Enter query terms separated by spaces.

Search for:
Display results by:
Search from:
 
through:
 

Approval Imminent for National WMD, Terrorism Response Plan, Says U.S. Homeland Security Official From Tuesday, November 16, 2004 issue.

Approval Imminent for National WMD, Terrorism Response Plan, Says U.S. Homeland Security Official

By Joe Fiorill
Global Security Newswire

WASHINGTON — An integrated national plan for U.S. WMD and terrorism response is likely to be approved by Cabinet secretaries by the end of this week, Deputy Homeland Security Secretary James Loy said here today.

By this time next year, the final National Response Plan will have replaced the disparate plans now in effect at federal agencies that work on WMD and terrorism response, the former Coast Guard commandant said at a maritime-security conference organized by Defense Today and held at George Washington University.

A February 2003 directive by President George W. Bush required the fledgling Homeland Security Department to design and implement the National Response Plan and the associated National Incident Management System in a bid to “establish a single, comprehensive approach” to managing terrorist attacks, natural disasters and other large-scale emergencies (see GSN, Sept. 30).

The National Incident Management System is intended to guide operations during incidents and is based on the Incident Command System, already widely used by emergency agencies around the country. The broader National Response Plan lays out the administrative structure behind response operations, bringing together existing plans such as the Domestic Terrorism Concept of Operations Plan and the Federal Radiological Emergency Response Plan.

Under last year’s directive, the response plan and operational system were to be developed by the Homeland Security Department, then reviewed by the president’s Homeland Security Council, which includes several Cabinet secretaries.

The directive required federal agencies to adopt the incident-management system and to help to develop, and ultimately adopt in their own practice, the overall emergency-response plan. The president instructed agencies by fiscal 2005 to give emergency-response grants only to those states and localities that practiced the National Incident Management System.

Among the effects of the National Response Plan is the designation of a “primary federal agency” charged with managing the response to each type of incident envisioned.

According to a draft of the plan, Homeland Security’s Emergency Preparedness and Response Directorate would be responsible for WMD response “regardless of the cause,” as well as for general coordination of emergency management for all hazards.

Homeland Security agencies would also be in charge of several other areas. The department’s Information Analysis and Infrastructure Protection Directorate would be responsible for infrastructure protection and for information, and its Border and Transportation Security Directorate would be responsible both for border and transportation security and for terrorism preparedness generally.

The State Department would be responsible for international coordination, while the Defense Department would be responsible for protecting the U.S. territory against military attacks.


Back to top
   

 

About Newswire  |  Contact National Journal  |  Re-Use Guidelines

© Copyright 2008 by National Journal Group, Inc. The material in this section is produced independently for NTI by National Journal Group, Inc. Any reproduction or retransmission, in whole or in part, is a violation of federal law and is strictly prohibited without the consent of the National Journal Group, Inc. All rights reserved.