-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.senate.gov/~appropriations/commerce/2499jr.htm
<A HREF="http://www.senate.gov/~appropriations/commerce/2499jr.htm">Janet
Reno's testimony, 2/4/99</A>
-----
 Statement of
 Janet Reno
 Attorney General of the United States
 Before the
 United States Senate
 Committee on Appropriations
 Subcommittee on Commerce, Justice, and State
 the Judiciary, and Related Agencies
 February 4, 1999

INTRODUCTION

 I am pleased to appear before you today to continue the dialogue
between the Department of Justice and the Committee on our efforts to
combat terrorism. At the outset, I would like to thank the Chairman for
his leadership and express my appreciation to the Subcommittee for your
interest and support in counter- terrorism matters.

 Since my testimony last March we have made progress on developing
strategies to deter, prevent, and respond to terrorist acts. We have
enhanced our process of interagency cooperation and consultation with
state and local authorities to prepare for, respond to, and investigate
terrorist incidents in the U.S. and abroad. I would like to highlight
for you what we have accomplished on these fronts in the last year.

 As you know, under Presidential Decisional Directives (PDDs) 39 and 62,
roles and responsibilities of federal agencies in counter-terrorism
activities have been clarified. The Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) is the lead agency for responding to acts of domestic
terrorism. The FBI continues to work to identify, prevent, deter, and
defeat terrorist operations before they occur. We will not always be
able to prevent every incident and we will have to respond to terrorist
incidents here and abroad. In these instances the FBI will lead the
federal response to a domestic terrorist incident through the
coordinated crisis response mechanism of its Counter-Terrorism
Section. In addition, the FBI works with the Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) as the lead agency for consequence
management. Building on this framework the National Infrastructure
Protection Center (NIPC) in the FBI is now a reality and is working to
detect and respond to cyber-based attacks on our critical
infrastructures.

 Under its role as the designated lead agency for domestic terrorism,
the FBI and the Department are taking positive steps to ensure state and
local communities are prepared in the event of a terrorist attack
involving weapons of mass destruction (WMD). We convened a stakeholders
conference last August to get input and expertise from our federal
agency partners in this effort, the Departments of Energy (DOE), Defense
(DOD), Health and Human Services (HHS), the Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and FEMA, as well as from the state and local first
responder communities.

 Through the Nunn-Lugar-Domenici program first responders are receiving
valuable training and communities are being provided protective,
detection, and communications equipment.

 We have proposed the establishment of the Office of State and Local
Domestic Preparedness Support (OSDLPS) within the Office of Justice
Programs (OJP) to coordinate the delivery of training, equipment and
technical assistance to state and local first responders.

 We have also proposed the establishment of the National Domestic
Preparedness Office (NDPO) to be led by the FBI in partnership with OJP
to provide a national-level coordinating office and single point of
contact for the state and local responder community to access federal
domestic preparedness programs, including those under the Department of
Justice and other federal agencies.

 In order to provide a coordinated capacity to respond to terrorist
incidents, the FBI has created -- through funding provided by this
Committee -- the Strategic Information Operations Center (SIOC). The
SIOC is staffed 24 hours a day as a command post to direct special
operations and to respond to terrorist incidents.

 Working in coordination with state and local law enforcement the FBI
has established 18 Joint Terrorism Task Forces operating in major
cities. These task forces serve to enhance coordination and cooperation
among federal, state and local law enforcement. Over 200 members of
state and local law enforcement participate on these task forces with
the FBI and other representatives from federal law enforcement to
investigate terrorism incidents.

 With the support of and at the direction of this Committee, we worked
with other agencies to prepare the Administration's Five-Year Counter
Terrorism and Technology Crime Plan (Five-Year Plan) which was submitted
on December 30, 1998. The Five-Year Plan serves as a baseline strategy
for coordination of a national policy and capabilities to combat
terrorism in the United States and against American interests abroad. As
this Committee directed, the Five-Year Plan was developed in partnership
with other federal agencies, and with the input of academia and state
and local law enforcement. The resources required by the actions set
forth in this Plan will be presented in a separate Budget Addendum. I
consider this Plan a living document and I am committed to working with
you and your staff to update this Plan on a regular basis and to address
issues as they arise either in the context of our strategy or individual
incidents.

 Secretary Albright will discuss the issue of international terrorism in
greater detail. As you know, PDD 39 provides that the State Department
is the lead agency for coordinating the U.S. response to acts of
international terrorism like the bombings in East Africa. The FBI works
with the State Department and other agencies to provide support and
crisis management assistance through the FBI's International Terrorism
Section. This coordination was evident in the aftermath of the bombings
in East Africa last August when the FBI and the State Department worked
together to rapidly deploy personnel to the scene and collaborate with
local law enforcement officials to identify those responsible and begin
the process of bringing them to justice. Immediately upon notification
of the bombings a coordinated effort began under the State Department's
lead to deploy two multiagency Foreign Emergency Support Teams
(FEST). The FBI supplied representatives on the two FEST teams. In
addition, the FBI deployed Evidence Response Teams and activated the
SIOC at FBI Headquarters. Through this coordinated effort we worked with
Kenyan and Tanzanian authorities to mount the investigation that has
resulted in the indictment of 10 individuals, including Usama Bin
Laden. But our work continues.

