Mon, 02 Aug 2004

Global terror poses first-response challenges

S. L. Bachman, Yale Center for the Study of Globalization, San Francisco

Among the heroes of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the New York City firefighters stand out. They trooped into the burning World Trade Center towers despite slim odds of saving the people inside, or coming out alive. But, as three years worth of hearings and investigations have made clear, their task was even more quixotic than they realized.

From New York to Istanbul, the police, firefighters, and medical personnel that make up a city's first-responders may be dedicated to their duties, but most are poorly equipped to handle the extreme emergencies brought on by global terrorism.

As a U.S. investigative commission confirmed on July 22, gross failures of "imagination" kept national officials from adequately preparing for a catastrophic al-Qaeda attack, despite al-Qaeda's 1993 truck-bombing of the World Trade Center. The firefighters' emergency radios operated poorly or not at all inside the twin towers. First-responders failed to "achieve unified incident command," according to the final report of the "9-11 Commission" -- the independent, bipartisan commission that examined America's civil preparedness for the 2001 terrorist attacks.

Many who died that day perished because the United States had prepared to fight states, not a loosely organized, internationally dispersed coalition of terrorists.

Nations around the world face the same paradox: As global terrorist groups target population centers, local first- responders are at least as important as standing armies -- and at times more important. But first-responders -- firefighters, police, emergency medical technicians, transportation workers, and others -- are largely commanded, trained, and equipped to respond to local emergencies.

Those who are first on the scene at emergencies now must not only stanch bleeding wounds, put out fires, or arrest trouble- makers. They also must consider: Is this emergency the first event in a series of global terrorist attacks? Is this illness the result of a chemical or bio-terror attack? Are these ill patients the first sign of an epidemic that could spread via international travel around the world, causing untold thousands of deaths and billions of dollars of economic losses?

Since 2001, cities from New York to New Delhi, Istanbul to Kabul have upgraded first-responders' equipment, training and command.

But there is a long, long way to go. Helping local first- responders to meet a global threat is in many ways more difficult than equipping, training, and commanding national military forces.

The local puzzle contains many more pieces: more political officials, city bureaucracies and political micro-climates; local sources of revenue or lack thereof; and the ability and willingness to do the job among people who have never prepared for it.

Big cities and states are fuming that, for political and bureaucratic reasons, states and territories with small, scattered populations are budgeted for many times more money per capita than New York, California and other more populous states.

Human and mechanical errors are rampant. In June, a series of human and computer errors almost caused officials to shoot down a Kentucky State Police plane, carrying the states' governor, as it approached the airport closest to Washington, D.C.'s urban core. The airport has been all but closed since 2001, when a hijacked plane crashed into the nearby Pentagon, which houses the Defense Department.

Ideological and political blunders complicate readiness and responsiveness. In Spain, anti-terrorism measures failed to head off 10 explosions that rocked Madrid's commuter rail lines during a single day in May, killing nearly 190.

In Indonesia -- where bombs in Bali and Jakarta in 2002 and 2003 killed 214 -- the Transnational Crime Co-ordination Centre (TNCC) opened in Jakarta in July. The center will allow police to access data on up-to-date computers. But many of Indonesia's police stations, like police stations in many other developing countries, still lack telephones and computers.

And in Istanbul, Turkey, four truck bombs blew up two synagogues, the British Consulate, and a British-based bank, taking more than 60 lives, in November 2003. Scores of suspects have been rounded up since. Even so, seven months later, and four days before a NATO summit, a bomb destroyed a bus, killing four.

To meet local terrorism-preparedness needs, at least two central questions must be addressed:

First, how will local officials coordinate with national, and international, anti-terrorism efforts?

Coordination among national and local officials is no mean feat in the best of times. The shadowy and unpredictable threat posed by global terrorism increases the challenge many-fold. Jurisdictional and technical issues complicate matters.

It is painfully clear, however, that coordinating national- level action with local first-responders is crucial.

The second key question for first-responders is: Who will pay?

The deaths of almost one hundred Australians in the Bali nightclub bombing, combined with concerns over the spread of terrorists into Australian cities, prompted the Australian government to help pay for the new anti-terrorism center in Jakarta. But where will other cities get money to train, equip, and command first-responders?

In the U.S., the question remains unanswered. "Unless the Bush Administration takes responsibility for the cost of providing national security in our cities," warns Los Angeles City Councilman Jack Weiss in a press release, "local governments may be forced to reduce the level of response because we simply can't afford it." Officials from many of the world's major cities could write almost the same thing of their own national leaders.

In an increasingly interconnected world, building local capacity is a critical component of preparation against global terrorism. But preparing to meet global threats locally means balancing unpredictable global threats against known, immediate needs.

The writer is the author of Globalization in the San Francisco Bay Area, published by the Pacific Council on International Policy, www.pacificcouncil.org.