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 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 13
Page 14
... operation . Second , you must make sure that they are coordinated , not just with themselves . The 40 - I think there are actually 43 dif- ferent organizations , Mr. Chairman - and that they know what they are doing . But there is ...
... operation . Second , you must make sure that they are coordinated , not just with themselves . The 40 - I think there are actually 43 dif- ferent organizations , Mr. Chairman - and that they know what they are doing . But there is ...
Page 23
... Operations Teams and other teams . At least one Department of Energy laboratory is offering consequence management services for chemical and biological as well as nuclear incidents . And the Public Health Service is in the process of ...
... Operations Teams and other teams . At least one Department of Energy laboratory is offering consequence management services for chemical and biological as well as nuclear incidents . And the Public Health Service is in the process of ...
Page 36
... operational readiness and competence since 1987 , when President Reagan launched an initiative to buttress U.S. military ... operations . The successes we have enjoyed , and there have been many , have been a direct consequence of good ...
... operational readiness and competence since 1987 , when President Reagan launched an initiative to buttress U.S. military ... operations . The successes we have enjoyed , and there have been many , have been a direct consequence of good ...
Page 38
... operations , military strikes , and law enforcement we made substantial gains in reducing the ability of states , such as Iraq , North Korea , Cuba , Syria , and Libya , to sponsor terrorism . Although the number of states identified on ...
... operations , military strikes , and law enforcement we made substantial gains in reducing the ability of states , such as Iraq , North Korea , Cuba , Syria , and Libya , to sponsor terrorism . Although the number of states identified on ...
Page 39
... operational or other purposes . The process is the same whether the targets are Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon or ... operation through intelligence methods , but we used this information to convince skeptical U.S. allies in Western ...
... operational or other purposes . The process is the same whether the targets are Hezbollah guerrillas in Lebanon or ... operation through intelligence methods , but we used this information to convince skeptical U.S. allies in Western ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American Armed Islamic Group BARR biological agents biological weapons bombing budget capabilities Central Intelligence Agency Chairman chemical and biological Colombia combat terrorism committee Congress Consequence Managers counter terrorism Crisis Managers czar DAVIS deal Department of Defense DMCS domestic terrorism Domestic Terrorist drug effective efforts to combat Federal agencies fiscal year 1997 Force funding going governmentwide HAMAS Hastert identify Ike Skelton intelligence community international terrorism International Terrorist Attacks issue JOHNSON Kurdish Workers Party law enforcement look mass destruction ment MICA Middle East National Security Council nuclear number of groups number of incidents Office Oklahoma City operations personnel potential priorities problem programs and activities question requirements risk assessment rorism SOUDER spending subcommittee target Team terrorism-related programs terrorist acts terrorist groups terrorist threat Thank things threat and risk U.S. Army U.S. policy weapons of mass World Trade Center
Popular passages
Page 42 - Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, and the Naval Medical Research Institute. In addition, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention, the National Institutes of Health, the Food and Drug Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency all claim to have a critical role in the process.
Page 19 - FBI, the threat of terrorists' use of chemical and biological weapons is low, but some groups and individuals of concern are beginning to show interest in such weapons. Agency officials also have noted that terrorists' use of nuclear weapons is the least likely scenario, although the consequences could be disastrous.
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 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 15 - Defense Against Weapons of Mass Destruction Act" also known as the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici Act.
Page 17 - 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 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 45 - 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 15 - 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 24 - FBI terrorism-related funding and staff-level authorizations tripled, and Federal Aviation Administration spending to combat terrorism nearly tripled. We also reported that key interagency management functions were not clearly required or performed. For example, neither the National Security Council nor the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) was required to regularly collect, aggregate, and review funding and spending data relative to combating terrorism on a crosscutting, governmentwide basis....