 Both the report of the Accountability Review Board on the Embassy
Bombings and the Five-Year Plan underscore the need to improve training
and contingency planning to deal with mass casualties and major
destruction from terrorist bombs. In these types of incidents, saving
lives and treating the injured is our first priority. Yet, as we
experienced in East Africa, necessary medical and emergency equipment
was not always ready and available. We need to improve our planning and
stockpiling for contingencies so that we can tailor our response for
individual incidents.

 I would like to briefly describe the nature of the existing terrorist
threat. Terrorists will continue, in the near term, to employ
conventional weapons and methods, such as bombings, firearms and
kidnapings. We must continue to enhance our readiness to withstand and
respond to such attacks at home and abroad. This continuing need was
graphically demonstrated by the horrific attacks on our embassies in
Kenya and Tanzania last August. The devastation and senseless loss of
life caused by the terrorists responsible for these events were wrought
by the use of conventional explosives in large vehicle bombs � the same
type of weapons used to attack the World Trade Center in New York City
in 1993 and the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City in 1995. As the
Report of the Accountability Review Boards on the Embassy Bombings in
Nairobi and Dar Es Salaam clearly indicates, we must continue our
efforts to detect and defeat such conventional weapons and to secure our
citizens here and abroad.

 Terrorists will not confine themselves to the use of conventional
weapons. Our intelligence and investigative efforts indicate increasing
interest in biological and chemical weapons. A terrorist attack using a
biological weapon may not be immediately apparent, and the resulting
impact on victims, police, firefighters, and emergency medical personnel
-- the first responders on the scene -- could be far reaching. In fact,
as we have found recently the mere threat of the use of unconventional
weapons can cause concern and panic. Threats to release harmful
biological or chemical substances cannot be ignored; they require a
sizable commitment of law enforcement investigative resources before
they can be discounted.

 This underscores the need to train and equip first responders and
emergency medical personnel adequately to deal with a range of
unconventional weapons including dual use substances � those which have
a benign, legitimate use as well as potential use as weapons � which
pose an added risk. We are working with the Department of Health and
Human Services, especially with the Public Health Service, to strengthen
the preparedness of our public health and emergency medical resources to
recognize and respond to terrorist events involving biological and
chemical agents.

 Because we are increasingly reliant upon interdependent networks we
face the threat of cyber attacks on our infrastructure and information
systems which could significantly harm our military power and our
economy. The networks that connect our utilities, transportation, and
telecommunications systems rely on the National Information
Infrastructure (NII). These may prove to be attractive targets to
cyber-terrorists looking to exploit the global nature of the Internet.

 In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks in East Africa last August,
the threat posed by the network of loosely affiliated individuals
associated with and inspired by Usama Bin Laden has received substantial
public attention. Through cooperation with other agencies we have made
progress on this investigation. I know Director Freeh and Secretary
Albright will speak more about the scope of the existing threat to
Americans both at home and abroad and our coordinated efforts to prepare
for and respond to these threats. But, I would like to emphasize today
my commitment to continuing to use the full panoply of our resources to
bring terrorists like Osama Bin Laden and those like him to justice.

 I would like to discuss in more detail all the steps we have taken and
the solid advances we have made in developing and implementing a
comprehensive approach to combat terrorism. In so doing I want to
address directly the issues of mutual concern that have arisen in the
numerous discussions we have had with you and your staff.

 I share the Committee's concern that state and local officials be fully
and continuously involved in our counter- terrorism planning efforts. I
want to focus on what we are doing to include state and local first
responders and to build trust and partnership relationships with those
on the front lines who will be the first to respond in the aftermath of
a terrorist attack.

 We have looked to the state and local responder community to provide us
valuable input throughout our planning efforts for instance in the
stakeholder's conference, and in preparing the Five-Year Plan. In the
proposed NDPO effort, an advisory committee of state and local
authorities will be the bridge between the federal domestic preparedness
program planning and the needs and priorities of the states and local
emergency response and health care community.

 In order to establish effective partnerships at the state and local
level we must get state and local officials the information they need to
protect the public and themselves and to aid their preparedness and
response efforts. Through the FBI's Joint Terrorism Task Forces and the
Regional Terrorism Task Force concept, we are working to provide a means
of sharing classified information on case-related matters with state and
local law enforcement officials. These task forces, by themselves, do
not address all of the situations in which state and local officials
need access either to classified information or to information derived
from classified material. We are developing a process investigating how
to provide the appropriate security clearances so that state and local
officials will get the information they need. In taking these steps, we
are building on the FBI's thorough and efficient success in making
threat warning information about specific threats to particular
jurisdictions available in a timely manner.  State and local officials
who work side-by-side with federal officials, as in the NIPC and in the
proposed NDPO, will hold appropriate security clearances.

 In addition, first responders absolutely need access to the information
necessary to protect the public and themselves, even when that
information is classified. In many instances, the source or method by
which the information was obtained, and which requires it to be
classified, can be removed and the information declassified before it is
shared with state and local officials. In the case of an actual or
threatened terrorist incident, state and local personnel who need access
to classified information will be provided clearances on an expedited
basis. Finally, state and local officials participating on the advisory
committee of the proposed NDPO will also be eligible to receive
classified information, as needed, to help make policy recommendations.

