Some Urge Greater Use of Troops in Major Disasters
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/09/08/AR2005090801862_pf.html
The breakdown of local and state agencies that tried to respond
to Hurricane Katrina has spurred fresh debate about whether
disasters of such magnitude ought to be turned over to the U.S.
military and other federal authorities to manage at the outset.
National plans developed after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks rest on the notion that police, fire and other emergency
groups are best positioned to serve as first responders. Federal
agencies are supposed to function as backup to state and local
ones, and military forces are meant to play a largely supporting
role to civilian authorities.
But Katrina showed what can happen when the foundation of this
organizational structure is quickly overwhelmed and
disintegrates, according to government officials and independent
analysts.
"The would-be first responders at the state and local level were
themselves victims in very large numbers," Defense Secretary
Donald H. Rumsfeld said at a news conference this week. As a
result, "we had a situation that was distinctly different than
in past events of this type."
Rumsfeld and other senior administration officials this week
have resisted entering a public discussion of alternative
approaches, insisting that the focus for now stay on cleaning up
after Katrina. President Bush and congressional leaders have
promised investigations into what went wrong in the response to
the hurricane's devastation.
But Rumsfeld said the government would likely address again the
question of "lead responsibility" for the Defense Department in
disaster response. He noted that the issue was critical not only
in responding to a natural catastrophe but also to a terrorist
attack, because reliance on local authorities has been the basis
of emergency planning in both cases.
Some homeland defense specialists have argued since Katrina
struck that national plans must be revised to provide for a
bigger and faster federalized effort, particularly in
large-scale disasters.
"Only the federal government can mobilize a national response to
catastrophic disasters," said James Carafano of the Heritage
Foundation, a conservative think tank. "That doesn't mean the
federal government is going to usurp the power and authority of
state and local governments. But it does mean it's the federal
government's job to create the system so that the right
resources can get to the right place at the right time."
There is no guarantee that a greater federal role would improve
response. Both the Pentagon and the Federal Emergency Management
Agency have been widely faulted for not grasping quickly enough
the scope of Katrina's damage and not committing sufficient
people, supplies and equipment early on.
Historically, practical as well as legal considerations have
favored relying on leadership at the grass-roots level.
"The police and fire departments and local emergency-service
people are, by definition, the first ones on the scene," said
H.K. Park, a former defense official who worked on homeland
security issues during the Clinton administration. "And they
have the advantage of knowing their communities.
"There's also a legal dimension," he added, "involving states'
rights versus federal rights."
Further, military forces remain constrained from a domestic law
enforcement role by the 1878 Posse Comitatus Act. Though the
Pentagon has committed more than 8,000 active-duty Army and
Marine troops and about 10,000 sailors, it has made it clear
that these forces will not perform police functions.
National Guard troops, now numbering more than 46,000,
constitute a far larger share of the military presence in the
disaster area. They bring two main advantages. First, they
possess medical, engineering, communication and logistical
skills required in relief work. Second, Guard units, when
operating under the command of state governors, are not limited
by Posse Comitatus.
Any move to assign greater responsibility to the Pentagon for
domestic emergency management is likely to face resistance,
particularly since the armed forces are already strained by the
conflict in Iraq. Commanders remain sensitive to the notion of
U.S. troops becoming an occupying force in their own country.
When Guard forces arrived in New Orleans late last week, Lt.
Gen. Russel Honore, who is overseeing military operations in the
region, ordered them to point their rifles down to reinforce the
message they had come to provide assistance, not occupy the
city.
Politically, too, the idea of an enhanced federal role may be a
hard sell to some local and state officials if it means
diminishing their authority. Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Babineaux
Blanco resisted a Bush administration effort last week to exert
federal control over all local police and state National Guard
units.
Some experts also contend that an attempt to federalize a relief
effort could backfire, resulting in less flexibility rather than
more.
"You don't want to federalize the Guard," Park warned. "When
Guard forces are controlled by the governor, they can engage in
law enforcement duties. When federalized, they are subject to
Posse Comitatus."
But Carafano and others argue that major disasters require a
different approach, with only the federal government able to
provide the resources and coordination necessary to manage a
catastrophic event.
