced disproportionately useful
results. It should be expanded. Since officials at the borders encounter
travelers and their documents first and investigate travel facilitators,
they must work closely with intelligence officials.
Internationally and in the United States, constraining
terrorist travel should become a vital part of counterterrorism strategy.
Better technology and training to detect terrorist travel documents are
the most important immediate steps to reduce America's vulnerability to
clandestine entry. Every stage of our border and immigration system should
have as a part of its operations the detection of terrorist indicators on
travel documents. Information systems able to authenticate travel
documents and detect potential terrorist indicators should be used at
consulates, at primary border inspection lines, in immigration services
offices, and in intelligence and enforcement units. All frontline
personnel should receive some training. Dedicated specialists and ongoing
linkages with the intelligence community are also required. The Homeland
Security Department's Directorate of Information Analysis and
Infrastructure Protection should receive more resources to accomplish its
mission as the bridge between the frontline border agencies and the rest
of the government counterterrorism community.
A Biometric Screening System
When people travel internationally, they usually move
through defined channels, or portals. They may seek to acquire a passport.
They may apply for a visa. They stop at ticket counters, gates, and exit
controls at airports and seaports. Upon arrival, they pass through
inspection points. They may transit to another gate to get on an airplane.
Once inside the country, they may seek another form of identification and
try to enter a government or private facility. They may seek to change
immigration status in order to remain.
Each of these checkpoints or portals is a screening-a
chance to establish that people are who they say they are and are seeking
access for their stated purpose, to intercept identifiable suspects, and
to take effective action.
The job of protection is shared among these many defined
checkpoints. By taking advantage of them all, we need not depend on any
one point in the system to do the whole job. The challenge is to see the
common problem across agencies and functions and develop a conceptual
framework-an architecture-for an effective screening system.35
Throughout government, and indeed in private enterprise,
agencies and firms at these portals confront recurring judgments that
balance security, efficiency, and civil liberties. These problems should
be addressed systemically, not in an ad hoc, fragmented way. For example:
What information is an individual required to
present and in what form? A fundamental
problem, now beginning to be addressed, is the lack of standardized
information in "feeder" documents used in identifying individuals.
Biometric identifiers that measure unique physical characteristics, such
as facial features, fingerprints, or iris scans, and reduce them to
digitized, numerical statements called algorithms, are just beginning to
be used. Travel history, however, is still recorded in passports with
entry-exit stamps called cachets, which al Qaeda has trained its
operatives to forge and use to conceal their terrorist activities.
How will the individual and the information be
checked? There are many databases just in
the United States-for terrorist, criminal, and immigration history, as
well as financial information, for instance. Each is set up for different
purposes and stores different kinds of data, under varying rules of
access. Nor is access always guaranteed. Acquiring information held by
foreign governments may require painstaking negotiations, and records that
are not yet digitized are difficult to search or analyze. The development
of terrorist indicators has hardly begun, and behavioral cues remain
important.
Who will screen individuals, and what will they
be trained to do? A wide range of border,
immigration, and law enforcement officials encounter visitors and
immigrants and they are given little training in terrorist travel
intelligence. Fraudulent travel documents, for instance, are usually
returned to travelers who are denied entry without further examination for
terrorist trademarks, investigation as to their source, or legal process.
What are the consequences of finding a
suspicious indicator, and who will take action?
One risk is that responses may be ineffective or produce no further
information. Four of the 9/11 attackers were pulled into secondary border
inspection, but then admitted. More than half of the 19 hijackers were
flagged by the Federal Aviation Administration's profiling system when
they arrived for their flights, but the consequence was that bags, not
people, were checked. Competing risks include "false positives," or the
danger that rules may be applied with insufficient training or judgment.
Overreactions can impose high costs too-on individuals, our economy, and
our beliefs about justice.