 Information sharing is critical to our preparedness efforts. As you
know, the Five-Year Plan was classified in its entirety. We have
recently made available to you a 50 page unclassified excerpt from the
Five-Year Plan which addresses strategies to enhance state and local
capabilities to respond to terrorist acts. We are making this document
widely available to state and local authorities. This report and the
results of the state and local questionnaire will serve as the basis of
a continuing dialogue with these officials on how we can implement,
improve, and expand upon the initiatives in the Five-Year Plan in ways
that will best strengthen the capabilities of states, cities, and local
communities across the country. As we update the Plan annually, we will
incorporate the views of state and local officials and of emergency
responders.

 As we learned from the bombings of the World Trade Center in New York
and the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, domestic terrorism
incidents have their initial and most devastating impact at the state
and local levels. It is the first responder and emergency worker who
must literally begin to pick up the pieces: locate, extricate, and treat
the victims; put out the fires; and take the first steps to begin to
restore order out of chaos. We owe it to these vital personnel and to
ourselves to enable them to be adequately trained and equipped for these
tasks. We cannot measure our preparedness to deal with terrorist acts
without measuring the degree to which we have prepared first
responders. Accordingly, we must continue to do everything we can to
enhance the capabilities of state and local emergency responders,
managers and officials who will play a critical role in the immediate
response to such events.

 We must recognize that there is no single template for interaction with
state and local authorities since under our federal system there is
considerable variation in how local governments are structured and
organized. In the wake of a terrorist incident there may well be initial
confusion as we organize ourselves and bring all our resources to bear
on an effective response. But make no mistake, there is no confusion
that the first priority of all concerned is the saving of lives.

 I know there is concern that during a terrorist incident our
communications infrastructure could be disabled -- thereby encumbering
the ability of first responders to communicate by radio or
telephone. Fortunately, such an occurrence would not cripple the
Department's communications capacity. Some degree of
infrastructure-independent radio communications, with security features
intact, would still be feasible. We are dedicated to maintaining this
core capacity. In addition, in our dealings with state and local public
safety agencies, we emphasize their need to develop and maintain
communications systems that are not wholly reliant on the existence of a
communications infrastructure.

 The confusion that inevitably follows in the wake of a terrorist
incident makes it essential that federal, state, and local responders
work together to plan and execute exercises that can help the responder
community understand each other's functions in the event of a terrorist
attack and in particular a WMD incident.

 Since I last testified before you, we conducted a tabletop exercise in
the District of Columbia using a WMD scenario. As this committee has
recognized, exercises and training must include senior level officials
to achieve senior level coordination. Thus, government officials and
emergency response personnel in the various jurisdictions within the
District of Columbia metropolitan area participated in this
exercise. This exercise demonstrated areas where we need to clarify our
respective roles and improve communication so that we can function more
effectively in the event of a terrorist incident. This is one of the
important purposes of such exercises, and I am committed to continuing
to conduct and participate in these exercises in order to improve our
unified operational capabilities.

 We have made significant progress in our efforts to deter, prepare for
and respond to terrorist activity. In all of these efforts our goals are
clear. First and foremost we want to detect and prevent terrorist acts
before they occur. If they do occur, our highest priority is to save
lives and provide help to the injured. Finally, we will work tirelessly
to hold accountable the perpetrators of terrorist acts and bring them to
justice no matter how long it may take.

I. PREVENTING AND RESPONDING TO TERRORISM

 A. National Infrastructure Protection Center (NIPC)

 Within the last year the NIPC was established to deter, detect,
analyze, investigate and provide warnings of cyber threats and attacks
on the critical infrastructures of the United States, including illegal
intrusions into government and private sector computer networks. The
NIPC will also evaluate, acquire, and deploy computer equipment and
cyber tools to support investigations and infrastructure protection
efforts. NIPC will play a major role in the national plan for cyber
protection, which the President has tasked in PDD 63. The national plan
will be finalized shortly.

 The NIPC continues to recruit personnel at FBI Headquarters and in the
field. The NIPC currently has representatives from several government
agencies including DOD, DOE, Central Intelligence Agency, National
Security Agency, Secret Service, the Postal and Inspection Service, as
well as state law enforcement. The NIPC is also seeking private sector
representatives.

 As computers pervade our lives and culture, they play an
ever-increasing role in a wide variety of criminal activity, not just
cyber terrorism or other sorts of illegal intrusions. Thus, computers
can be used in fraud schemes on the Internet or to disseminate child
pornography. In order to improve our ability to deal with these sorts of
computer-facilitated crimes we must raise the general level of computer
competence among all agents and prosecutors, not just those in the NIPC
and National Infrastructure Protection and Computer Intrusion (NIPCI)
field squads and the small cadre of specially trained prosecutors. We
need to aggressively train existing staff across the board, so that all
personnel in DOJ and FBI have the requisite expertise to carry out these
investigations.

 In order to build up state and local capabilities, the NIPC, in
conjunction with NDPO, plans to conduct outreach and training efforts
for local first responders and state and local law enforcement. The NIPC
seeks to train investigators and at least one trainer from state-level
investigative agencies in each of the 50 states and the District of
Columbia. The NIPC also plans to train investigators from the
municipalities represented in the Major Cities Police Chiefs' and the
Major Sheriffs' Associations and has been consulting on this possibility
with the International Association of Chiefs of Police and the National
Sheriffs Association. A larger effort to include the training of 500
state and local law enforcement personnel at a one week hands-on course
will be launched in the second half of this fiscal year. In addition,
the Administration has proposed the Cyber Corps program to address the
shortage of highly skilled computer science expertise in the
government. This program will encourage agencies to recruit an expert
class of computer security workers through existing scholarship and
financial assistance. Finally, the newly-created National Cybercrime
Training Partnership, an organization consisting of federal, state, and
local cybercrime trainers, is developing a comprehensive set of courses,
pursuant to rigorous academic standards, to ensure that the cybercrime
training available can meet the ever-increasing demand.

