WAR ON TERROR: Four Years After 9/11 The Quest for National Security
NATURAL DISASTER'S MARK: In Hurricane Katrina's wake, some question whether battle against terrorism is the right fight
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2005/09/11/MNG40EM00T1.DTL
As rescuers tore through the rubble of the
Instead, on the fourth anniversary of the nation's worst terrorist attack,
The cruel irony has prompted some to question whether the country's obsession with terrorism has left it vulnerable to other disasters. Rather than credit the administration for staving off terrorist attacks, many believe that unreasonable fears borne from the Sept. 11 attacks drove the country, and its leaders, to overreact to the terrorist threat and divert precious resources from the near-certain catastrophes of nature.
Financier George Soros told 1,000 participants in a
"This provides vivid insights into what (a terrorist) situation might be like," said retired Col. Larry Wilkerson, former chief of staff to Secretary of State Colin Powell. "It makes me even tenfold more worried -- if that's possible -- than I was before." Much has been written about the lasting legacy of Sept. 11 as it relates to the nation's foreign policy, politics and psyche. But the timing of Hurricane Katrina has also prompted a conversation about the cost of focusing on terror.
"This terrorism paranoia has (created) unbalanced priorities," said Ben Wisner, an adviser to the United Nations on disaster risk, and a visiting professor at
For the past four years, terrorism has been the big picture in
"After
As Bush spoke these words, tens of thousands of
Of the 1.4 million men and women in uniform and another 600,000 in the reserves or National Guard, roughly 140,000 are serving in
Yet it is not in dispute that the nation's emergency preparation and response since Sept. 11 has been aimed primarily at potential terrorist attacks. Hundreds of billions of dollars have been allocated for homeland security, and the Federal Emergency Management Agency lost its Cabinet level status as it was subsumed by the new, anti-terrorism, Department of Homeland Security. "It's pretty clear that most of this activity was not focused on major natural disasters ... and was really focused more on the problems associated with terrorist attacks," said Richard Falkenrath, former deputy homeland security adviser and deputy assistant to President Bush.
Although its budget has grown, many blame the emergency agency's diminished bureaucratic standing for its slow response to the hurricane disaster. "FEMA has proven to be a shell of what it once was and has been unable, and seemingly unwilling, to provide the direct and immediate resources necessary in the aftermath of the most devastating natural disaster in American history," said Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La.
However, some analysts say a shift in the nation's attention is not the same as neglect. The consequences of a terrorist attack and a natural disaster hold more similarities than differences. "These aren't two separate problems. In many instances, the responses are the same," said Francis Fukuyama, a professor of International Studies at
"This country is big enough and strong enough to prepare for both," said former New Hampshire Sen. Warren Rudman, who, along with former Colorado Sen. Gary Hart, chaired a commission that warned of the dangers of terrorism before the Sept. 11 attacks. "What we found out with Katrina is that the country is still unable to deal with disaster," Rudman said in an interview. "God forbid this happens in
The breakdown of communications alone -- it took
Some say the lesson to be learned is that
"This just shows you that we really need to put more resources on prevention," said James Steinberg, director of foreign policy studies at the Brookings Institution. "No matter how well we plan, you can't plan for everything. The big lesson is that there are limits to our response." That is not a conclusion that many find settling, especially after the efforts since
"Our country is not so ready to respond to the uber-disasters as we'd like to be, four years after 9/11," Falkenrath said.
In Insight
War to end all wars: The
E-mail Marc Sandalow at [EMAIL PROTECTED].
AB
"For to us will be their return; then it will be for us to call them to account." (Holy Quran 88:25-26)
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