- A special note on the importance of trusting
subjective judgment: One potential hijacker was turned back by an
immigration inspector as he tried to enter the United States. The
inspector relied on intuitive experience to ask questions more than he
relied on any objective factor that could be detected by "scores" or a
machine. Good people who have worked in such jobs for a long time
understand this phenomenon well. Other evidence we obtained confirmed
the importance of letting experienced gate agents or security screeners
ask questions and use their judgment. This is not an invitation to
arbitrary exclusions. But any effective system has to grant some scope,
perhaps in a little extra inspection or one more check, to the instincts
and discretion of well trained human beings.
Recommendation: The U.S. border security system
should be integrated into a larger network of screening points that
includes our transportation system and access to vital facilities, such as
nuclear reactors. The President should direct the Department of Homeland
Security to lead the effort to design a comprehensive screening system,
addressing common problems and setting common standards with systemwide
goals in mind. Extending those standards among other governments could
dramatically strengthen America and the world's collective ability to
intercept individuals who pose catastrophic threats.
We advocate a system for screening, not categorical
profiling. A screening system looks for particular, identifiable suspects
or indicators of risk. It does not involve guesswork about who might be
dangerous. It requires frontline border officials who have the tools and
resources to establish that people are who they say they are, intercept
identifiable suspects, and disrupt terrorist operations.
The U.S. Border Screening System
The border and immigration system of the United States
must remain a visible manifestation of our belief in freedom, democracy,
global economic growth, and the rule of law, yet serve equally well as a
vital element of counterterrorism. Integrating terrorist travel
information in the ways we have described is the most immediate need. But
the underlying system must also be sound.
Since September 11, the United States has built the
first phase of a biometric screening program, called US VISIT (the United
States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology program). It
takes two biometric identifiers-digital photographs and prints of two
index fingers-from travelers. False identities are used by terrorists to
avoid being detected on a watchlist. These biometric identifiers make such
evasions far more difficult.
So far, however, only visitors who acquire visas to
travel to the United States are covered. While visitors from "visa waiver"
countries will be added to the program, beginning this year, covered
travelers will still constitute only about 12 percent of all noncitizens
crossing U.S. borders. Moreover, exit data are not uniformly collected and
entry data are not fully automated. It is not clear the system can be
installed before 2010, but even this timetable may be too slow, given the
possible security dangers.36
- Americans should not be exempt from carrying
biometric passports or otherwise enabling their identities to be
securely verified when they enter the United States; nor should
Canadians or Mexicans. Currently U.S. persons are exempt from carrying
passports when returning from Canada, Mexico, and the Caribbean. The
current system enables non-U.S. citizens to gain entry by showing
minimal identification. The 9/11 experience shows that terrorists study
and exploit America's vulnerabilities.
- To balance this measure, programs to speed known
travelers should be a higher priority, permitting inspectors to focus on
greater risks. The daily commuter should not be subject to the same
measures as first-time travelers. An individual should be able to
preenroll, with his or her identity verified in passage. Updates of
database information and other checks can ensure ongoing reliability.
The solution, requiring more research and development, is likely to
combine radio frequency technology with biometric identifiers.37
- The current patchwork of border screening systems,
including several frequent traveler programs, should be consolidated
with the US VISIT system to enable the development of an integrated
system, which in turn can become part of the wider screening plan we
suggest.
- The program allowing individuals to travel from
foreign countries through the United States to a third country, without
having to obtain a U.S. visa, has been suspended. Because "transit
without visa" can be exploited by terrorists to enter the United States,
the program should not be reinstated unless and until transit passage
areas can be fully secured to prevent passengers from illegally exiting
the airport.
Inspectors adjudicating entries of the 9/11 hijackers
lacked adequate information and knowledge of the rules. All points in the
border system-from consular offices to immigration services offices-will
need appropriate electronic access to an individual's file. Scattered
units at Homeland Security and the State Department perform screening and
data mining: instead, a government-wide team of border and transportation
officials should be working together. A modern border and immigration
system should combine a biometric entry-exit system with accessible files
on visitors and immigrants, along with intelligence on indicators of
terrorist travel.