 B. Federal Crisis Response Structure

 In the event of a domestic terrorist incident, under PDDs 39 and 62 the
FBI is the lead agency for responding to terrorist threats and incidents
occurring within the United States. As the lead agency for domestic
terrorism response, the FBI will utilize its investigative and law
enforcement expertise in the crisis management of a terrorist
attack. The FBI will work with FEMA which has the lead responsibility
for consequence management.

 Responsibility for operational coordination of resources and
information within the FBI during a terrorism event depends on the
nature and venue of the crisis and the identity and affiliation of the
perpetrators.

 If a terrorist incident occurs, the FBI's SIOC is immediately
activated. If necessary the new SIOC is capable of managing multiple
crises simultaneously. The SIOC has been recently utilized and tested
during recent alerts in response to intelligence developed in past
weeks. During a crisis, the SIOC functions as the conduit for
information and expertise at the headquarters level of all pertinent
agencies and components.

 In a WMD incident, consequence management personnel from FEMA, EPA,
DOE, NDPO, and DOD will supplement FBI personnel in the SIOC just as
they would supplement FBI personnel in the field in the Joint Operations
Center (JOC). During a non-WMD incident, the SIOC structure closely
resembles the structure of the FBI Command Post in the field.

 If a terrorist attack affecting U.S. interests overseas occurs, SIOC
will be activated immediately to facilitate communications and prompt
evaluation of the appropriate FBI response. As Director Freeh will
discuss, the FBI Legats stationed abroad are ready to offer support and
assistance to the Chief of Mission and to advise me as to the situation
at the scene. Likewise, deployment of the FEST by the State Department
will include FBI representation.

 If an attack occurs overseas against U.S. persons or property, or
within the U.S. with foreign involvement, then the FBI's International
Terrorism Operations Section will coordinate the FBI's response. If a
WMD incident in the U.S. that is perpetrated by foreign terrorists, the
WMD Operations Unit will coordinate the federal response in support of
the International Terrorism Operations Section which would focus on the
actual investigation.

 If there is a terrorist attack against our critical infrastructures
that is cyber in nature, the NIPC will coordinate crisis response
activities with the Counter-Terrorism Section or the International
Terrorism Section using the resources of the SIOC. To respond in a
coordinated fashion, a crisis action team comprised of criminal
investigators, computer scientists, analysts, watch standers, and other
federal agency representatives will be formed. The crisis action team
will attempt to determine the scope of the attack, the technology
employed, and the possible source and purpose of the attack. The NIPC
Watch and Warning Unit will continually assess the situation and issue
warnings, as necessary, to federal agencies, state and local
authorities, and the private sector. In the event of a physical attack
on an infrastructure, the NIPC will support the investigation using its
key asset network.

 In the field, the FBI Field Office in the jurisdiction where a
terrorist incident occurs will establish a Command Post under the
direction of the Special Agent in Charge (SAC) to manage and coordinate
the crisis response. If the terrorist incident is of the magnitude which
requires the involvement of other agencies, the SAC will expand the
Command Post into a Joint Operations Center (JOC). The FBI's Critical
Incident Response Group will assist the field office in establishing the
Command Post/JOC by providing tactical advice and equipment, and the
Attorney Critical Incident Response Groups will provide additional
advice and keep me informed at all critical stages of our response. If a
crisis warrants it, Director Freeh may ask that I seek interagency
approval for the deployment of the Domestic Emergency Support Team, also
known as the DEST, to draw on specific federal agency expertise, to
transport these additional experts to the field, and to incorporate them
into the JOC. The composition of the DEST is tailored to the particular
incident. In the event of chemical, biological or nuclear terrorism,
HHS, EPA, DOD and DOE might be represented on the DEST.

 The FBI is developing a comprehensive approach to all states which will
help prevent, deter, and respond to terrorist threats by collecting,
analyzing, and disseminating intelligence broadly and consistent with
security concerns. The FBI has established Joint Terrorism Task Forces
in 18 major metropolitan areas composed of state and local officials and
local representatives from the FBI and other federal agencies such as
the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms, the Customs Service, the
Secret Service, and the Immigration and Naturalization
Service. Participants, including state and local law enforcement
officials, hold security clearances and work together, usually on a
full-time basis to share information and investigate terrorist
activities. Recognizing that not all terrorist activity is centered in
urban areas, the FBI has developed the "Regional Terrorism Task Force"
concept to serve several rural states with common terrorism
concerns. Two such task forces have recently been established.


