Preparedness Against Terrorist Attacks: Hearing Before the Subcommittee on Oversight, Investigations, and Emergency Management of the Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure, House of Representatives, One Hundred Sixth Congress, Second Session, April 6, 2000U.S. Government Printing Office, 2001 - 90 pages |
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Page 7
... involved with you , Madam Chairwoman , I want you to imagine the components of a nuclear warhead smug- gled across our border , assembled in Arizona and fired at D.Č. Sounds almost ludicrous , doesn't it ? Do not laugh . And I do not ...
... involved with you , Madam Chairwoman , I want you to imagine the components of a nuclear warhead smug- gled across our border , assembled in Arizona and fired at D.Č. Sounds almost ludicrous , doesn't it ? Do not laugh . And I do not ...
Page 10
... involved in here , and none having any clear understanding of what their role is . So I do agree with your comment that one of the first things we have to do is come up with the generalized mission statement , of sorts , of what our ...
... involved in here , and none having any clear understanding of what their role is . So I do agree with your comment that one of the first things we have to do is come up with the generalized mission statement , of sorts , of what our ...
Page 13
... involved in this area , really , due to the Khobar Towers bombing . I had a young constituent killed in that attack . And so I spent more time reviewing that than I might have otherwise , and was appalled , as you say , to see that some ...
... involved in this area , really , due to the Khobar Towers bombing . I had a young constituent killed in that attack . And so I spent more time reviewing that than I might have otherwise , and was appalled , as you say , to see that some ...
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... involved with us . Thank you so much again . General CLAPPER . Thank you , Madam Chair . Mr. WERMUTH . Thank you , Madam Chair . Mrs. FOWLER . I'd like to now call the second panel . Mr. Norman J. Rabkin is Director of National Security ...
... involved with us . Thank you so much again . General CLAPPER . Thank you , Madam Chair . Mr. WERMUTH . Thank you , Madam Chair . Mrs. FOWLER . I'd like to now call the second panel . Mr. Norman J. Rabkin is Director of National Security ...
Page 16
... involved have been represented in and support this plan . OMB has also responded to legislation passed in 1997 requiring a better accounting for funds invested in counterterrorism pro- grams . It has prepared useful reports to provide ...
... involved have been represented in and support this plan . OMB has also responded to legislation passed in 1997 requiring a better accounting for funds invested in counterterrorism pro- grams . It has prepared useful reports to provide ...
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Common terms and phrases
Advisory Panel areas Assess Domestic Response assets biological Capabilities for Terrorism CBRN chemical Chief EVERSOLE Chief Freeman Civil Support Team Clapper Combating Terrorism Congress consequence management coordination counterterrorist CSTs Department of Justice develop Domestic Preparedness Office Domestic Preparedness Program Domestic Response Capabilities duplication Emergency Management Emergency Preparedness equipment Federal agencies federal assistance federal efforts Federal Government Federal programs federal response FEMA Fire Chiefs fire service firefighters FOWLER funding going Guard Weapons hazardous materials HAZMAT interagency issue Jim Gilmore Keystone Cops Louisiana State Police Madam Chairman Michael Freeman National Domestic Preparedness national strategy NDPO Oklahoma City Oklahoma City bombing Panel to Assess prepared preparedness against terrorist preparedness efforts questions RABKIN recommended risk assessment role Subcommittee on Oversight Terrorist Attacks Involving terrorist incident terrorist threats TERRY testimony Thank threat and risk TILLIE K Traficant Virginia Weapons of Mass Wermuth
Popular passages
Page 60 - First Annual Report to the President and the Congress of the Advisory Panel to Assess Domestic Response Capabilities for Terrorism Involving Weapons of Mass Destruction, /. Assessing the Threat, December 15, 1999; and.
Page 42 - Chairman and distinguished members of the Subcommittee, thank you for giving me the opportunity to testify on the child support enforcement program.
Page 60 - For more than 3 years we have evaluated and reported on a number of issues concerning federal programs and activities to combat terrorism. A list of related GAO products appears at the end of this statement. Our testimony will first highlight Important information on the threat, focusing specifically on the threat of terrorist attacks involving chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear (CBRN) materials.
Page 67 - Table 1 shows some of the federal programs providing assistance to state and local governments for emergency planning that would be relevant to responding to a bioterrorist attack. While the programs vary somewhat in their target audiences, the potential redundancy of these federal efforts...
Page 42 - ... preparedness, the progress of Federal training programs for local emergency responses, and deficiencies in Federal programs for response to terrorist incidents involving WMD; to recommend strategies for ensuring effective coordination of Federal agency response efforts and for ensuring fully effective local response capabilities for WMD terrorism incidents; and to assess appropriate state and local funding for response to WMD terrorism. 8 To meet those objectives, the Panel determined that it...
Page 63 - US intelligence agencies had reported an increased possibility that terrorists would use chemical or biological weapons in the next decade. However, terrorists would have to overcome significant technical and operational challenges to successfully produce and release chemical or biological agents of sufficient quality and quantity to kill or injure large numbers of people without substantial assistance from a foreign government sponsor. In most cases, specialized knowledge is required in the manufacturing...
Page 45 - ... resources, obtainable but fairly sophisticated production facilities and equipment, quality control and testing, and special handling. In many cases, the personnel of a terrorist organization run high personal safety risks, in producing, handling, testing, and delivering such a device. Moreover, the report notes, the more sophisticated a device, or the more personnel, equipment, facilities, and the like involved, the greater the risk that the enterprise will expose itself to detection and interdiction...
Page 45 - The report explains, with some specificity, the challenges involved in each of the four unconventional device or agent topic areas—biological, chemical, nuclear, and radiological—which suggests that some public pronouncements and media depictions about the ease with which terrorists might wreak genuine mass destruction or inflict widespread casualties do not always reflect the significant hurdles currently confronting any nonstate entity seeking to employ such weapons. The report acknowledges,...
Page 1 - I will ask if you will stand and raise your right hand. Do you solemnly swear the testimony you are about to give in this hearing will be the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, so help you God?
Page 67 - Similarly, multiple programs for equipment — such as the separate DOD and Public Health Service programs and the new Department of Justice equipment grant program — are causing frustration and confusion at the local level and are resulting in further complaints that the federal government is unfocused and has no coordinated plan or desired outcome for domestic preparedness. A major federal initiative to provide better focus and to coordinate federal assistance programs is the National Domestic...