-----Original Message-----
From: DEFENSE PRESS SERVICE LIST
Behalf Of
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Sent: 02 August 2002 17:05
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Cooperation, Flexibility Keys to Homeland Security


By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug. 2, 2002 -- All levels of government must
cooperate to prevent or lessen the consequences of another
terrorist attack, said Peter Verga, who directs DoD's
Homeland Security Task Force.

Verga has been meeting with local and state officials to
see how they view the problems caused by terrorist attacks
and how the Defense Department should help.

He said his meetings with mayors confirmed an important
belief. "The mayors consider all emergencies, all
disasters, all terrorist problems, to be local problems,"
Verga said during an interview. "If you think about it,
ultimately that's where they start -- somebody's city,
somebody's town, somebody's state."

He said mayors, governors and other local officials are
looking to the federal government to provide them the
wherewithal to deal with those problems at the local level.
"It's only if they can't deal with them at the local level
that they think it's necessary for the federal government -
- and in particular the Defense Department -- to come in
and assist them in actually dealing with the problem," he
said.

Verga sees the Defense Department as a resource that
mayors, other local officials and governors can turn to for
help in dealing with the threat of terrorist attacks. But
the department, he said, will also stand ready to back
these jurisdictions as part of other federal responses if
their capabilities are overwhelmed.

He said many local and state officials have spoken with him
about U.S. Northern Command. The command, part of the
changes to the Unified Command Plan, will stand up Oct. 1
at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo. Its missions will be to
defend North America and, if directed, to support civil
authorities as needed.

Verga said he spoke about the command in terms of what
Northern Command would bring to the table should a
situation occur. He said a major benefit will be the
command's ability to plan for catastrophes.

"The mayors and the governors have an appreciation for what
that would mean," he said. "We will, in fact, have a
command that has been planning on how to deal with that,
knows what kind of resources and forces must be brought to
bear on the problem, knows how to get them there and can
handle the range of responses."

The military does planning well, he said. While identifying
resources is important, he continued, so is devising plans
to transport the resource where it's needed and to support
it once it's in place, and so on.

U.S. Northern Command will work closely with officials of
the states' National Guard. In many cases, state adjutant
generals are also state emergency management directors. "So
there is a natural connection between (national) defense
resources, the National Guard and the defense resources of
the states," Verga said.

While progress has been made, much work remains. The Bush
administration has published the national strategy for
homeland security. Now, defense planners need to take that
to heart and build from it, he said.

Further, Congress is still working on legislation
establishing the new Department of Homeland Security.
Approval of this legislation will enable the new
department, along with DoD, the White House Office of
Homeland Security and all the state and local entities, to
better work together, Verga said.

Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld is actively involved in
all this. Verga said Rumsfeld would be providing planning
guidance to Northern Command on how it would be expected to
be employed. The Defense Department is still studying which
forces, if any, will be assigned to the new command on a
regular basis.

Flexibility is a crucial facet to the homeland security
equation. "You can never anticipate exactly what the
problem is going to be, exactly what the situation is that
you will deal with," Verga said. "You have to be flexible,
you have to have plans and capabilities that are responsive
to a variety of situations.

He said this mirrors Rumsfeld's switch from threat-based
planning to capabilities-based planning. "This gives you a
greater ability to respond regardless of what the threat
is," Verga said. "If, unfortunately, you plan for the wrong
threat, then you may find yourself facing a very
challenging situation.

"But if you have a set of capabilities that you can apply
regardless of the threat, you end up with a much more
flexible response. This is what DoD transformation is all
about."

Related Sites of Interest:
White House Office of
Homeland Security Web site
AFPS News Article:
<a href="http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Apr2002/n04252002_200204251.html";>The
Defense Point Man for Homeland
Security [http://www.whitehouse.gov/homeland/]

_______________________________________________________
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====================================================

Visit the Defense Department's Web site for the latest news
and information about America's response to the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist attacks and the war against terrorism: "Defend America"
at http://www.DefendAmerica.mil.

====================================================

Visit the Defense Department's "Unmanned Aerial Vehicle" Web
site at http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/uav2002/ for the
latest news and information on the history of the UAV and the
increasingly important role of UAVs in today's military strategy.

====================================================
Visit the "Department of Defense Homeland Security" Web site
at http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/homeland/ to learn more
about the Department of Defense role in homeland security.

====================================================

Visit the the Department of Defense "Unified Command Plan" web
special report at http://www.defenselink.mil/specials/unifiedcommand/
for more information on revisions to the Unified Command Plan and
the latest news on the newest combatant command, U.S. Northern
Command.

====================================================

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