II. DOMESTIC PREPAREDNESS EFFORTS

 A. Office of Justice Programs and the National Domestic Preparedness
Office

 We are working to streamline and improve our current and future
abilities to work effectively with state and local authorities toward
our common national goal of improved readiness. As you know, OJP is
responsible for specific financial and technical assistance to state and
local authorities under the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
Act of 1996 and the Justice Department's FY 1998 and FY 1999
Appropriations Acts. OJP has served as the Justice Department's
principal link to state and local jurisdictions in the areas of criminal
and juvenile justice and victims services. OJP is now bringing that
expertise and experience to the area of domestic preparedness. We have
proposed the establishment of the Office of State and Local Domestic
Preparedness Support (OSLDPS) within OJP to provide funds for equipment,
training and technical assistance to state and local authorities and
emergency responders. OSLDPS is proposed as one mechanism through which
we will implement the mandate given to the Justice Department by this
Committee to enhance the capabilities of state and local jurisdictions
to better respond to incidents of domestic terrorism.

 Additionally, we have proposed the creation of the National Domestic
Preparedness Office (NDPO) which will be lead by the FBI working in
partnership with OJP and all federal agencies engaged in WMD
preparedness efforts. The NDPO is proposed as an interagency effort
aimed at enhancing government-wide coordination among federal programs
offering terrorism preparedness assistance to state and local
communities. As such, the NDPO and OJP will work together as a team in a
unified Justice Department effort to streamline access to federal
preparedness assistance programs. The NDPO, in coordination with OJP,
will serve state and local authorities as the single federal point of
contact they have requested to facilitate their access to federal
programs and resources which suit their preparedness needs. As the NDPO
is established, we seek the active involvement of participating federal
agencies, including FEMA, the DOD, HHS, DOE, and the EPA, as well as
state and local authorities and emergency responder organizations. The
 participation of these agencies will be needed in staffing and in
otherwise supporting this effort. I want to stress that the NDPO is not
intended to be another layer of bureaucracy. Rather, it is intended to
streamline access to federal domestic preparedness assistance programs.

 With the NDPO we plan to build upon OJP's considerable expertise and
experience in providing assistance to state and local authorities on a
range of issues. With regard to equipment in the domestic preparedness
effort the major federal response to state and local needs has been
through the Nunn-Lugar equipment loan program which provides WMD-related
training equipment. In 1998, the Justice Department through OJP provided
$12 million for grants to local jurisdictions for personal protection,
chemical/biological detection, decontamination and communications
equipment. In 1999, OJP will award grants in partnership with the
standards, policy and guidance of the NDPO. Under the OJP First
Responder Equipment Acquisition Program, $69.5 million in grant monies
will go out to the 157 largest cities and counties in the 50 states. An
additional $4 million will fund equipment to support training provided
through the National Domestic Preparedness Consortium. The Consortium
was formally organized on June 11, 1998, in order to bring together
various existing national assets, as identified in the Department's FY
1998 and 1999 Appropriations Acts, into a singular, coordinated, and
integrated training architecture. The Consortium is comprised of the
Center for Domestic Preparedness at Fort McClellan; the National
Energetic Materials Research and Testing Center at the New Mexico
Institute of Mining and Technology; the National Center for Bio-Medical
Research and Training located at the Louisiana State University; the
National Emergency and Response and Rescue Training Center located at
the Texas A & M University; and DOE's National Exercise, Test, and
Training Center (Nevada Test Site).

 The Municipal Fire and Emergency Services program provides $16 million
to jurisdictions to provide specialized equipment to fire and emergency
service agencies.

 Key to the equipment grant program will be the Standardized Equipment
List (SEL), developed jointly by DOD and FBI, to define the types of
equipment for which grant funds can be utilized within the four
categories of personal protective equipment, detection devices,
decontamination equipment, and first response communications
equipment. The FBI and DOD drew upon the expertise of state and local
emergency responders in drawing up the SEL so it meets their
needs. OJP's FY 1999 application cycle will not be executed until the
Needs Assessment, due for initial reporting on March 1, 1999, is
completed and the application kit reviewed to ensure consistency with
the findings of the Needs Assessment. OJP will also initiate a technical
assistance program to provide state and local jurisdictions with
hands-on, on-site expertise and guidance to better enable these
jurisdictions to make well-founded decisions relating to both domestic
preparedness planning and response. OJP projects distribution of the
application kits to the selected jurisdictions by April 1, 1999.

 Through OJP and NDPO's joint efforts, state and local first responders
will be able to access technical assistance for their response personnel
to help them in making decisions about equipment grants and training.

 It is through these initiatives, and the initiatives and programs to be
developed and expanded over the next fiscal year, that OJP � in tandem
with the FBI and our other federal agency partners in the NDPO � will
continue to fulfill the mission of assisting state and local
jurisdictions to better prepare and respond to incidents of domestic
terrorism.


 B. The Five-Year Plan and Federal Agency Coordination

 Let me lay out for you the mechanisms we have developed to ensure that
federal agencies will work together and with the state and local
community in the event of a terrorist incident within the U.S.

 On December 30, 1998, I submitted to you the Administration's Five-Year
Interagency Counter-Terrorism and Technology Crime Plan. Consistent with
the direction you gave us in the Conference Committee Report
accompanying the 1998 Department of Justice Appropriations Act, the Plan
sets forth a baseline strategy for our nation's counter-terrorism
efforts. The long-range goal of the Five-Year Plan is to achieve
readiness nationwide and with respect to our interests abroad. The Plan
addresses critical technologies for targeted research and development,
preventing and deterring terrorism, integrating crisis and consequence
management, protecting our National Information Infrastructure, and
improving state and local capabilities. It represents our best thinking
as to where we are now, where we need to go, and how we are going to get
there in terms of national preparedness. For example, the Plan
recognizes that it is not enough to provide initial training for first
responders in select jurisdictions. We must make such initial training
available to first responders in all fifty states and the territories,
and we must provide refresher and follow-up training as well.

