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Homeland Security

SLUG: 5-52639 Homeland Security
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=11/25/02

TYPE=BACKGROUND REPORT

TITLE=HOMELAND SECURITY

NUMBER=5-52639

BYLINE=NICK SIMEONE

DATELINE=WASHINGTON

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: Some national security experts doubt the creation a new U-S government Department of Homeland Security means the nation is now better protected against terrorism. Correspondent Nick Simeone reports it could be years before the 22 agencies brought together under one department are working together effectively.

TEXT: When President Bush signed the Homeland Security Act into law Monday, he launched the biggest government re-organization since the creation of the Defense Department after World War Two. But in doing so, he acknowledged changing the ingrained ways of Washington's multiple and at times competing bureaucracies will not be easy.

/// BUSH ACT ///

To succeed in their mission, leaders of the new department must change the culture of many diverse agencies.

/// END ACT ///

And that, experts say, will be the hard part.

/// LIVINGSTONE ACT ///

There's going to be a certain amount of chaos.

/// END ACT ///

Counter terrorism expert Neil Livingstone.

/// SECOND LIVINGSTONE ACT ///

You could argue that the Defense Department has not gotten all the bugs out (eliminated all problems) in terms of that consolidation. So it's going to be a while before this agency is fully up and functional.

/// END ACT ///

Officials at the 22 agencies that will make up the new department have been sparring for months over budgets, responsibilities and their ultimate position in what will become the new pecking order of Washington.

/// AITKEN ACT ///

This is going to take years to implement and meanwhile we are an open society in a world that requires something more tight (effective) than that.

/// END ACT ///

Bruce Aitken is president of the Homeland Security Industries Association, a new lobby group formed by scores of companies wanting a piece of the new agency's 40-billion dollar budget.

/// AITKEN ACT ///

Traditionally, homeland security federal spending was about five-billion a year. This is the beginning of the process, not the end. It's not going to change overnight and we've got a lot of work to do.

/// END ACT ///

But some experts warn that rather than creating a new agency to protect against terrorism, fundamental changes are needed at existing agencies, like the C-I-A. The spy agency has been blamed for failing to pick up on intelligence that critics say might have helped prevent last year's terrorist attacks.

Kenneth Allard is a former U-S army intelligence officer.

/// ALLARD ACT ///

The C-I-A has now become part of the problem. And part of the reason why they are is the fact that you have too many white Anglo-Saxon Protestants with masters degrees in Soviet studies who are still there who have absolutely no clue about Iraq, about al-Qaida or about what we are facing with religious based fanaticism.

/// END ACT ///

Neither the C-I-A, nor the F-B-I -- two agencies on the forefront of the war on terrorism -- will be part of the new Department of Homeland Security. (SIGNED)

NEB/NJS/RH



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