For Immediate Release
Office of the Press Secretary
September 11, 2004
Three Years of Progress in the War on Terror
Fact Sheet
"In the three years since our country was attacked, we've taken
steps to overcome new threats. We will continue to do everything in our
power to defeat the terrorist enemy and to protect the American people.
Recently, the Commission on the Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States came to a conclusion that I share: that our country is safer than it was on
September the 11th, 2001, yet, we're still not safe. . . . We are a
Nation in danger. We're doing everything we can in our power to confront
the danger. We're making good progress in protecting our people and
bringing our enemies to account. But one thing is for certain: We'll keep
our focus and we'll keep our resolve and we will do our duty to best secure our country."
-- President George (August 2, 2004)
Three years have passed since the attacks of September 11, 2001.
While the danger has not passed, America today is safer and stronger
because of the actions taken by President Bush and his Administration
to protect our country.
Protecting Our Homeland
The Bush Administration has made an unprecedented commitment to
homeland security. Already, the President has led the largest
reorganization of government in more than 50 years; strengthened our
intelligence capabilities; expanded support for first responders and
state homeland security efforts; and increased protection of our
transportation systems, borders, ports, and critical infrastructure.
- Creating the Department of Homeland Security (DHS): The President
has led the most extensive reorganization of the Federal Government in
more than 50 years by creating DHS. DHS brought together 22 entities
and over 180,000 employees with critical homeland security missions and
provided the Nation with a single Federal department with the primary
mission to protect the homeland against terrorist threats.
-
Leading the Way on Reforming and Strengthening Intelligence and
Coordination: President Bush has led the way on intelligence reform
and has already undertaken a number of major reforms to improve
intelligence collection, analysis, and sharing to obtain the best
information on the terrorist threat to the Nation -- including:
- Acting on 36 of the 9/11 Commission's 41 recommendations: The
President, on August 27, signed executive orders giving the Director of
Central Intelligence many of the strengthened management powers over
the Intelligence Community that will eventually belong to the National
Intelligence Director (NID) proposed by the 9/11 Commission. He also
established a National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) to serve as a
central knowledge bank on known and suspected terrorists and
international terror groups, as well as their goals, strategies,
capabilities, and networks of contacts. The NCTC will also provide
strategic planning for U.S. government-wide counterterrorism
activities. The President also ordered that additional actions be
taken to continue to improve the sharing of terrorism information among
agencies and to improve our information technology architecture.
- Proposing the creation of a National Intelligence Director (NID)
with the authority needed to get the job done. The President
intends to give the NID budget authority over the National Foreign
Intelligence Program appropriation and the management tools necessary
to successfully oversee the Intelligence Community, including ensuring
the full integration of foreign and domestic intelligence. The
President seeks intelligence reform legislation that is consistent with
the recommendations of the 9/11 Commission.
- Transforming the FBI: For three years, the President has led the
effort to transform the FBI into an agency focused on preventing
terrorist attacks through intelligence collection and other key
efforts, while improving its ability to perform its traditional role as
a world-class law enforcement agency.
- Establishing the Terrorist Threat Integration Center (TTIC) to
integrate and analyze terrorism threat-related information collected
domestically and abroad, ensuring that intelligence and law enforcement
entities are working together. Elements of the CIA, the Department of
Defense (DoD), the Department of Justice, DHS, and the FBI work to
close the "seams" in our intelligence analysis. Launched in early
2003, the TTIC has been regarded by the 9/11 Commission as the
foundation for the newly established NCTC.
- Creating the Terrorist Screening Center to consolidate terrorist
watchlists and provide 24/7 operational support for Federal and other
government law enforcement personnel across the country and around the
world. The Center ensures that government investigators, screeners,
and agents are working with the same unified, comprehensive set of
information about terrorists -- and that they have access to
information and expertise that will allow them to act quickly when a
suspected terrorist is screened or stopped.
- Creating U.S. Northern Command to provide for integrated homeland
defense and coordinated DoD support to Federal, State, and local
civilian governments.
- Proposing and signing into law the USA PATRIOT Act, which
strengthens law enforcement's abilities to prevent, investigate,
and prosecute acts of terror, facilitating Federal government efforts
to thwart potential terrorist activity throughout the United States.
President Bush continues to call on Congress to take action to ensure
that these vital law enforcement tools do not expire.
- Creating a White House Homeland Security Council, led by a
homeland security advisor who reports directly to the President,
to coordinate homeland security policy across multiple departments and
agencies -- modeled on the National Security Council.
- Creating the President's Board on Safeguarding American's Civil
Liberties to continue to carry out the President's commitment to
protecting the privacy and other rights of all Americans.
-
Significantly Increasing Homeland Security Funding: Since 2001,
the President has:
- Proposed a near tripling of funding for homeland security. The FY
2005 budget will increase homeland security funding by 9.7% over FY
2004 -- not counting homeland security funding in the Department of
Defense and Project BioShield.
