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9/11 commissioners still see security oversights

Report: Government needs to act more urgently to prevent terror attacks

Image: U.S. Customs patrol boat
A U.S. Customs patrol boat skims the waters off San Diego in this Nov. 9 file photo. The patrols are part of a sprawling U.S. Homeland Security operation that is expected to come under criticism from the 9/11 Commission in a report being issued on Monday.
Salkin Lauren / Sipa Press file
updated 11:05 p.m. ET Dec. 2, 2005

WASHINGTON - More than four years after the Sept. 11 attacks, U.S. intelligence agencies still are failing to share information while Congress battles over security funding, a panel that investigated the terrorist hijackings will conclude in a new report.

In interviews Friday, members of the former Sept. 11 commission said the government should receive a dismal grade for its lack of urgency in enacting strong security measures to prevent terror attacks.

The 10-member, bipartisan commission disbanded after issuing 41 recommendations to bolster the nation’s security in July 2004. The members have reconstituted themselves, using private funds, as the 9/11 Public Discourse Project and will release a new report Monday assessing the extent their directives have been followed.

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Overall, the government has performed “not very well,” said former commission chairman Thomas Kean, former Republican governor of New Jersey.

“Before 9/11, both the Clinton and Bush administrations said they had identified Osama bin Laden and al-Qaida as problems that have to be dealt with, and were working on it,” Kean said. “But they just were not very high on their priority list. And again it seems that the safety of the American people is not very high on Washington’s priority list.”

A spokesman at the Homeland Security Department declined to comment until the report is issued Monday. Rep. Pete King, R-N.Y., chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, acknowledged that some areas continue to be vulnerable but have not been addressed due to disagreements with the Senate.

Congress established the commission in 2002 to investigate government missteps that led to the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. It found that the United States could not protect its citizens from the attacks because it underestimated al-Qaida. Since June, the former commissioners have held hearings to examine what they described as the government’s unfinished agenda to secure the country.

Key areas of focus
Among the main concerns, which former Democratic commissioner Timothy Roemer said would receive the “worst grades:”

  • The United States is not doing enough to ensure that foreign nations are upgrading security measures to stop the proliferation of nuclear, biological and chemical materials. Such materials could be used in weapons of mass destruction, and over 100 research reactors around the world have enough highly enriched uranium present to make a nuclear device.
    “We’ve seen that Osama bin Laden likes to do spectacular things,” said Roemer, a former Indiana congressman. “Is a dirty bomb next? ... We’re not doing enough, and we’re not doing it urgently enough.”
  • Police, firefighters, medics and other first responders still lack interconnected radio systems letting them communicate with each other during emergencies. Responders from different agencies at the World Trade Center were unable to coordinate rescues — or receive information that could have saved their own lives — on 9/11.
    Congress last year approved spending nearly $1 billion on interoperable systems, but King said the matter is “a very difficult issue.”
  • Both the Bush administration and Congress have continued to distribute security funding to states without aiming most money at high-risk communities. The Homeland Security Department gave $2.5 billion in grants to states and 50 high-risk cities last year, but some rural states, like Wyoming, received more money per resident than terror targets like New York.

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