 The Five-Year Plan is consistent with the PDDs issued last year. PDDs
62 and 63, set forth goals for national security, counter-terrorism and
infrastructure protection. These directives specify and clarify lead
agency roles in strengthening our preparedness for combating terrorism,
protecting our critical infrastructures, and managing the consequences
of terrorist acts, particularly those involving weapons of mass
destruction. These directives establish the National Coordinator for
Security, Infrastructure Protection and Counter-terrorism to oversee
program coordination and to aid the National Security Council in
carrying out its advisory role on issues of national security to the
President. The National Coordinator does not direct the activities of
the agencies, rather, he serves a coordinating function for the policies
and programs on threats to the U.S. and to U.S. interests abroad,
including attacks on our infrastructure, cyber systems, and government
operations; terrorism; and defense against covert delivery of WMD.

 We have closely coordinated our efforts in developing the Five-Year
Plan with the PDD 62 and 63 implementation efforts of the Office of the
National Coordinator in order to minimize duplication of effort and to
assure a consistent national approach in these vital areas. This
approach of coordinating and integrating related efforts must continue
as the Plan is updated in the coming years. We are working with the
Office of the National Coordinator to establish procedures that will
facilitate these updates and merge our efforts in overlapping areas.

 As this Committee has recognized, state and local input is essential to
our counter-terrorism planning. In developing the Five-Year Plan, we
sought the input of state and local authorities through a questionnaire
sent to public officials and organizations representing first responders
and emergency response personnel. Also, at my direction, OJP convened a
state and local stakeholders conference in August 1998, in Washington,
D.C. Together with state and local stakeholders, we brought together the
expertise of the DOD, HHS, DOE, the EPA, FEMA, the National Security
Council and the FBI which have all worked with state and local responder
constituencies in response to a variety of crises and catastrophes.

 The PDDs set out specific crisis and consequence management
responsibilities in the event of a terrorist attack. PDDs 39 and 62
outlines the responsibilities of law enforcement and other agencies in
responding to a terrorist incident. Numerous federal, state and local
agencies have devoted considerable resources in recent years to the
development of crisis and consequence management plans. We must work to
integrate these plans so that in the event of a terrorist incident all
those involved in the response and mitigation efforts work together.

 One of the planning documents developed over the past year to further
refine our interagency efforts in regard to domestic terrorism is the
Concept of Operations Plan (CONPLAN). The CONPLAN seeks to establish a
structure for a systematic, coordinated, effective national response to
threats and acts of terrorism.  The CONPLAN describes how the FBI crisis
response structure, the Federal Response Plan, the Federal consequence
management mechanisms and state and local Incident Command Systems will
coordinate their activities in the event of a WMD incident.

 By educating themselves as to the scope and provisions of each agency's
and jurisdiction's plan, and by exercising and training together,
federal, state, and local entities can learn to work together more
effectively. This education, exercising and training process must
include senior level officials to achieve senior level interagency
coordination. The Top-Off exercise, which this Committee has required,
is a significant and necessary step in this direction.

 The National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection and
Counter-terrorism plays an important coordination role in our
preparedness and response to events involving international terrorism
and WMD. The National Coordinator does not have an operational role,
rather, the Attorney General advises him with regard to national
security information when a terrorist event occurs. The National
Coordinator is responsible for coordinating the government's policies
and programs concerning unconventional threats within the United States
and to Americans abroad. These unconventional threats include attacks on
our infrastructure, cyber systems, and government operations; terrorism;
and the covert delivery of WMD. He is also responsible for coordinating
the development of interagency procedures for deployment of specialized
crisis assets.

III. TOOLS

 As we enhance our readiness nation-wide to deal with terrorism, we must
have the right tools and personnel to improve our capabilities across
the broad spectrum of WMD and threats to our nation and its critical
infrastructures.

 A. Expedited Procurement

 I want to acknowledge the leadership of this Committee in this effort
and the recent authority granted to me to purchase or lease necessary
equipment or services on an expedited basis to support ongoing counter
terrorism, national security, or computer crime investigations or
prosecutions. It will enable me to quickly access additional resources,
should the need arise, to supplement federal capabilities as well as to
assist emergency responders first on the scene, whether they are from
federal, state, or local agencies or from the private sector.

 Also, with the leadership of this committee, the Department and the FBI
Laboratory are capitalizing on national laboratory resources for the
development and deployment of new applied science and engineering
capabilities to support counterterrorism, intelligence activities and
criminal investigations.

 B. Legislation

 Although the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996
provided many necessary and additional legal tools, some modifications
to existing laws would clarify and strengthen these tools. Draft
legislation currently under review within the Department includes
proposals which would strengthen investigative tools, clarify and
supplement existing criminal and immigration statutes relating to
terrorist offenses and offenses involving WMD, and promote prompt
federal interagency cooperation in responding to terrorist incidents.

 One of the items under review is clarification of the removal ground of
"engage in terrorist activity" in order to facilitate removal of
terrorists who engage in fund-raising or otherwise provide material
support to terrorist organizations. We are also considering the addition
of terrorist offenses as predicate offenses to the federal racketeering
and money laundering statutes. Also under review is clarifying the
definitions in the biological weapons statutes and expansion of these
statutes to provide better controls over biological agents. For example,
an amendment could be proposed outlawing the possession of biological
agents that could be used in weapons of mass destruction by those with
no legitimate purpose for possessing these agents.