Our border screening system should check people
efficiently and welcome friends. Admitting large numbers of students,
scholars, businesspeople, and tourists fuels our economy, cultural
vitality, and political reach. There is evidence that the present system
is disrupting travel to the United States. Overall, visa applications in
2003 were down over 32 percent since 2001. In the Middle East, they
declined about 46 percent. Training and the design of security measures
should be continuously adjusted.38
Recommendation: The Department of Homeland
Security, properly supported by the Congress, should complete, as quickly
as possible, a biometric entry-exit screening system, including a single
system for speeding qualified travelers. It should be integrated with the
system that provides benefits to foreigners seeking to stay in the United
States. Linking biometric passports to good data systems and
decisionmaking is a fundamental goal. No one can hide his or her debt by
acquiring a credit card with a slightly different name. Yet today, a
terrorist can defeat the link to electronic records by tossing away an old
passport and slightly altering the name in the new one.
Completion of the entry-exit system is a major and
expensive challenge. Biometrics have been introduced into an antiquated
computer environment. Replacement of these systems and improved biometric
systems will be required. Nonetheless, funding and completing a
biometrics-based entry-exit system is an essential investment in our
national security.
Exchanging terrorist information with other countries,
consistent with privacy requirements, along with listings of lost and
stolen passports, will have immediate security benefits. We should move
toward real-time verification of passports with issuing authorities. The
further away from our borders that screening occurs, the more security
benefits we gain. At least some screening should occur before a passenger
departs on a flight destined for the United States. We should also work
with other countries to ensure effective inspection regimes at all
airports.39
The international community arrives at international
standards for the design of passports through the International Civil
Aviation Organization (ICAO). The global standard for identification is a
digital photograph; fingerprints are optional. We must work with others to
improve passport standards and provide foreign assistance to countries
that need help in making the transition.40
Recommendation: The U.S. government cannot meet
its own obligations to the American people to prevent the entry of
terrorists without a major effort to collaborate with other governments.
We should do more to exchange terrorist information with trusted allies,
and raise U.S. and global border security standards for travel and border
crossing over the medium and long term through extensive international
cooperation.
Immigration Law and Enforcement
Our borders and immigration system, including law
enforcement, ought to send a message of welcome, tolerance, and justice to
members of immigrant communities in the United States and in their
countries of origin. We should reach out to immigrant communities. Good
immigration services are one way of doing so that is valuable in every
way-including intelligence.
It is elemental to border security to know who is coming
into the country. Today more than 9 million people are in the United
States outside the legal immigration system. We must also be able to
monitor and respond to entrances between our ports of entry, working with
Canada and Mexico as much as possible.
There is a growing role for state and local law
enforcement agencies. They need more training and work with federal
agencies so that they can cooperate more effectively with those federal
authorities in identifying terrorist suspects.
All but one of the 9/11 hijackers acquired some form of
U.S. identification document, some by fraud. Acquisition of these forms of
identification would have assisted them in boarding commercial flights,
renting cars, and other necessary activities.
Recommendation: Secure identification should
begin in the United States. The federal government should set standards
for the issuance of birth certificates and sources of identification, such
as drivers licenses. Fraud in identification documents is no longer just a
problem of theft. At many entry points to vulnerable facilities, including
gates for boarding aircraft, sources of identification are the last
opportunity to ensure that people are who they say they are and to check
whether they are terrorists.41
Strategies for Aviation and Transportation
Security
The U.S. transportation system is vast and, in an open
society, impossible to secure completely against terrorist attacks. There
are hundreds of commercial airports, thousands of planes, and tens of
thousands of daily flights carrying more than half a billion passengers a
year. Millions of containers are imported annually through more than 300
sea and river ports served by more than 3,700 cargo and passenger
terminals. About 6,000 agencies provide transit services through buses,
subways, ferries, and light-rail service to about 14 million Americans
each weekday.42
In November 2001, Congress passed and the President
signed the Aviation and Transportation Security Act. This act created the
Transportation Security Administration (TSA), which is now part of the
Homeland Security Department. In November 2002, both the Homeland Security
Act and the Maritime Transportation Security Act followed. These laws
required the development of strategic plans to describe how the new
department and TSA would provide security for critical parts of the U.S.
transportation sector.