The problem, Carafano said, is that officials at all levels of
government have appeared more inclined to focus on preparing for
smaller disasters. As a result, much of the increased funding
for emergency-response activities in recent years has gone
toward equipment useful to local agencies, such as new fire
trucks or protective fencing, that are of little value when
overwhelming disasters strike.
"The money should have gone towards the things that enable local
and state authorities to plug into a national system -- things
like communications, emergency operations centers, training," he
said. "All of these would have enabled the mayor of New Orleans
to better communicate his needs."
=================
> There are some amazing photos collected there. Scott has just
put up
> a new page on hurricane Katrina.
>
>
http://www.weatherwars.info/katrina.htm
----- This is a post from Bill Weiler, freelance journalist,
over in Merritt Island, FL, who has been researching what went
on before the storm hit. These are the author's comments.
Politics Over Duty
I think all of Mayor Nagin's pomp and posturing is going to bite
him hard in the near future as the lies and distortions of his
interviews are coming to light.
On Friday night, 48 hours before the storm hit, Max Mayfield of
the National Hurricane Center took the unprecedented action of
calling Mayor Nagin and Governor Blanco personally to plead with
them to begin MANDATORY evacuation of New Orleans and they said
they'd take it under consideration. This was after the NOAA buoy
240 miles south had recorded 68' waves before it was destroyed.
President Bush spent Friday afternoon and evening in meetings
with his advisors and administrators drafting all of the
paperwork required for a state to request federal assistance
(and not be in violation of the Posse Comitatus Act or having to
enact the Insurgency Act). Just before midnight Friday evening
the President called Governor Blanco and pleaded with her to
sign the request papers so the federal government and the
military could legally begin mobilization and call up. He was
told that they didn't think it necessary for the federal
government to be involved yet.
After the President's final call to the governor she held
meetings with her staff to
discuss the political ramifications of bringing federal forces.
It was decided that if they allowed federal assistance it would
make it look as if they had failed so it was agreed upon that
the feds would not be invited in.
Saturday before the storm hit the President again called Gov.
Blanco and Mayor
Nagin requesting they please sign the papers requesting federal
assistance, that they declare the state an emergency area, and
begin mandatory evacuation. After a personal plea from the
President, Nagin agreed to order an evacuation, but it would not
be a full mandatory evacuation, and the governor still refused
to sign the papers requesting and authorizing federal action.
In frustration the President declared the area a national
disaster area before the
state of Louisiana did so he could legally begin some advanced
preparations.
Rumor has it that the President's legal advisers were looking
into the ramifications of using the insurgency act to bypass the
Constitutional requirement that a state request federal aid
before the federal government can move troops into the state
with troops -- but that had not been done since 1906 and the
constitutionality of using it before the disaster was called
into question.
Throw in that over half the federal aid of the past decade to
New Orleans for levee construction, maintenance, and repair was
diverted to fund a marina and support
the gambling ships. Toss in the investigation that will look
into why the emergency preparedness plan submitted to the
federal government for funding and published on the city's
website was never implemented and in fact may have been bogus
for the purpose of gaining additional federal funding (as we now
learn that the organizations identified in the plan were never
contacted or coordinating into any planning, though the document
implies that they were).
The suffering people of New Orleans need to be asking some hard
questions,
as do we all, but they better start with why Blanco refused to
sign the multi-state Mutual Aid Pack Activation documents until
Wednesday (the storm hit early Monday Aug. 30th), which further
delayed the legal deployment of National Guard from adjoining
states. Or maybe ask why Nagin keeps harping that the President
should have commandeered 500 Greyhound buses to help him when,
according to his own emergency plan and documents, he claimed
that, between the local school buses and the city transportation
buses, he had over 500 buses at his disposal -- but he never
raised a finger to prepare them or activate them.
This is a sad time for all of us to see that a major city has
all but been destroyed and thousands of people have died with
hundreds of thousands more suffering,
but it's certainly not a time for people to be pointing fingers
and trying to find a
bigger dog to blame for local corruption and incompetence. Pray
to God for the
survivors, that they can start their lives anew as fast as
possible, and pray that
we learn from all the mistakes so we can avoid them in the
future.