Combating Terrorism: The Proliferation of Agencies' Efforts : Hearing Before the Subcommittee on National Security, International Affairs, and Criminal Justice of the Committee on Government Reform and Oversight, House of Representatives, One Hundred Fifth Congress, Second Session, April 23, 1998U.S. Government Printing Office, 1998 - 78 pages |
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Page 2
... things . It was something that sobers us . We know that some of the things that were threatened there and protected against there can happen here . We have to be able to look at this with the best scrutiny and the best ability to find ...
... things . It was something that sobers us . We know that some of the things that were threatened there and protected against there can happen here . We have to be able to look at this with the best scrutiny and the best ability to find ...
Page 21
... things , the draft policy tries to resolve jurisdictional issues between agencies and places new emphasis on managing the consequences of a terrorist incident and on the roles and responsibilities of the various agencies involved ...
... things , the draft policy tries to resolve jurisdictional issues between agencies and places new emphasis on managing the consequences of a terrorist incident and on the roles and responsibilities of the various agencies involved ...
Page 30
... thing and Republicans , Democrats , and Independents alike have always cooperated in combating that threat . So , with that in mind , let me turn to these charts and just do a very quick presentation . The statistics I'm going to show ...
... thing and Republicans , Democrats , and Independents alike have always cooperated in combating that threat . So , with that in mind , let me turn to these charts and just do a very quick presentation . The statistics I'm going to show ...
Page 31
... thing is to go against the conventional wisdom that the Middle East is the source of most international terrorism . That simply is not true . For the prelimi- nary statistics for 1997 , the State Department will issue its final report ...
... thing is to go against the conventional wisdom that the Middle East is the source of most international terrorism . That simply is not true . For the prelimi- nary statistics for 1997 , the State Department will issue its final report ...
Page 32
... thing that I would note is that the number of Islamic Radical Fundamentalists groups , at least those engaged in inter- national terrorism , are not dramatically increasing . Like the caveat that goes with mutual funds , this is no ...
... thing that I would note is that the number of Islamic Radical Fundamentalists groups , at least those engaged in inter- national terrorism , are not dramatically increasing . Like the caveat that goes with mutual funds , this is no ...
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Common terms and phrases
American Armed Islamic Group BARR biological agents biological weapons bombing BRAR BRARY budget capabilities casualties Central Intelligence Agency Chairman chemical and biological citizens Colombia combat terrorism CONG CONGRESS THE LIBRARY Consequence Managers counter terrorism Crisis Managers czar DAVIS deal Department of Defense DMCS domestic terrorism Domestic Terrorist drug efforts to combat Federal agencies funding going governmentwide GRES GRESS THE LIBRARY Hastert Ike Skelton Intelligence Agency intelligence community international terrorism International Terrorist Attacks Islamic issue JOHNSON law enforcement LIBR LIBRA LIBRARY OF CONGR LIBRARY OF CONGRESS LIBRARY RARY look mass destruction MICA military NGRES nuclear number of incidents Oklahoma City ONGRES priorities problem RARY RARY CONGRESS RARY OF CONGRESS requirements RESS risk assessment rorism SOUDER spending subcommittee target Team terrorist acts Thank things threat and risk U.S. policy United weapons of mass World Trade Center
Popular passages
Page 33 - And again, you see a large number of wounded, over 900 in the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York City, in 1993, and again in Dharan.
Page 28 - Command testified in 1998 about the difficulties of using weapons of mass destruction, noting that "an effective, mass-casualty producing attack on our citizens would require either a fairly large, very technically competent, well-funded terrorist program or state sponsorship." Moreover, in 1996, the Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency testified that the agency had no conclusive information that any of the terrorist organizations it monitors were...
Page 15 - States and note that conventional explosives and firearms continue to be the weapons of choice for terrorists. Terrorists are less likely to use chemical and biological weapons than conventional explosives, although the possibility that they may use chemical and biological materials may increase over the next decade, according to intelligence agencies.
Page 45 - Embassy in Pakistan. Elements of several US Government agencies were involved in vetting the information provided by the source and putting in place an operation to apprehend Yousef. In addition, the United States asked for and received the full assistance of the Government of Pakistan to arrest and extradite Yousef. This type of coordination and cooperation is characteristic of what happens when things go well. But these events do not happen of their own accord. It takes preparation and often years...
Page 51 - For example, the Department of Energy does not need to have a NEST and a JTOT. These units should be merged and scaled down. I also think it is foolish to assign various parts of the mission for dealing with threats from weapons of mass destruction to different military units. One unit could perform the tasks currently assigned to Army's Technical Escort Unit and the Marine Corps' Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, for example.
Page 18 - ... analytically sound threat and risk assessment using valid inputs from the intelligence community and other agencies. Threat and risk assessments could help the government make decisions about how to target investments in combating terrorism and set priorities on the basis of risk; identify unnecessary program duplication, overlap, and gaps; and correctly size individual agencies...
Page 29 - Mr. Chairman, that concludes my prepared statement. I would be happy to answer any questions you or the committee may have.
Page 24 - Budget (OMB) was required to regularly collect, aggregate, and review funding and spending data relative to combating terrorism on a crosscutting, governmentwide basis. Further, neither agency had established funding priorities for terrorism-related programs within or across agencies...
Page 17 - According to intelligence agencies, conventional explosives and firearms continue to be the weapons of choice for terrorists. Terrorists are less likely to use chemical and biological weapons at least partly because they are more difficult to weaponize and the results are unpredictable.
Page 45 - States will not go unpunished, and that if identified and caught they will personally pay a heavy price. Second, it provides a clear demonstration of what separates us from terrorists. Our goal as a country is to seek justice rather than vengeance. When we afford terrorists the right of due process we are making a powerful statement to our citizens as well as the terrorists. We hold them legally accountable for their actions. Finding and arresting terrorists outside the United States is a significant...