Over 90 percent of the nation's $5.3 billion annual
investment in the TSA goes to aviation-to fight the last war. The money
has been spent mainly to meet congressional mandates to federalize the
security checkpoint screeners and to deploy existing security methods and
technologies at airports. The current efforts do not yet reflect a
forward-looking strategic plan systematically analyzing assets, risks,
costs, and benefits. Lacking such a plan, we are not convinced that our
transportation security resources are being allocated to the greatest
risks in a cost-effective way.
- Major vulnerabilities still exist in cargo and
general aviation security. These, together with inadequate screening and
access controls, continue to present aviation security challenges.
- While commercial aviation remains a possible target,
terrorists may turn their attention to other modes. Opportunities to do
harm are as great, or greater, in maritime or surface transportation.
Initiatives to secure shipping containers have just begun. Surface
transportation systems such as railroads and mass transit remain hard to
protect because they are so accessible and extensive.
Despite congressional deadlines, the TSA has developed
neither an integrated strategic plan for the transportation sector nor
specific plans for the various modes-air, sea, and ground.
Recommendation: Hard choices must be made in
allocating limited resources. The U.S. government should identify and
evaluate the transportation assets that need to be protected, set
risk-based priorities for defending them, select the most practical and
cost-effective ways of doing so, and then develop a plan, budget, and
funding to implement the effort. The plan should assign roles and missions
to the relevant authorities (federal, state, regional, and local) and to
private stakeholders. In measuring effectiveness, perfection is
unattainable. But terrorists should perceive that potential targets are
defended. They may be deterred by a significant chance of failure.
Congress should set a specific date for the completion
of these plans and hold the Department of Homeland Security and TSA
accountable for achieving them.
The most powerful investments may be for improvements in
technologies with applications across the transportation modes, such as
scanning technologies designed to screen containers that can be
transported by plane, ship, truck, or rail. Though such technologies are
becoming available now, widespread deployment is still years away.
In the meantime, the best protective measures may be to
combine improved methods of identifying and tracking the high-risk
containers, operators, and facilities that require added scrutiny with
further efforts to integrate intelligence analysis, effective procedures
for transmitting threat information to transportation authorities, and
vigilance by transportation authorities and the public.
A Layered Security System
No single security measure is foolproof. Accordingly,
the TSA must have multiple layers of security in place to defeat the more
plausible and dangerous forms of attack against public transportation.
- The plan must take into consideration the full array
of possible enemy tactics, such as use of insiders, suicide terrorism,
or standoff attack. Each layer must be effective in its own right. Each
must be supported by other layers that are redundant and coordinated.
- The TSA should be able to identify for Congress the
array of potential terrorist attacks, the layers of security in place,
and the reliability provided by each layer. TSA must develop a plan as
described above to improve weak individual layers and the effectiveness
of the layered systems it deploys.
On 9/11, the 19 hijackers were screened by a
computer-assisted screening system called CAPPS. More than half were
identified for further inspection, which applied only to their checked
luggage.
Under current practices, air carriers enforce government
orders to stop certain known and suspected terrorists from boarding
commercial flights and to apply secondary screening procedures to others.
The "no-fly" and "automatic selectee" lists include only those individuals
who the U.S. government believes pose a direct threat of attacking
aviation.
Because air carriers implement the program, concerns
about sharing intelligence information with private firms and foreign
countries keep the U.S. government from listing all terrorist and
terrorist suspects who should be included. The TSA has planned to take
over this function when it deploys a new screening system to take the
place of CAPPS. The deployment of this system has been delayed because of
claims it may violate civil liberties.
Recommendation: Improved use of "no-fly" and
"automatic selectee" lists should not be delayed while the argument about
a successor to CAPPS continues. This screening function should be
performed by the TSA, and it should utilize the larger set of watchlists
maintained by the federal government. Air carriers should be required to
supply the information needed to test and implement this new system.
