Conducting a Nationwide Terrorism Preparedness Exercise (H.R. 1302)
Do you support or oppose this bill?
What is H.R. 1302?
(Updated September 12, 2021)
This bill would require the Dept. of Homeland Security (DHS) to plan and conduct an exercise to test and improve how prepared law enforcement agencies are for terrorist attacks. After the exercise is conducted, the DHS would have to submit a report detailing vulnerabilities in U.S. security with respect to terrorism. The report would include recommendations for what legislative actions should be taken to remove the vulnerabilities.
The DHS’s exercise would be required to include:
A scenario where a U.S. citizen is travelling to provide support to a terrorist group in another country;
A scenario where either a U.S. citizen or a foreign national enters the U.S. to launch a terrorist attack; and
Appropriate coordination with local, state, federal, and foreign agencies.
The bill also amends previous legislation to require that other exercises include strategies or scenarios involving terrorist threats. These other exercises and protocols include:
The national preparedness goal;
The National Incident Management System; and
The National Response Plan.
Argument in favor
It’s been too long since the government identified holes in its ability to respond to terrorist threats, and the threat of terrorism is becoming even more widespread.
Argument opposed
Recent terrorist attacks have already demonstrated how vulnerable the U.S. is to attacks, there’s no need to perform an exercise to confirm what we already know.
Impact
People trying to launch a terrorist attack on the U.S. or help a foreign terrorist group; local, state, and federal agencies partaking in the exercise; the DHS.
Cost of H.R. 1302
A CBO cost estimate is unavailable.
Additional Info
In Depth: Sponsoring Rep. Martha McSally (R-AZ) explained in a press release why this legislation was necessary when she introduced its predecessor in the last Congress:
“The last time the federal government actually tested our defenses against the threat of terrorists entering our country was seven years ago. Since then, the threat environment has changed dramatically. Nearly 30,000 people from over 100 countries have traveled to conflict zones in Syria and Iraq since 2011, including over 4,500 Westerners and 250 Americans. There are ISIS-related investigations happening in all 50 states. We need to know our systems in place can keep Americans safe, and where there are vulnerabilities, we need to fix them immediately.”
This legislation has the support of 11 cosponsors in the House, including nine Republicans and two Democrats.
Of Note: The last time the government led a large scale terrorism preparedness exercise was in October, 2007. The exercise simulated a situation in which terrorists released radiation in Portland, Oregon, Phoenix, Arizona, and Guam. Over 15,000 people from different levels of governmental and non-governmental organizations participated in the response.
Media:
- Sponsoring Rep. Martha McSally (R-AZ) Press Release (Previous Version)
- CBO Cost Estimate (Previous Version)
- WM Symposia (Previous Version)
Summary by: Chris Conrad
(Photo Credit: Flickr user soldiermediacenter)
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