RESPONSE not PREVENTION.

Bruce


http://www.concordmonitor.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050808/REPOSITORY
/508080342/1013/NEWS03
First terrorism war plans created
Military outlines responses to attacks

By BRADLEY GRAHAM
The Washington Post
August 08. 2005 8:00AM

COLORADO SPRINGS - The U.S. military has devised its first-ever war plans
for guarding against and responding to terrorist attacks in the United
States, envisioning 15 potential crisis scenarios and anticipating several
simultaneous strikes around the country, according to officers who drafted
the plans.

The classified plans, developed at Northern Command headquarters in Colorado
Springs, Colo., outline a variety of possible roles for quick-reaction
forces estimated at as many as 3,000 ground troops per attack, a number that
could easily grow depending on the extent of the damage and the abilities of
civilian response teams.

The possible scenarios range from "low end," relatively modest crowd-control
missions to "high-end," full-scale disaster management after catastrophic
attacks such as the release of a deadly biological agent or the explosion of
a radiological device, several officers said.

Some of the worst-case scenarios involve three attacks at the same time, in
keeping with a Pentagon directive earlier this year ordering Northcom, as
the command is called, to plan for multiple simultaneous attacks.

The war plans represent a historic shift for the Pentagon, which has been
reluctant to become involved in domestic operations and is legally
constrained from engaging in law enforcement. Indeed, defense officials
continue to stress that they intend for the troops to play largely a
supporting role in homeland emergencies, bolstering police, firefighters and
other civilian response groups.

But the new plans provide for what several senior officers acknowledged is
the likelihood that the military will have to take charge in some
situations, especially when dealing with mass-casualty attacks that could
quickly overwhelm civilian resources.
"In my estimation, (in the event of) a biological, a chemical or nuclear
attack in any of the 50 states, the Department of Defense is best positioned
- of the various eight federal agencies that would be involved - to take the
lead," said Adm. Timothy Keating, the head of Northcom, which coordinates
military involvement in homeland security operations.

The plans present the Pentagon with a clearer idea of the kinds and numbers
of troops and the training that might be required to build a more credible
homeland defense force. They come at a time when senior Pentagon officials
are engaged in an internal, year-long review of force levels and weapons
systems, attempting to balance the heightened requirements of homeland
defense against the heavy demands of overseas deployments in Iraq,
Afghanistan and elsewhere.

Keating expressed confidence that existing military assets are sufficient to
meet homeland security needs. Maj. Gen. Richard Rowe, Northcom's chief
operations officer, agreed, but he added that "stress points" in some
military capabilities probably would result if troops were called on to deal
with multiple homeland attacks.

Several people on the staff here and at the Pentagon said in interviews that
the debate and analysis within the U.S. government regarding the extent of
the homeland threat and the resources necessary to guard against it remain
far from resolved.

--

The command's plans consist of two main documents. One, designated CONPLAN
2002 and consisting of more than 1,000 pages, is said to be a sort of
umbrella document that draws together previously issued orders for homeland
missions and covers air, sea and land operations. It addresses not only
post-attack responses but also prevention and deterrence actions aimed at
intercepting threats before they reach the United States.

The other, identified as CONPLAN 0500, deals specifically with managing the
consequences of attacks represented by the 15 scenarios.

CONPLAN 2002 has passed a review by the Pentagon's Joint Staff and is due to
go soon to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld and top aides for further study
and approval, the officers said. CONPLAN 0500 is undergoing final drafting
here. (CONPLAN stands for "concept plan" and tends to be an abbreviated
version of an OPLAN, or "operations plan," which specifies forces and
timelines for movement into a combat zone.)

(begin optional trim)

The plans, like much else about Northcom, mark a new venture by a U.S.
military establishment still trying to find its comfort level with the idea
of a greater homeland defense role after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

Military officers and civilian Pentagon policy-makers say they recognize, on
one hand, that the armed forces have much to offer not only in numbers of
troops but also in experience managing crises and responding to emergencies.
On the other hand, they worry that too much involvement in homeland missions
would diminish the military's ability to deal with threats abroad.

The Pentagon's new homeland defense strategy, issued in June, emphasized in
boldface type that "domestic security is primarily a civilian law
enforcement function." Still, it noted the possibility that ground troops
might be sent into action on U.S. soil to counter security threats and deal
with major emergencies.