CAPPS is still part of the screening process, still
profiling passengers, with the consequences of selection now including
personal searches of the individual and carry-on bags. The TSA is dealing
with the kind of screening issues that are being encountered by other
agencies. As we mentioned earlier, these screening issues need to be
elevated for high-level attention and addressed promptly by the
government. Working through these problems can help clear the way for the
TSA's screening improvements and would help many other agencies too.
The next layer is the screening checkpoint itself. As
the screening system tries to stop dangerous people, the checkpoint needs
to be able to find dangerous items. Two reforms are needed soon: (1)
screening people for explosives, not just their carry-on bags, and (2)
improving screener performance.
Recommendation: The TSA and the Congress must
give priority attention to improving the ability of screening checkpoints
to detect explosives on passengers. As a start, each individual selected
for special screening should be screened for explosives. Further, the TSA
should conduct a human factors study, a method often used in the private
sector, to understand problems in screener performance and set attainable
objectives for individual screeners and for the checkpoints where
screening takes place.
Concerns also remain regarding the screening and
transport of checked bags and cargo. More attention and resources should
be directed to reducing or mitigating the threat posed by explosives in
vessels' cargo holds. The TSA should expedite the installation of advanced
(in-line) baggage-screening equipment. Because the aviation industry will
derive substantial benefits from this deployment, it should pay a fair
share of the costs. The TSA should require that every passenger aircraft
carrying cargo must deploy at least one hardened container to carry any
suspect cargo. TSA also needs to intensify its efforts to identify, track,
and appropriately screen potentially dangerous cargo in both the aviation
and maritime sectors.
The Protection of Civil Liberties
Many of our recommendations call for the government to
increase its presence in our lives-for example, by creating standards for
the issuance of forms of identification, by better securing our borders,
by sharing information gathered by many different agencies. We also
recommend the consolidation of authority over the now far-flung entities
constituting the intelligence community. The Patriot Act vests substantial
powers in our federal government. We have seen the government use the
immigration laws as a tool in its counterterrorism effort. Even without
the changes we recommend, the American public has vested enormous
authority in the U.S. government.
At our first public hearing on March 31, 2003, we noted
the need for balance as our government responds to the real and ongoing
threat of terrorist attacks. The terrorists have used our open society
against us. In wartime, government calls for greater powers, and then the
need for those powers recedes after the war ends. This struggle will go
on. Therefore, while protecting our homeland, Americans should be mindful
of threats to vital personal and civil liberties. This balancing is no
easy task, but we must constantly strive to keep it right.
This shift of power and authority to the government
calls for an enhanced system of checks and balances to protect the
precious liberties that are vital to our way of life. We therefore make
three recommendations.
First, as we will discuss in chapter 13, to open up the
sharing of information across so many agencies and with the private
sector, the President should take responsibility for determining what
information can be shared by which agencies and under what conditions.
Protection of privacy rights should be one key element of this
determination.
Recommendation: As the President determines the
guidelines for information sharing among government agencies and by those
agencies with the private sector, he should safeguard the privacy of
individuals about whom information is shared.
Second, Congress responded, in the immediate aftermath
of 9/11, with the Patriot Act, which vested substantial new powers in the
investigative agencies of the government. Some of the most controversial
provisions of the Patriot Act are to "sunset" at the end of 2005. Many of
the act's provisions are relatively noncontroversial, updating America's
surveillance laws to reflect technological developments in a digital age.
Some executive actions that have been criticized are unrelated to the
Patriot Act. The provisions in the act that facilitate the sharing of
information among intelligence agencies and between law enforcement and
intelligence appear, on balance, to be beneficial. Because of concerns
regarding the shifting balance of power to the government, we think that a
full and informed debate on the Patriot Act would be healthy.
Recommendation: The burden of proof for
retaining a particular governmental power should be on the executive, to
explain (a) that the power actually materially enhances security and (b)
that there is adequate supervision of the executive's use of the powers to
ensure protection of civil liberties. If the power is granted, there must
be adequate guidelines and oversight to properly confine its use.
