Friday, September 09, 2005

An ultracatastrophe

Well now some of the facts start to come out. In the above linked New York Times article, worth a read some important points:

"Can you imagine how it would have been perceived if a president of the United States of one party had pre-emptively taken from the female governor of another party the command and control of her forces, unless the security situation made it completely clear that she was unable to effectively execute her command authority and that lawlessness was the inevitable result?" asked one senior administration official, who spoke anonymously because the talks were confidential.

"I need everything you have got," Ms. Blanco said she told Mr. Bush last Monday, after the storm hit.

In an interview, she acknowledged that she did not specify what sorts of soldiers. "Nobody told me that I had to request that," Ms. Blanco said. "I thought that I had requested everything they had. We were living in a war zone by then."

By Wednesday, she had asked for 40,000 soldiers.

In a separate discussion last weekend, the governor also rejected a more modest proposal for a hybrid command structure in which both the Guard and active-duty troops would be under the command of an active-duty, three-star general - but only after he had been sworn into the Louisiana National Guard.

"This event has exposed, perhaps ultimately to our benefit, a deficiency in terms of replacing first responders who tragically may be the first casualties," Paul McHale, the assistant secretary of defense for domestic security, said.

Michael Chertoff, the secretary of homeland security, has suggested that active-duty troops be trained and equipped to intervene if front-line emergency personnel are stricken. But the Pentagon's leadership remains unconvinced that this plan is sound, suggesting instead that the national emergency response plans be revised to draw reinforcements initially from civilian police, firefighters, medical personnel and hazardous-waste experts in other states not affected by a disaster.

The federal government rewrote its national emergency response plan after the Sept. 11 attacks, but it relied on local officials to manage any crisis in its opening days. But Hurricane Katrina overwhelmed local "first responders," including civilian police and the National Guard.

What this means is we are at least starting to see where the system didn't work so that it can be fixed. It also points out that the next President in office under a disaster should just invoke the Insurrection Act, rather than wait or negotiate with a Governor. Especially if they are going to play politics while people die. If the President is going to be the one blamed anyway? Might as well make sure that it is within the feds control.

1 comment:

Scott G said...

I agree that Louisiana had the initial responsibility, but anyone who watched the news leading up to the storm should have seen that local and state action may be inadequate. Ultimately and maybe unfairly, Bush is the one charged with protecting Americans. I think if he seemed like he understood what was going on, he would be receiving less flack, but he was off playing guitar and giving speeches.