(AP) The
nation is preparing for its biggest terrorism exercise
ever next week when three fictional "dirty bombs" go off
and cripple transportation arteries in two major U.S.
cities and Guam, according to a document obtained by The
Associated Press.
Yet even as this drill begins, details from the previous
national exercise held in 2005 have yet to be publicly
released - information that's supposed to help officials
prepare for the next real attack.
House lawmakers were expected to demand answers
Wednesday, including why the "after-action" report from
2005 hasn't been made public. Congress has required the
exercise since 2000, but has done little in the way of
oversight beyond attending the actual events.
Next week will be the fourth Top Officials exercise -
dubbed TOPOFF. The program costs about $25 million a
year and involves the federal government's highest
officials, such as top people from the Defense and
Homeland Security departments.
"The challenge with TOPOFF is not the exercise itself.
It's to move as quickly as possible to remedy what
perceives to be the problems that are uncovered," former
Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge said in an
interview with AP this week.
Ridge, who launched his own security consulting company
on Monday, said he's a big fan of the TOPOFF exercises.
But he said "it's not acceptable" that the review from
the 2005 exercise is still not released publicly.
The House Homeland Security emergency communications,
preparedness and response subcommittee was holding a
hearing Wednesday on the terrorism exercise program.
This year's TOPOFF will build on lessons learned from
previous exercises, according to the Homeland Security
Department, which runs the program. The agency said the
Oct. 15-19 exercise would be "the largest and most
comprehensive" to date.
According to an internal department briefing of next
week's exercise obtained by AP, a dirty bomb will go off
at a Cabras power plant in Guam; another dirty bomb will
explode on the Steel Bridge in Portland, Ore., impacting
major transportation systems, and a third dirty bomb
will explode at the intersection of busy routes 101 and
202 near Phoenix.
Local hospitals and law enforcement agencies will be
involved in the "attacks" by the dirty bombs, which are
conventional explosives that include some radioactive
material that would cause contamination over a limited
area but not create actual nuclear explosions.
"Lessons learned from the exercise will provide valuable
insights to guide future planning for securing the
nation against terrorist attacks, disasters and other
emergencies," according to the department's Web site.
The after action report from TOPOFF 3, which deals with
issues that came up in the 2005 exercise, is supposed to
identify areas for improvement. That report is still
going through internal reviews.
According to a brief summary of the 2005 exercise -
marked For Official Use Only, but obtained by AP -
problems arose when officials realized the federal
government's law for providing assistance does not cover
biological incidents.
The exercise involved a mustard gas attack from an
improvised explosive device in Connecticut and the
release of the pneumonic plague in New Jersey. This
caused certain federal disaster programs to be
unavailable to some residents suffering from the attack,
according to the summary.
A 2005 Homeland Security inspector general report
suggested the department start tracking the lessons
learned from these exercises.
And a 2006 White House report on Hurricane Katrina
criticized the department for not having a system to
address and fix the problems discovered in the TOPOFF
exercises.
"The most recent Top Officials (TOPOFF) exercise in
April 2005 revealed the federal government's lack of
progress in addressing a number of preparedness
deficiencies, many of which had been identified in
previous exercises," according to the White House.
Previously, a more detailed version of lessons-learned
from TOPOFF 2, held in 2003 was not released to states
for security reasons.