 In addition, the Department is considering a High-Technology Crime Bill
to address several technical and procedural infirmities that inhibit
effective investigation and prosecution of cybercrime. While not all
cybercrime is perpetrated by terrorists, improving our overall
capabilities to combat cybercrime will improve our readiness to address
cyber terrorism.

  The High-Technology Crime Bill could contain proposals to clarify and
expedite routine procedures used in the investigation of computer
crimes. Today, investigators must place multiple trap-and-trace devices
and execute multiple search warrants in the many jurisdictions through
which relevant information passes. Consequently, law enforcement often
finds itself well behind the criminals who traverse international
networks with the touch of the keyboard.

 In this digital age of Internet-based communications, signals do not
travel along straight lines, thus the traditional trap and trace or pen
register is not effective. Signals are often broken up and may pass
through many providers, in several different jurisdictions, en route to
their destination. In order to obtain key prosecution information about
a telephone call that is routinely provided in response to an authorized
court order, law enforcement officers must obtain orders in each
successive jurisdiction through which a signal passes in order to trace
the communication to its source. This consumes valuable time and scarce
resources and impedes identification of the perpetrator. A possible
amendment to existing statutes could allow federal judges to direct
 cooperation among successive communications providers that carry a
particular communication in tracing a call to its ultimate source or
destination.

 C. Encryption

 Court-authorized electronic surveillance (wiretaps) and search and
seizure are two of the most critically important investigative
techniques used by law enforcement to prosecute crime including
terrorism. The growing use of strong, commercially-available,
non-recoverable encryption will significantly impair our ability to
effectively use wiretaps and conduct searches and seizures.

 Encryption is extremely beneficial when used legitimately by
individuals and corporations to protect the privacy and confidentiality
of voice and data communications and sensitive electronically stored
information (computer files). In order to provide individuals and
corporations with greater privacy protections as the world moves into
the information age, both industry and government are encouraging the
use of strong encryption. But the use of strong encryption by criminals
and terrorists poses a significant risk to public safety and national
security.

 Law enforcement has steadfastly expressed its concern about the
adoption of an encryption policy based solely on market forces. Law
enforcement, including the International Association of Chiefs of
Police, the National Sheriff's Association, the National District
Attorneys Association, the National Association of Attorney Generals and
the Major City Chiefs, continues to call for the adoption of a balanced
encryption policy -- one that meets the commercial needs of industry as
well as the needs of the public for effective law enforcement.

 The Administration is not currently seeking mandatory controls on
encryption, but instead is working with industry to find voluntary
solutions that meet privacy, electronic commerce and public safety
needs. We remain optimistic that such a voluntary approach will be
successful in addressing our public safety needs.

IV. RESOURCES

 The Department currently spends approximately $738.5 million for
counter terrorism and anti-terrorism activities. In FY 2000, the
Department is seeking an increase of 319 positions
(60 agents and 66 attorneys) and $122.6 million for counter-
terrorism/cybercrime programs to enhance our ability to deter, detect,
investigate and prosecute violations committed by terrorists and other
computer criminals. This reflects our concern that the interdependent
systems that support every critical aspect of American life, including
telecommunications, power delivery, transportation, delivery of
government services and banking and commerce, are vulnerable to
terrorist groups, organized criminals and, simply, lone hackers.

 For the FBI, our request includes counterterrorism/ technology crime
program increases totaling 207 positions     (60 agents) and $45.7
million. Of the total amount, we seek   $9 million to modernize the
Hazardous Devices School at Redstone Arsenal, Alabama, where state and
local bomb technicians are trained and certified. This request also
includes 108 positions (60 agents) and $11.3 million to allow the FBI to
establish up to 12 field NIPCI Squads to investigate cyber intrusion
cases, address infrastructure protection matters, support computer
facilitated crime investigations, and provide equipment for    26 other
field offices; 79 positions and $9.9 million to increase the number of
Computer Analysis Response Team (CART) examiners who provide forensic
support in cases involving computers, and provide CART members with
appropriate equipment and training;   7 positions and $4.2 million for
data network interception support and development; $7 million for
counter-encryption equipment and services; 13 positions and $2.6 million
for protocol analysis and processing staffing and equipment; and,
finally, $1.7 million for NIPC operations.

 We continue to require additional technologically proficient personnel
who are capable of protecting the security and integrity of government
systems and of enabling us to stay a step ahead of those who would
attack or otherwise compromise our capabilities. We will seek to
accelerate our efforts to hire, train and retain specialized and
technologically skilled personnel, not only for the NIPC and field
squads, but also for critical positions throughout the Department of
Justice. Using the authority provided by the exemption to Title 5 for
certain positions that was approved by this Committee, we will augment
our existing staff with specialized and technologically skilled
personnel.

 To increase the United States' ability to protect its businesses and
its citizens, we are requesting 87 positions   (55 attorneys) and $7.3
million for the U.S. Attorneys. The Administration is committed to
protecting the nation's businesses and citizens from terrorists and
other computer criminals. But, to meet this commitment, there must be
additional attorneys and support staff for the investigation and
prosecution of computer crime in its various manifestations. The U.S.
Attorneys require additional staffing to handle significant cases of
national interest which are due, in part, to terrorism, computer and
other high tech crime generated by the steadily accelerating role of
computers in businesses, the personal lives of our citizens, the
exploding growth of on-line services and Internet use, the
vulnerabilities of computer systems to attack and abuse, and the ability
of terrorists and computer criminals to attack anonymously and from
locations throughout the world.