Third, during the course of our inquiry, we were told
that there is no office within the government whose job it is to look
across the government at the actions we are taking to protect ourselves to
ensure that liberty concerns are appropriately considered. If, as we
recommend, there is substantial change in the way we collect and share
intelligence, there should be a voice within the executive branch for
those concerns. Many agencies have privacy offices, albeit of limited
scope. The Intelligence Oversight Board of the President's Foreign
Intelligence Advisory Board has, in the past, had the job of overseeing
certain activities of the intelligence community.
Recommendation: At this time of increased and
consolidated government authority, there should be a board within the
executive branch to oversee adherence to the guidelines we recommend and
the commitment the government makes to defend our civil liberties.
We must find ways of reconciling security with liberty,
since the success of one helps protect the other. The choice between
security and liberty is a false choice, as nothing is more likely to
endanger America's liberties than the success of a terrorist attack at
home. Our history has shown us that insecurity threatens liberty. Yet, if
our liberties are curtailed, we lose the values that we are struggling to
defend.
Setting Priorities for National Preparedness
Before 9/11, no executive department had, as its first
priority, the job of defending America from domestic attack. That changed
with the 2002 creation of the Department of Homeland Security. This
department now has the lead responsibility for problems that feature so
prominently in the 9/11 story, such as protecting borders, securing
transportation and other parts of our critical infrastructure, organizing
emergency assistance, and working with the private sector to assess
vulnerabilities.
Throughout the government, nothing has been harder for
officials-executive or legislative-than to set priorities, making hard
choices in allocating limited resources. These difficulties have certainly
afflicted the Department of Homeland Security, hamstrung by its many
congressional overseers. In delivering assistance to state and local
governments, we heard-especially in New York-about imbalances in the
allocation of money. The argument concentrates on two questions.
First, how much money should be set aside for criteria
not directly related to risk? Currently a major portion of the billions of
dollars appropriated for state and local assistance is allocated so that
each state gets a certain amount, or an allocation based on its
population-wherever they live.
Recommendation: Homeland security assistance
should be based strictly on an assessment of risks and vulnerabilities.
Now, in 2004, Washington, D.C., and New York City are certainly at the top
of any such list. We understand the contention that every state and city
needs to have some minimum infrastructure for emergency response. But
federal homeland security assistance should not remain a program for
general revenue sharing. It should supplement state and local resources
based on the risks or vulnerabilities that merit additional support.
Congress should not use this money as a pork barrel.
The second question is, Can useful criteria to measure
risk and vulnerability be developed that assess all the many variables?
The allocation of funds should be based on an assessment of threats and
vulnerabilities. That assessment should consider such factors as
population, population density, vulnerability, and the presence of
critical infrastructure within each state. In addition, the federal
government should require each state receiving federal emergency
preparedness funds to provide an analysis based on the same criteria to
justify the distribution of funds in that state.
In a free-for-all over money, it is understandable that
representatives will work to protect the interests of their home states or
districts. But this issue is too important for politics as usual to
prevail. Resources must be allocated according to vulnerabilities. We
recommend that a panel of security experts be convened to develop written
benchmarks for evaluating community needs. We further recommend that
federal homeland security funds be allocated in accordance with those
benchmarks, and that states be required to abide by those benchmarks in
disbursing the federal funds. The benchmarks will be imperfect and
subjective; they will continually evolve. But hard choices must be made.
Those who would allocate money on a different basis should then defend
their view of the national interest.
Command, Control, and Communications
The attacks on 9/11 demonstrated that even the most robust emergency
response capabilities can be overwhelmed if an attack is large enough.
Team-work, collaboration, and cooperation at an incident site are critical
to a successful response. Key decisionmakers who are represented at the
incident command level help to ensure an effective response, the efficient
use of resources, and responder safety. Regular joint training at all
levels is, moreover, essential to ensuring close coordination during an
actual incident.
