Emergency Plan Fails to Consider EMP Threat

by BMCWrites | August 9, 2008 at 05:42 pm | 124 views | add comment | 0 recommendations

Soon after publishing Oil Crisis Pales in Comparison to EMP Threat, a post offering insight into the threat of an electromagnetic pulse attack against the United States, I decided to review the Department of Homeland Security’s recently-released National Emergency Communications Plan and examine the young agency’s take on the matter. Surprisingly, the 83-page plan includes no mention of the threat or how the nation might respond — or, quite possibly, not be able to respond — to it.

To me, inclusion of an assessment of the EMP threat seems critical, especially when one considers that the NECP’s success depends heavily upon the ability of Americans at all levels of government to use radios, computers and other electronic communication devices that could be disabled by an EMP attack.

I suspect that the exclusion of the EMP threat from the NECP resulted from the fact that Homeland Security, an agency charged via Title XVIII of the Homeland Security Act of 2002 with developing the NECP, was not aware of the fact that The Commission to Assess the Threat to the United States from Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP) Attack had been set up in 2001. That, however, is only the estimation of a former Air Force officer, long distanced from the bureaucracy that is the federal government.

With the stakes so high, Americans can only hope that coordination between Homeland Security and the EMP Commission improves dramatically — and soon!

-- Bob McCarty Writes


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August 9, 2008 at 05:42 pm by BMCWrites, 124 views, add comment

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