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Pentagon Plans New Command For U.S.

vieuxcmaq, Dimanche, Janvier 27, 2002 - 12:00

Bradley Graham (Washington Post) (cdesjardins10@hotmail.com)

The Pentagon has decided to ask the White House for approval to set up a new four-star command to coordinate federal troops used to defend North America, part of an intensified effort to bolster homeland security, defense officials said.

Pentagon Plans New Command For U.S.
Four-Star Officer Would Oversee Homeland Defense

By Bradley Graham
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, January 27, 2002; Page A01

The Pentagon has decided to ask the White House for approval to set up a new four-star command to coordinate federal troops used to defend North America, part of an intensified effort to bolster homeland security, defense officials said.

The move was prompted by the new domestic security demands placed on the military after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the Bush administration's declared war on terrorism.

Although the Pentagon has regional commanders in chief, known as CINCs, who are responsible for Europe, the Pacific, Latin America, and the Middle East and South Asia, none exists for U.S. forces in the United States and Canada. The proposed change would give a single four-star officer authority over such domestic deployments as Air Force jets patrolling above U.S. cities, Navy ships running coastal checks and Army National Guard troops policing airports and border crossings.

Before September, military leaders had resisted the idea of a homeland CINC (pronounced "sink"), reflecting a traditional aversion to -- and legal limits on -- the use of federal armed forces for domestic law enforcement. Opposition also existed outside the Pentagon on both the political left and right, with civil libertarians and right-wing militia groups alike warning against military forces encroaching on areas traditionally considered the responsibility of civilian emergency response, law enforcement and health agencies.

But in recent months, as military air, sea and land patrols pressed into action by the Pentagon have answered to several four-star commanders, the Defense Department's top military officers have come to accept the need for streamlining the chain of command.

Earlier opposition from such groups as the American Civil Liberties Union has also waned, although concerns persist about possible "mission creep" and the risk that any military forces deployed around the country could end up threatening individual rights.

Initially, the military chiefs had argued for assigning the homeland defense mission to one of two commands already headquartered in the United States -- either the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) in Colorado, which is responsible for protecting U.S. skies, or the Joint Forces Command in Virginia, which has been charged with guarding the maritime approaches to North America and the land defense of the continental United States. The thinking was that setting up an entirely new command would entail needless additional bureaucracy and expense.

But Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld has settled on creating a new command rather than loading an existing one with additional responsibilities, according to four officials in different branches of the Pentagon familiar with the plan. Currently, the general who heads NORAD also runs the U.S. Space Command, which oversees the nation's military satellites and computer networks. The admiral who leads the Joint Forces Command is in charge of developing new ways the different services can fight together, and he serves as head of NATO's North Atlantic region.

"All the chiefs and CINCs have seen the plan and have signed on to it, although it has not yet been briefed to the president," a senior military officer said yesterday. "Everyone is moving down the track toward realizing it."

Defense officials also said that the geographic responsibilities of the new command would likely extend beyond U.S. borders to the rest of North America. Among other advantages, this would facilitate the transfer of the air defense mission from NORAD, which is operated jointly with Canada.

"It's not going to be just a homeland defense command," another official said. "It's going to be a command that has responsibility beyond homeland defense."

But many of the details for implementing the new command structure have yet to be worked out, including where it would be located, what it would be called, who would lead it and exactly which functions it would take from existing CINCs.

"There's still the hope this new command can be created without a net increase in headquarters staff across all the CINC-doms," the senior officer said.

Another official said: "It's going to take time to work out how you go about moving responsibilities from this or that CINC to this new command. This particular review will go ahead and establish the command, and then we'll lay out a series of considerations over the course of the next several months to make it all happen."

Responsibility for coordinating federal activities in homeland defense rests with Tom Ridge, who heads the White House's Office of Homeland Security, which was set up after the Sept. 11 attacks. While the new Pentagon command would doubtless have links to Ridge's office, it would formally fall in a separate chain of authority running from the president through the secretary of defense to those federal troops enlisted in the homeland effort.

Historically, Pentagon planning for dealing with the consequences of terrorist attacks has relied heavily on local and regional organizations -- including the police, firefighters, medics and hazardous-material teams -- taking the lead. Only as a matter of last resort were federal troops to be summoned to help.

Even with the increased domestic role thrust on the armed forces in the aftermath of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, senior defense officials say they would prefer to avoid making federal troops permanent fixtures at airports and elsewhere.

Pentagon authorities contend that state and local agencies should handle the bulk of homeland security responsibilities while federal forces stay focused on trouble spots abroad.

"The problem is concurrency," Army Secretary Thomas E. White said in an interview last week. "No one has let us out of our obligations in Kosovo, in Bosnia, in the Sinai, in Korea. The Army is fully deployed in 100 different countries, supporting our regional commanders in chief. And we are hard-pressed to do that which the Army is principally organized to do. So we don't need to volunteer for any other tasks."

White said defense officials are hoping to begin pulling National Guard troops off security duties at the nation's airports in the next 60 to 90 days, turning the work over to the new Transportation Security Administration.

Roughly 6,000 troops are stationed at more than 400 airports across the country as part of the effort to deter terrorists and reassure the public about the safety of air travel.

Defense officials are also evaluating whether to scale back the combat air patrols over Washington, New York and more than two dozen other cities now that airports and commercial airline companies have instituted stronger safeguards.

Legal barriers to sending the armed forces into U.S. streets have existed for more than a century under the Posse Comitatus Act of 1878. That law was prompted by President Ulysses S. Grant's use of federal troops to monitor the elections in the former Confederate states. The act prohibits military personnel from searching, seizing or arresting people in the United States.

Some exceptions exist, allowing military forces to suppress insurrections or domestic unrest or to assist in crimes involving nuclear, biological or chemical weapons.

Since Sept. 11, several prominent lawmakers -- including Sen. John W. Warner (R-Va.), the ranking minority member on the Armed Services Committee, and Sen. Max Cleland (D-Ga.), another committee member -- have called for revising the act. But congressional opinion on the matter is divided, and senior Pentagon officials have expressed little interest in any fundamental legislative overhaul.

The move to establish a homeland CINC, officials said, is part of a broader series of geographical and other adjustments being proposed in a number of regional commands under what the Pentagon calls the Unified Command Plan. "This does not finish something," a senior official said. "It actually starts a process of examining how you might" streamline the commands.

© 2002 The Washington Post Company



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