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Protecting the American homeland : one year on / Michael E. O'Hanlon ... [and others].

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Van Pelt Library HV6432 .P76 2003
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LIBRA HV6432 .P76 2003
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
O'Hanlon, Michael E.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Terrorism--Prevention--Government policy--United States.
Terrorism.
Terrorism--Prevention--Government policy.
United States.
National security--United States.
National security.
Civil defense--United States.
Civil defense.
Emergency management--United States.
Emergency management.
United States--Defenses.
Defenses.
Physical Description:
xl, 188 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
Edition:
[Updated] with a new preface.
Place of Publication:
Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution Press, 2003, c2002.
Summary:
A good deal has been done to improve the safety of Americans on their own soil since the attacks of September 11, 2001. Yet there have been numerous setbacks. The Bush administration and Congress wasted at least six months in 2002 due to partisan disagreement over a new budget for homeland security, and as one consequence, resources were slow to reach first responders across the country. Most improvements in homeland security have focused on "refighting the last war" -- improving defenses against attacks similar to those the country has already suffered. Not enough has been done to anticipate possible new kinds of terrorist actions. Policymakers have also focused too much attention on the creation of a Department of Homeland Security -- rather than identifying and addressing the kinds of threats to which the country remains vulnerable. While the creation of a cabinet-level agency focusing on homeland security may have merit, the authors of this study argue that the department will not, in and of itself, make Americans safer. To the contrary, the complexity of merging so many disparate agencies threatens to distract Congress and the administration from other, more urgent security efforts.
The new preface to Protecting the American Homeland urges policymakers to focus on filling key gaps that remain in the current homeland security effort: identifying better protection for private infrastructure; using information technology to share intelligence and more effectively "connect the dots" that could hold hints to possible terrorist tactics; expanding the capacities of the Coast Guard and Customs Service, as well as airline transportation security; dealing with the possible threat of surface-to-air missiles to airliners; and encouraging better coordination among intelligence agencies. While acknowledging the impossibility of preventing every possible type of terrorist violence, the authors recommend a more systematic approach to homeland security that focuses on preventing attacks that can cause large numbers of casualties, massive economic or societal disruption, or severe political harm to the nation.
Contents:
Introduction
Securing America's perimeter
Preventive measures within the United States
Protecting targets within the United States
Consequence management
Principles for providing and financing homeland security
Organizing for success
Conclusion.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:
0815764537
OCLC:
51861795

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