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U.S. Report Lists Possibilities for Terrorist Attacks and Likely Toll
By ERIC LIPTON
Published: March 16, 2005
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/16/politics/16home.html (must
register to view original article)
WASHINGTON, March 15 - The Department of Homeland Security, trying to focus
antiterrorism spending better nationwide, has identified a dozen possible
strikes it views as most plausible or devastating, including detonation of a
nuclear device in a major city, release of sarin nerve agent in office
buildings and a truck bombing of a sports arena.
The document, known simply as the National Planning Scenarios, reads more
like a doomsday plan, offering estimates of the probable deaths and economic
damage caused by each type of attack.
They include blowing up a chlorine tank, killing 17,500 people and injuring
more than 100,000; spreading pneumonic plague in the bathrooms of an
airport, sports arena and train station, killing 2,500 and sickening 8,000
worldwide; and infecting cattle with foot-and-mouth disease at several
sites, costing hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. Specific locations
are not named because the events could unfold in many major metropolitan or
rural areas, the document says.
The agency's objective is not to scare the public, officials said, and they
have no credible intelligence that such attacks are planned. The department
did not intend to release the document publicly, but a draft of it was
inadvertently posted on a Hawaii state government Web site.
By identifying possible attacks and specifying what government agencies
should do to prevent, respond to and recover from them, Homeland Security is
trying for the first time to define what "prepared" means, officials said.
That will help decide how billions of federal dollars are distributed in the
future. Cities like New York that have targets with economic and symbolic
value, or places with hazardous facilities like chemical plants could get a
bigger share of agency money than before, while less vulnerable communities
could receive less.
"We live in a world of finite resources, whether they be personnel or
funding," said Matt A. Mayer, acting executive director of the Office of
State and Local Government Coordination and Preparedness at the Homeland
Security Department, which is in charge of the effort.
President Bush requested the list of priorities 15 months ago to address a
widespread criticism of Homeland Security from members of Congress and
antiterrorism experts that it was wasting money by spreading it out instead
of focusing on areas or targets at greatest risk. Critics also have faulted
the agency for not having a detailed plan on how to eliminate or reduce
vulnerabilities.
Michael Chertoff, the new secretary of homeland security, has made it clear
that this risk-based planning will be a central theme of his tenure, saying
that the nation must do a better job of identifying the greatest threats and
then move aggressively to deal with them.
"There's risk everywhere; risk is a part of life," Mr. Chertoff said in
testimony before the Senate last week. "I think one thing I've tried to be
clear in saying is we will not eliminate every risk."
The goal of the document's planners was not to identify every type of
possible terrorist attack. It does not include an airplane hijacking, for
example, because "there are well developed and tested response plans" for
such an incident. Planners included the threats they considered the most
plausible or devastating, and that represented a range of the calamities
that communities might need to prepare for, said Marc Short, a department
spokesman. "Each scenario generally reflects suspected terrorist
capabilities and known tradecraft," the document says.
To ensure that emergency planning is adequate for most possible hazards,
three catastrophic natural events are included: an influenza pandemic, a
magnitude 7.2 earthquake in a major city and a slow-moving Category 5
hurricane hitting a major East Coast city.
The strike possibilities were used to create a comprehensive list of the
capabilities and actions necessary to prevent attacks or handle incidents
once they happen, like searching for the injured, treating the surge of
victims at hospitals, distributing mass quantities of medicine and
collecting the dead.
Once the White House approves the plan, which could happen within the next
month, state and local governments will be asked to identify gaps in
fulfilling the demands placed upon them by the possible strikes, officials
said.
No terrorist groups are identified in the documents. Instead, those
responsible for the various hypothetical attacks are called Universal
Adversary.
The most devastating of the possible attacks - as measured by loss of life
and economic impact - would be a nuclear bomb, the explosion of a liquid
chlorine tank and an aerosol anthrax attack.
The anthrax attack involves terrorists filling a truck with an aerosolized
version of anthrax and driving through five cities over two weeks spraying
it into the air. Public health officials, the report predicts, would
probably not know of the initial attack until a day or two after it started.
By the time it was over, an estimated 350,000 people would be exposed, and
about 13,200 would die, the report predicts.
The emphasis on casualty predictions is a critical part of the process,
because Homeland Security officials want to establish what kinds of demands
these incidents would place upon the public health and emergency response
system.
"The public will want to know very quickly if it is safe to remain in the
affected city and surrounding regions," the anthrax attack summary says.
"Many persons will flee regardless of the public health guidance that is
provided."
Even in some cases where the expected casualties are relatively small, the
document lays out extraordinary economic consequences, as with a
radiological dispersal device, known as a "dirty bomb." The planning
document predicts 540 initial deaths, but within 20 minutes, a radioactive
plume would spread across 36 blocks, contaminating businesses, schools,
shopping areas and homes, as well as transit systems and a sewage treatment
plant.
The authors of the reports have tried to make each possible attack as
realistic as possible, providing details on how terrorists would obtain
deadly chemicals, for example, and what equipment they would be likely to
use to distribute it. But the document makes clear that "the Federal Bureau
of Investigation is unaware of any credible intelligence that indicates that
such an attack is being planned."
Even so, local and state governments nationwide will soon be required to
collaboratively plan their responses to these possible catastrophes.
Starting perhaps as early as 2006, most communities would be expected to
share specially trained personnel to handle certain hazardous materials, for
example, instead of each city or town having its own unit.
To prioritize spending nationwide, communities or regions will be ranked by
population, population density and an inventory of critical infrastructure
in the region.
The communities in the first tier, the largest jurisdictions with the
highest-value targets, will be expected to prepare more comprehensively than
other communities, so they would be eligible for more federal money.
"We can't spend equal amounts of money everywhere," said Mr. Mayer, of the
Homeland Security Department.
To some, the extraordinarily detailed planning documents in this effort -
like a list of more than 1,500 distinct tasks that might need to be
performed in these calamities - are an example of a Washington bureaucracy
gone wild.
"The goal has to be to get things down to a manageable checklist," said Gary
C. Scott, chief of the Campbell County Fire Department in Gillette, Wyo.,
who has served on one of the many advisory committees helping create the
reports. "This is not a document you can decipher when you are on a scene.
It scared the living daylights out of people." But federal officials and
some domestic security experts say they are convinced that this is a
threshold event in the national process of responding to the 2001 attacks.
"Our country is at risk of spending ourselves to death without knowing the
end site of what it takes to be prepared," said David Heyman, director of
the homeland security program at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, a Washington-based research organization. "We have a great sense of
vulnerability, but no sense of what it takes to be prepared. These scenarios
provide us with an opportunity to address that."
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