"For the Pentagon to acknowledge that it would have to respond to
catastrophic attack and needs a plan was a big step," said James Carafano,
who follows homeland security issues for the Heritage Foundation, a
conservative Washington think tank.

William M. Arkin, a defense specialist who has reported on Northcom's war
planning, said the evolution of the Pentagon's thinking reflects the
recognition of an obvious gap in civilian resources.

Since Northcom's inception in October 2002, its headquarters staff has grown
to about 640 members, making it larger than the Southern Command, which
oversees operations in Latin America, but smaller than the regional commands
for Europe, the Middle East and the Pacific. A brief tour late last month of
Northcom's operations center at Peterson Air Force Base found officers
monitoring not only aircraft and ship traffic around the United States but
also the Discovery space shuttle mission, the National Scout Jamboree in
Virginia, several border surveillance operations and a few forest
firefighting efforts.

(end optional trim)

Pentagon authorities have rejected the idea of creating large standing units
dedicated to homeland missions. Instead, they favor a "dual use" approach,
drawing on a common pool of troops trained both for homeland and overseas
assignments.

Particular reliance is being placed on the National Guard, which is
expanding a network of 22-member civil support teams to all states and
forming about a dozen 120-member regional response units. Congress last year
also gave the Guard expanded authority under Title 32 of the U.S. Code to
perform such homeland missions as securing power plants and other critical
facilities.

The Northcom commander can also quickly call on active-duty forces. On top
of previous powers to send fighter jets into the air, Keating earlier this
year gained the authority to dispatch Navy and Coast Guard ships to deal
with suspected threats off U.S. coasts. He has immediate access to four
active-duty Army battalions based around the country, officers here said.

Nonetheless, when it comes to ground forces possibly taking a lead role in
homeland operations, senior Northcom officers remain reluctant to discuss
specifics. Keating said such situations, if they arise, probably would be
temporary, with lead responsibility passing back to civilian authorities.

Military exercises code-named Vital Archer, which involve troops in lead
roles, are shrouded in secrecy. Other homeland exercises featuring troops in
supporting roles are widely publicized.

Civil liberties groups have warned that the military's expanded involvement
in homeland defense could bump up against the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878,
which restricts the use of troops in domestic law enforcement. But Pentagon
authorities have told Congress they see no need to change the law.

According to military lawyers here, the dispatch of ground troops would most
likely be justified on the basis of the president's authority under Article
2 of the Constitution to serve as commander in chief and protect the nation.
The Posse Comitatus Act exempts actions authorized by the Constitution.

"That would be the place we would start from" in making the legal case, said
Col. John Gereski, a senior Northcom lawyer.

(begin optional trim)

But Gereski also said he knew of no court test of this legal argument, and
Keating left the door open to seeking an amendment of the Posse Comitatus
Act.

One potentially tricky area, the admiral said, involves National Guard
officers who are put in command of task forces that include active-duty as
well as Guard units - an approach first used last year at the Group of Eight
summit in Georgia. Guard troops, acting under state control, are exempt from
Posse Comitatus prohibitions.

"It could be a challenge for the commander who's a Guardsman, if we end up
in a fairly complex, dynamic scenario," Keating said. He cited a potential
situation in which Guard units might begin rounding up people while regular
forces could not.

(end optional trim)

The command's sensitivity to legal issues, Gereski said, is reflected in the
unusually large number of lawyers on staff here - 14 compared with 10 or
fewer at other commands. One lawyer serves full time at the command's
Combined Intelligence and Fusion Center, which joins military analysts with
law enforcement and counterintelligence specialists from such civilian
agencies as the FBI, the CIA and the Secret Service.

A senior supervisor at the facility said the staff there does no
intelligence collection, only analysis.

He also said the military operates under long-standing rules intended to
protect civilian liberties. The rules, for instance, block military access
to intelligence information on political dissent or purely criminal
activity.

Even so, the center's lawyer is called on periodically to rule on the
appropriateness of some kinds of information-sharing. Asked how frequently
such cases arise, the supervisor recalled two in the previous 10 days, but
he declined to provide specifics.

By BRADLEY GRAHAM
The Washington Post




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