Merging the HSC and NSC: Stronger Together

Q3 Social Sciences Homeland Security Affairs Pub Date : 2009-01-01 DOI:10.21236/ada494429
C. Wormuth, Jeremy White
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

At the federal level, homeland security is inherently and fundamentally an interagency undertaking. The quality of interagency relationships and processes is central to the success or failure of federal - and national - homeland security activities. Short of giving a single Cabinet secretary directive authority over other Cabinet secretaries during major domestic incidents (which is unlikely given traditional forms of American government) the only way to ensure effective unity of effort at the federal level is to exercise strong leadership from the White House. This kind of leadership is needed not just during an actual catastrophe but also when the government is engaged in the day-to-day activities of working to prevent, protect against, and prepare for such catastrophes. In recent years the White House has not played this role, in large part because of the bifurcation of national security issues into a National Security Council and a Homeland Security Council. One of the most important and most necessary changes the new administration should make is to merge these organizations into a single council with a largely shared professional staff. This newly merged Council should exercise forceful leadership on behalf of the president of the United States in developing homeland security strategy and policy and should closely oversee its implementation.Why a Merger is NeededThere are three main reasons that the existing Homeland Security Council (HSC) and its staff have not been particularly effective. The first, and perhaps most important, is structural: by establishing a separate council and associated staff to address homeland issues, the White House artificially bifurcated its approach to national security issues, although the issues themselves frequently have both domestic and international aspects that are interrelated. For example, effectively combating terrorism involves targeting terrorists and their support networks overseas, but also addressing the potential for radicalization of individuals inside the United States. Effectively addressing 21st century security challenges requires an integrated approach that considers both sides of a given problem - but such an approach is very difficult to achieve when two different organizations inside the White House are involved. Both council staffs work in the Old Executive Office Building, but they share little more than a mailing address. Each council has a different organizational structure, each staff reports to a different adviser to the president, and each has its own executive secretariat, with separate systems for convening meetings and designating lead directorates on specific issues. The two council staffs don't even work on the same e-mail system: while the NSC staff does most of its work on the classified e-mail system, the HSC staff works mostly on the "low side," or the unclassified network. Some coordination between the two staffs does take place, but it occurs largely through the initiative of individual staff members, who must overcome the hurdles presented by the bifurcated structure.A second major reason for the ineffectiveness of the HSC on many issues is organizational: it is relatively weak, particularly compared to the NSC. A host of dry, technical personnel and budget issues have contributed significantly to this problem. Unlike the NSC and its staff, the HSC and its staff do not constitute a separate organization inside the Executive Office of the President; as a result, HSC personnel numbers count against the overall personnel ceiling for White House staff and so there is pressure to minimize the size of the HSC organization. While the NSC has more than 240 staff members, the HSC on average has only forty-five. 1 Moreover, as a consequence of HSC's administrative status within the Office of the President, the council does not have its own budget, which places a tight salary cap on the staff. Although HSC staff members have significant responsibility and work extremely long hours, even the highest paid among them earn less than senior GS-15 civil servants elsewhere in government. …
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合并HSC和NSC:共同强大
在联邦一级,国土安全本质上是一项跨部门的工作。机构间关系和过程的质量对联邦和国家国土安全活动的成败至关重要。在重大国内事件中,由于没有赋予内阁部长对其他内阁部长的指令权(鉴于美国政府的传统形式,这是不太可能的),确保联邦一级有效统一努力的唯一途径是由白宫行使强有力的领导。这种领导能力不仅在实际发生灾难时需要,而且在政府从事预防、防范和准备此类灾难的日常工作时也需要。近年来,白宫没有发挥这一作用,很大程度上是因为国家安全问题分为国家安全委员会(national security Council)和国土安全委员会(Homeland security Council)。新政府应该作出的最重要和最必要的改变之一是将这些组织合并为一个单一的理事会,其专业人员基本上是共用的。这个新合并的委员会应代表美国总统在制定国土安全战略和政策方面发挥强有力的领导作用,并应密切监督其执行情况。为什么需要合并现有的国土安全委员会(HSC)及其工作人员没有特别有效,主要有三个原因。第一个,也许也是最重要的一个,是结构性的:通过建立一个独立的委员会和相关的工作人员来处理国土问题,白宫人为地将其处理国家安全问题的方法一分为二,尽管这些问题本身往往既有国内方面,也有相互关联的国际方面。例如,有效打击恐怖主义包括打击恐怖分子及其海外支持网络,但也要解决美国境内个人激进化的可能性。有效地应对21世纪的安全挑战需要一种综合的方法,考虑到给定问题的两个方面——但是,当白宫内部涉及两个不同的组织时,这种方法很难实现。两个委员会的工作人员都在老行政办公大楼工作,但他们除了一个邮寄地址外几乎没有什么共同之处。每个理事会都有不同的组织结构,每个工作人员向总统的不同顾问报告,每个理事会都有自己的执行秘书处,有单独的系统来召集会议和指定具体问题的领导理事会。这两个委员会的工作人员甚至不在同一个电子邮件系统上工作:国家安全委员会的工作人员在机密电子邮件系统上做大部分工作,而HSC的工作人员主要在“低级”或非机密网络上工作。这两个工作人员之间确实进行了一些协调,但这主要是通过个别工作人员的主动行动来实现的,他们必须克服分岔结构所造成的障碍。HSC在许多问题上无效的第二个主要原因是组织:它相对较弱,特别是与NSC相比。许多干巴巴的技术人员和预算问题是造成这一问题的主要原因。与国家安全保障委员会及其工作人员不同,安全保障委员会及其工作人员不是总统办公厅内的单独机构;因此,HSC人员的数量与白宫工作人员的总体人员上限不符,因此存在最小化HSC组织规模的压力。NSC有240多名工作人员,而HSC平均只有45名。此外,由于HSC在总统办公室内的行政地位,该委员会没有自己的预算,这给工作人员设置了严格的工资上限。尽管HSC的工作人员责任重大,工作时间极长,但即使是薪酬最高的人,其收入也低于政府其他部门的GS-15级高级公务员。…
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FEMA, Response, and Recovery Training and Exercises in Homeland Security Risk Management, Threats, and Hazards Homeland Security Law, Regulations, and Budgeting Border Security, U.S. Citizenship, and Immigration Services
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