Recommendation: Emergency response agencies
nationwide should adopt the Incident Command System (ICS).When multiple
agencies or multiple jurisdictions are involved, they should adopt a
unified command. Both are proven frameworks for emergency response. We
strongly support the decision that federal homeland security funding will
be contingent, as of October 1, 2004, upon the adoption and regular use of
ICS and unified command procedures. In the future, the Department of
Homeland Security should consider making funding contingent on aggressive
and realistic training in accordance with ICS and unified command
procedures.
The attacks of September 11, 2001 overwhelmed the
response capacity of most of the local jurisdictions where the hijacked
airliners crashed. While many jurisdictions have established mutual aid
compacts, a serious obstacle to multi-jurisdictional response has been the
lack of indemnification for mutual-aid responders in areas such as the
National Capital Region.
Public safety organizations, chief administrative
officers, state emergency management agencies, and the Department of
Homeland Security should develop a regional focus within the emergency
responder community and promote multi-jurisdictional mutual assistance
compacts. Where such compacts already exist, training in accordance with
their terms should be required. Congress should pass legislation to remedy
the long-standing indemnification and liability impediments to the
provision of public safety mutual aid in the National Capital Region and
where applicable throughout the nation.
The inability to communicate was a critical element at
the World Trade Center, Pentagon, and Somerset County, Pennsylvania, crash
sites, where multiple agencies and multiple jurisdictions responded. The
occurrence of this problem at three very different sites is strong
evidence that compatible and adequate communications among public safety
organizations at the local, state, and federal levels remains an important
problem.
Recommendation: Congress should support pending
legislation which provides for the expedited and increased assignment of
radio spectrum for public safety purposes. Furthermore, high-risk urban
areas such as New York City and Washington, D.C., should establish signal
corps units to ensure communications connectivity between and among
civilian authorities, local first responders, and the National Guard.
Federal funding of such units should be given high priority by Congress.
Private-Sector Preparedness
The mandate of the Department of Homeland Security does
not end with government; the department is also responsible for working
with the private sector to ensure preparedness. This is entirely
appropriate, for the private sector controls 85 percent of the critical
infrastructure in the nation. Indeed, unless a terrorist's target is a
military or other secure government facility, the "first" first responders
will almost certainly be civilians. Homeland security and national
preparedness therefore often begins with the private sector.
Preparedness in the private sector and public sector for
rescue, restart, and recovery of operations should include (1) a plan for
evacuation, (2) adequate communications capabilities, and (3) a plan for
continuity of operations. As we examined the emergency response to 9/11,
witness after witness told us that despite 9/11, the private sector
remains largely unprepared for a terrorist attack. We were also advised
that the lack of a widely embraced private-sector preparedness standard
was a principal contributing factor to this lack of preparedness.
We responded by asking the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) to develop a consensus on a "National Standard for
Preparedness" for the private sector. ANSI convened safety, security, and
business continuity experts from a wide range of industries and
associations, as well as from federal, state, and local government
stakeholders, to consider the need for standards for private sector
emergency preparedness and business continuity.
The result of these sessions was ANSI's recommendation
that the Commission endorse a voluntary National Preparedness Standard.
Based on the existing American National Standard on Disaster/Emergency
Management and Business Continuity Programs (NFPA 1600), the proposed
National Preparedness Standard establishes a common set of criteria and
terminology for preparedness, disaster management, emergency management,
and business continuity programs. The experience of the private sector in
the World Trade Center emergency demonstrated the need for these
standards.
Recommendation: We endorse the American National
Standards Institute's recommended standard for private preparedness. We
were encouraged by Secretary Tom Ridge's praise of the standard, and urge
the Department of Homeland Security to promote its adoption. We also
encourage the insurance and credit-rating industries to look closely at a
company's compliance with the ANSI standard in assessing its insurability
and creditworthiness. We believe that compliance with the standard should
define the standard of care owed by a company to its employees and the
public for legal purposes. Private-sector preparedness is not a luxury; it
is a cost of doing business in the post-9/11 world. It is ignored at a
tremendous potential cost in lives, money, and national security.
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