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Forging a new shield / Project on National Security Reform.

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Format:
Book
Government document
Author/Creator:
Project on National Security Reform
Contributor:
Center for the Study of the Presidency
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Project on National Security Reform.
National security--United States.
National security.
Civil defense--United States.
Civil defense.
Emergency management--United States.
Emergency management.
Interagency coordination--United States.
Interagency coordination.
Organizational change--United States.
Organizational change.
United States.
Physical Description:
1 electronic tetx : digital, PDF file
Place of Publication:
Arlington, VA : Center for the Study of the Presidency, Project on National Security Reform, [2008]
Summary:
The legacy structures and processes of a national security system that is now more than 60 years old no longer help American leaders to formulate coherent national strategy. 1. The system is grossly imbalanced. It supports strong departmental capabilities at the expense of integrating mechanisms. 2. Resources allocated to departments and agencies are shaped by their narrowly defined core mandates rather than broader national missions. 3. The need for presidential integration to compensate for the systemic inability to adequately integrate or resource missions overly centralizes issue management and overburdens the White House. 4. A burdened White House cannot manage the national security system as a whole to be agile and collaborative at any time, but it is particularly vulnerable to breakdown during the protracted transition periods between administrations. 5. Congress provides resources and conducts oversight in ways that reinforce the first four problems and make improving performance extremely difficult. Taken together, the basic deficiency of the current national security system is that parochial departmental and agency interests, reinforced by Congress, paralyze interagency cooperation even as the variety, speed, and complexity of emerging security issues prevent the White House from effectively controlling the system. The White House bottleneck, in particular, prevents the system from reliably marshaling the needed but disparate skills and expertise from wherever they may be found in government, and from providing the resources to match the skills. That bottleneck, in short, makes it all but impossible to bring human and material assets together into a coherent operational ensemble. Moreover, because an excessively hierarchical national security system does not know what it knows as a whole, it also cannot achieve the necessary unity of effort and command to exploit opportunities.
Notes:
Title from title screen (viewed Jan. 14, 2009).
"November 2008."
Preserved in the OCLC Digital Archive. Harvested from http://www.pnsr.org/data/files/pnsr_forging_a_new_shield_report.pdf on Dec. 5, 2008.
Includes bibliographical references.
OCLC:
276988282

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