Current News |
Pentagon to Detail Troops
to Bolster Domestic Security
By Spencer S. Hsu and Ann Scott Tyson
Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, December 1, 2008; Page A01
Source:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/11/30/AR2008113002217.html
The U.S. military expects to have 20,000
uniformed troops inside the United
States by 2011 trained to help state and
local officials respond to a nuclear
terrorist attack or other domestic
catastrophe, according to Pentagon
officials.
The long-planned shift in the Defense
Department's role in homeland security
was recently backed with funding and
troop commitments after years of
prodding by Congress and outside
experts, defense analysts said.
There are critics of the change, in the
military and among civil liberties
groups and libertarians who express
concern that the new homeland emphasis
threatens to strain the military and
possibly undermine the Posse Comitatus
Act, a 130-year-old federal law
restricting the military's role in
domestic law enforcement.
But the Bush administration and some in
Congress have pushed for a heightened
homeland military role since the middle
of this decade, saying the greatest
domestic threat is terrorists exploiting
the proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction.
Before the terrorist attacks of Sept.
11, 2001, dedicating 20,000 troops to
domestic response -- a nearly sevenfold
increase in five years -- "would have
been extraordinary to the point of
unbelievable," Paul McHale, assistant
defense secretary for homeland defense,
said in remarks last month at the Center
for Strategic and International Studies.
But the realization that civilian
authorities may be overwhelmed in a
catastrophe prompted "a fundamental
change in military culture," he said.
The Pentagon's plan calls for three
rapid-reaction forces to be ready for
emergency response by September 2011.
The first 4,700-person unit, built
around an active-duty combat brigade
based at Fort Stewart, Ga., was
available as of Oct. 1, said Gen. Victor
E. Renuart Jr., commander of the U.S.
Northern Command.
If funding continues, two additional
teams will join nearly 80 smaller
National Guard and reserve units made up
of about 6,000 troops in supporting
local and state officials nationwide.
All would be trained to respond to a
domestic chemical, biological,
radiological, nuclear, or high-yield
explosive attack, or CBRNE event, as the
military calls it.
Military preparations for a domestic
weapon-of-mass-destruction attack have
been underway since at least 1996, when
the Marine Corps activated a 350-member
chemical and biological incident
response force and later based it in
Indian Head, Md., a Washington suburb.
Such efforts accelerated after the Sept.
11 attacks, and at the time Iraq was
invaded in 2003, a Pentagon joint task
force drew on 3,000 civil support
personnel across the United States.
In 2005, a new Pentagon homeland defense
strategy emphasized "preparing for
multiple, simultaneous mass casualty
incidents." National security threats
were not limited to adversaries who seek
to grind down U.S. combat forces abroad,
McHale said, but also include those who
"want to inflict such brutality on our
society that we give up the fight," such
as by detonating a nuclear bomb in a
U.S. city.
In late 2007, Deputy Defense Secretary
Gordon England signed a directive
approving more than $556 million over
five years to set up the three response
teams, known as CBRNE Consequence
Management Response Forces. Planners
assume an incident could lead to
thousands of casualties, more than 1
million evacuees and contamination of as
many as 3,000 square miles, about the
scope of damage Hurricane Katrina caused
in 2005.
Last month, McHale said, authorities
agreed to begin a $1.8 million pilot
project funded by the Federal Emergency
Management Agency through which civilian
authorities in five states could tap
military planners to develop disaster
response plans. Hawaii, Massachusetts,
South Carolina, Washington and West
Virginia will each focus on a particular
threat -- pandemic flu, a terrorist
attack, hurricane, earthquake and
catastrophic chemical release,
respectively -- speeding up federal and
state emergency planning begun in 2003.
Last Monday, Defense Secretary Robert M.
Gates ordered defense officials to
review whether the military, Guard and
reserves can respond adequately to
domestic disasters.
Gates gave commanders 25 days to propose
changes and cost estimates. He cited the
work of a congressionally chartered
commission, which concluded in January
that the Guard and reserve forces are
not ready and that they lack equipment
and training.
Bert B. Tussing, director of homeland
defense and security issues at the U.S.
Army War College's Center for Strategic
Leadership, said the new Pentagon
approach "breaks the mold" by assigning
an active-duty combat brigade to the
Northern Command for the first time.
Until now, the military required the
command to rely on troops requested from
other sources.
"This is a genuine recognition that this
[job] isn't something that you want to
have a pickup team responsible for,"
said Tussing, who has assessed the
military's homeland security strategies.
The American Civil Liberties Union and
the libertarian Cato Institute are
troubled by what they consider an
expansion of executive authority.
Domestic emergency deployment may be
"just the first example of a series of
expansions in presidential and military
authority," or even an increase in
domestic surveillance, said Anna
Christensen of the ACLU's National
Security Project. And Cato Vice
President Gene Healy warned of "a
creeping militarization" of homeland
security.
"There's a notion that whenever there's
an important problem, that the thing to
do is to call in the boys in green,"
Healy said, "and that's at odds with our
long-standing tradition of being wary of
the use of standing armies to keep the
peace."
McHale stressed that the response units
will be subject to the act, that only 8
percent of their personnel will be
responsible for security and that their
duties will be to protect the force, not
other law enforcement. For decades, the
military has assigned larger units to
respond to civil disturbances, such as
during the Los Angeles riot in 1992.
U.S. forces are already under heavy
strain, however. The first reaction
force is built around the Army's 3rd
Infantry Division's 1st Brigade Combat
Team, which returned in April after 15
months in Iraq. The team includes
operations, aviation and medical task
forces that are to be ready to deploy at
home or overseas within 48 hours, with
units specializing in chemical
decontamination, bomb disposal,
emergency care and logistics.
The one-year domestic mission, however,
does not replace the brigade's next
scheduled combat deployment in 2010. The
brigade may get additional time in the
United States to rest and regroup,
compared with other combat units, but it
may also face more training and
operational requirements depending on
its homeland security assignments.
Renuart said the Pentagon is accounting
for the strain of fighting two wars, and
the need for troops to spend time with
their families. "We want to make sure
the parameters are right for Iraq and
Afghanistan," he said. The 1st Brigade's
soldiers "will have some very aggressive
training, but will also be home for much
of that."
Although some Pentagon leaders initially
expected to build the next two response
units around combat teams, they are
likely to be drawn mainly from reserves
and the National Guard, such as the
218th Maneuver Enhancement Brigade from
South Carolina, which returned in May
after more than a year in Afghanistan.
Now that Pentagon strategy gives new
priority to homeland security and calls
for heavier reliance on the Guard and
reserves, McHale said, Washington has to
figure out how to pay for it.
"It's one thing to decide upon a course
of action, and it's something else to
make it happen," he said. "It's time to
put our money where our mouth is."
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