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Containing the Threat: Eleven Million Challenges
James D. Hessman Wednesday, June 25, 2008
In the field of port and maritime security, the principal action agencies are the DHS’s U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) division and the U.S. Coast Guard, which is now also under DHS. Both not only have been underfunded for many years but also have been assigned numerous additional duties and responsibilities in the almost seven years that have passed since the 9/11 terrorist attacks. CBP’s “port of entry” responsibilities, for example, under what is called the C-TPAT (Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism) program – the key operational tool available to carry out the mandate to screen 100 percent of all U.S.-bound cargo – require a CBP presence at well over 300 airports, seaports, and various “designated land borders.” A few additional statistics are needed, though, to put the depth and complexity of the 100-percent screening challenge into clearer perspective. Here, there are two examples worth noting: (a) In fiscal year 2007 alone, according to the GAO – in an earlier (April 2008) report on Supply Chain Security – “more than 11 million oceangoing cargo containers carrying goods were offloaded at U.S. seaports.” (b) In addition, also according to GAO (in Stana’s testimony of 26 May), CBP’s “original goal” was to validate the security credentials of all certified C-TPAT members “within three years of certification"; the agency fell somewhat short of that goal, though, validating only “about 11 percent” of certified members in the first three years. CBP, and the Coast Guard – as well as DHS, the Congress, and the entire Executive Branch of government – all face a daunting and very costly challenge, obviously, in the months and years ahead. However, the cost of not succeeding would be exponentially higher than the cost of carrying out the 100-percent screening mandate. The Department of Defense’s unofficial estimate of the dollar-cost alone of the 9/11 attacks was “$1 trillion, and counting.” That figure does not include the cost of the more than 3,000 innocent lives lost in that second grim date that will live in infamy. The cost in dollars, and in lives lost, of a nuclear explosion in or near a major U.S. seaport would be much, much higher, and the cleanup effort required after such a cataclysmic event might well take not months, or even years, but several decades. |
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