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U.S. Response: Bush Warns Iran, Syria on TerrorismU.S. President George W. Bush said yesterday that Iran and Syria “will be held accountable” if they do not increase their efforts to fight terrorism (see GSN, July 15). Appearing with Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Bush called on Middle Eastern nations to “support the efforts” of Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas by working to combat terrorism. “This includes the governments of Syria and Iran,” Bush said. “Syria and Iran continue to harbor and assist terrorists. This behavior is completely unacceptable, and states that support terror will be held accountable,” he added. Bush administration officials have criticized Syria for supporting the smuggling of people and goods in support of terrorism, according to the Washington Post (see GSN, May 5). The White House wants Syria to use its influence in neighboring Lebanon to help force out terrorist groups operating there, administration officials said. Bush’s comments yesterday appear to be timed to help bring attention to his plans for the Middle East at a time when the Bush administration appears to be bogged down with crises in Iraq, such as the controversy over Iraq’s alleged weapons of mass destruction, said Jon Alterman, director of the Center for Strategic and International Studies’ Middle East Program. “This administration has been very successful about managing its message, but that has been getting away from them on Iraq,” Alterman said. “There has been very little positive in recent weeks,” he added (Mike Allen, Washington Post, July 22).
From July 18, 2003 issue.U.S. Response: Emergency Officials Say They Need MoneyRegional emergency response officials went before Congress yesterday to push for additional federal funding to bolster homeland security efforts (see GSN, July 1). “We need to get dollars from the federal government, and we need to get them fast,” said Orange County Assistant Sheriff George Jaramillo during testimony to the House Select Committee on Homeland Security. Orange County has received $875,000 of the $12 million pledged by the federal government, the Los Angeles Times reported. The Los Angeles Police Department was promised $6 million in homeland security funding from Washington, but it has yet to see any of the money, according to LAPD Lt. John Karle. “Somewhere between Congress spending the money and first responders cashing the check there is a terrible bottleneck,” said committee Chairman Christopher Cox (R-Calif.). “The state of California does not have the kind of financial statements that permit us to go in and look and see where that money is; we certainly couldn’t track it as we could a UPS package,” he added. Cox is developing legislation that would streamline the funding process, the Times reported. Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney appeared on behalf of the National Governors Association and said that many states distribute their federal funding well. Representative Barney Frank (D-Mass.) questioned Romney for spending $900,000 in homeland security funding to secure the resort area of Oak Bluffs Marina in Martha’s Vineyard. “That’s a prime example of what happens when the federal government gives appropriations directly to communities,” Romney said (Susannah Rosenblatt, Los Angeles Times, July 18). When it comes to antiterror funding, lawmakers said they need to pay more attention to the needs of communities. “We’ve been listening too much to the bureaucrats at the top and not enough to the first responders,” said Representative Curt Weldon (R-Pa.). New Rochelle, N.Y., Fire Commissioner Ray Kiernan said his department had not received federal support. “We’ve seen no money, no guidance, no standards,” Kiernan said. “When all these plans don’t work — we’re the guys that inherit the mess,” he added. Adding to communities’ financial problems are the periodic nationwide terror alert warnings that are issued by the government. Romney told the House committee that state and local officials want to know if an increased security threat is targeted at specific areas of the country or types of targets, such as bridges, while police and fire officials said moving up to the “orange,” or elevated, alert level costs them a lot of money and resources, AP reported. “Somebody else is determining the heightened alert, shouldn’t somebody else be determining the cost?” Jaramillo said. “If they’re calling the shots at the federal level, they have to come up with the money,” he added (Lolita Baldor, Associated Press/Salon.com, July 17).
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