 For the Criminal Division, the Department requests an increase of 13
positions (9 attorneys) and $1.8 million for Counter
terrorism/cybercrime in the FY 2000 budget. This enhancement will permit
the Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section of the Criminal
Division to focus additional resources on 3 areas: 1) infrastructure
protection;
2) international computer crime; and 3) intellectual property rights
enforcement. These resources will permit the Criminal Division to
investigate and prosecute attacks on the National Information
Infrastructure, and to assist in assuring the integrity of systems that
are integral to our telecommunications, power delivery, transportation,
delivery of government services and banking and commerce. The global
nature of the Internet, and the rapid expansion of international
commerce, have been accompanied by a globalization of computer-related
crime. Our need to address these international crime problems calls for
enhanced resources to coordinate global solutions. Finally, the
protection of intellectual property rights will expand significantly in
the 21st century, as this country's intellectual capacity becomes,
perhaps, our greatest resource. In all these areas, the Criminal
Division's Computer Crime attorneys will be critical in the effort to
combat successfully terrorism/cybercrime.

 For the Office of Intelligence Policy and Review, we seek an increase
of 5 positions (2 attorneys) and $357,000. This includes resources to
handle additional Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA)
applications, especially those in support of counterterrorism work, as
well as increased workload resulting from revision of the FISA statute,
which allows for separate "pen register" and "trap and trace" FISA
warrants.

 Our request includes an overall increase of 7 positions and $38.5
million to expand the OJP domestic preparedness efforts. We propose
transferring the $135 million appropriated in the Counterterrorism Fund
in 1999 for state and local domestic preparedness assistance to OJP in
2000. In addition, we propose restructuring $31.5 million of these
resources, which, when combined with the requested increase of $38.5
million, will allow funding to be provided for the following
enhancements: $6 million to expand the First Responder Equipment
Acquisition Grant Program; $45 million to provide local bomb technician
squads with the specialized equipment necessary to allow them to detect
and react to a chemical or biological weapon threat or release;    $7
million for a Law Enforcement First Responder Training Program to train
local law enforcement officers on the basic skills necessary to fulfill
their roles as first responders to a weapons of mass destruction
terrorist incident; $9 million for the Center for Domestic Preparedness
at Fort McClellan, Alabama, to continue training at the U.S. Army's
installation after the planned closure on September 30, 1999; and $3
million to expand the technical assistance component of OJP's domestic
preparedness efforts. In addition, OJP's request includes $1.9 million
for the National White Collar Crime Center to provide training and
technical assistance relating to computer crimes to state and local law
enforcement and regulatory agencies.

 The Department also seeks $27 million for the Counterterrorism
Fund. These resources will be used to reimburse departments and agencies
of the Federal government for costs incurred in support of countering,
investigating, or prosecuting domestic and/or international terrorism;
finance reward payments in connection with such activities; restore
operational capacities of offices destroyed or damaged by domestic or
international terrorist acts; ensure continuance of essential government
functions during an emergency; protect the Nation's critical
infrastructure; provide for costs associated with the NDPO; and provide
for costs associated with design of the Federal Intrusion Detection
Network.

 In 1999, the Department did not receive any new funding for responding
to extraordinary circumstances, but did receive   $145 million for
earmarked initiatives. Since the Department expects to use all 1998
carryover funding, approximately      $25 million, for the extraordinary
costs of countering, investigating and prosecuting terrorists in 1999,
the need for new funding is critical.

 As I have mentioned before, having the right computer infrastructure is
more and more critical in our investigative work. While this issue is
much larger than counterterrorism, it warrants attention here. The
Department of Justice's 2000 request includes:  $38.8 million for the
Federal Bureau of Investigation's (FBI) Information Sharing Initiative
(ISI),   $13 million for the Drug Enforcement Administration's Firebird
System, and $37 million for the U.S. Attorneys' Justice Consolidated
Office Network (JCON).

 While these enhancements support basic office automation related to the
missions of these agencies, I want to emphasize that to do our job
effectively, whether it be addressing counterterrorism or fighting
violent crime in general, we have to have up-to-date computer
systems. For example, it will be through the ISI system, once
implemented, that the FBI will be able to tie its intelligence
information and case documentation together in order for the appropriate
analytical work to be accomplished. The implementation of ISI is
critical, to ensure that the millions of pages of documents the FBI
handles worldwide can be shared among appropriate field offices and
headquarters divisions.

 Furthermore, to ensure the integrity of our computer infrastructure, we
must develop systems that can link our different offices and agencies
together, while ensuring a secure environment. Most of today's computer
software and network systems cannot function on outdated hardware and
legacy systems, which unfortunately is what many of our investigators
and attorneys are still using. Without these systems, neither our
investigators nor our prosecutors can adequately address our complicated
counterterrorism casework.

 This Committee has been very supportive of efforts to build and enhance
law enforcement capabilities to deter, detect and defend against acts of
terrorism. We greatly appreciate this support and we look forward to
continuing to work together on this critically important issue.
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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