- Strengthened counterterrorism efforts through the Department of
Justice (DOJ), proposing a 19% increase in homeland security funding
for programs within DOJ over FY 2004 to $2.6 billion. The FY 2005
budget also brings overall FBI funding to $5.1 billion, a $1.9 billion
(almost 60%) increase over the FY 2001 level.
- Allocated more than $13 billion to help State and local governments prepare for terrorism. President Bush has sought and
secured historic and massive increases in funding for first responder
preparedness since September 11, 2001. These funds should be spent on
training and equipping first responders for terrorism preparedness and
response.
-
Bringing Terrorists to Justice and Disrupting Terror Cells Inside
the United States: The Department of Justice has charged over 350 individuals uncovered in the course of terrorist investigations, and
convicted or secured guilty pleas from over 185 individuals. The U.S.
government has disrupted alleged terrorist cells in New York,
Washington, Oregon, Northern Virginia, North Carolina, and Florida.
-
Strengthening Transportation Security: The Administration
instituted a multi-layered strategy to enhance aviation security
from the curb to the cockpit. The Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) screens 100% of commercial air passengers and
bags. TSA has trained and authorized hundreds of pilots to carry
firearms in the cockpit, directed the hardening of cockpit doors on
6,000 commercial aircraft, and stationed explosives-detection canine
teams at each of the Nation's largest airports. Federal Air Marshals
ride aboard our Nation's aircrafts, protecting passengers and crew.
The President's FY 2005 budget proposes $5.3 billion for transportation
security funding, a 93% ($4.9 billion) increase over FY 2001 levels.
- Improving Border Security:
- Three years ago, there were inspectors from three different
Federal agencies at our ports of entry. Today, the Department of
Homeland Security's U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP)
consolidates all port inspection activities into a single workforce to
create "one face at the border." The Border Patrol is also part of
CBP, creating synergy between inspectors at the ports and those
patrolling between them. More than 18,000 CBP Officers, 1,400 CBP
Agriculture Specialists, and 11,000 Border Patrol Agents guard our
Nation's borders.
- The US-VISIT entry-exit system uses cutting-edge biometric
technology to help ensure that our borders remain open to
legitimate travelers but closed to terrorists. US-VISIT was launched
at 116 airports and 16 seaports across the country and the program is
expanding to land ports of entry. This program has been very
successful, processing more than 8.5 million travelers since January.
The President's FY 2005 budget includes $7.1 billion for border
security funding, a $3 billion increase over FY 2001 levels.
-
Increasing Port and Cargo Security:
- The President has significantly increased funding for the Coast
Guard, including dramatic increases for port security and acquisition
of new resources. The Coast Guard is creating over a dozen 100-person
Maritime Safety and Security Teams, to provide point defense for
critical infrastructure and high-value shipping; employing armed
helicopters to provide waterside security; and reviewing thousands of
new vessel, facility, and port security plans. Funding for Coast Guard
port security efforts has increased over 500% from the beginning of
this Administration through 2004. The Coast Guard's Deepwater fleet
modernization project has received a total of $1.5 billion over the
last three years, and the President has requested $678 million in his
FY 2005 budget.
- DHS has strengthened measures to protect the Nation from smuggled
radioactive materials and nuclear devices, by equipping CBP inspectors,
Coast Guard boarding personnel, and Border Patrol agents with portable
radiation detectors and installing radiation detection portals at sea,
land, rail, and air ports of entry, including mail processing
facilities. The first radiation portals were installed in March 2003.
- DHS established the National Targeting Center (NTC), which uses
computer-assisted analytical protocols to determine which cargo and
passengers destined for the United States present the greatest threat,
focusing examinations and inspections on them. The NTC screens data on
100% of inbound seaborne shipping containers (6 million per year) to
identify those posing a "high risk"; CBP personnel conduct examinations
of 100% of high-risk containers.
- DHS established the Container Security Initiative (CSI), deploying
CBP officials to 25 major international seaports to pre-screen shipping
containers for illicit or dangerous materials before they are loaded on
vessels bound for the United States. CSI includes the ports that ship
roughly two-thirds of inbound containers to the United States.
Additional ports are being added over the next two years.
-
Significantly Expanding Our Biodefense Capabilities: Keeping
Americans safe from the threat of bioterrorism has been a priority
since the outset of the Administration. Since 2001, over $10 billion
has been invested across all aspects of biodefense -- and NIH
bioterrorism funding alone has increased by more than 3,000 percent.
The President and the Administration have:
- Approved "Biodefense for the 21st Century" -- the first-ever
national strategy against bio threats -- that provides a roadmap
for developing comprehensive U.S. biodefense capabilities.
- Proposed and signed into law Project BioShield, which provides new
tools to acquire medical countermeasures protecting Americans against a
chemical, biological, radiological, or nuclear attack. Project
BioShield is a comprehensive effort that will ensure that resources
($5.6 billion) are available to pay for "next-generation" medical
countermeasures, expedite the conduct of NIH research and development
on medical countermeasures based on the most promising recent
scientific discoveries, and give FDA the ability to make promising
treatments quickly available in emergency situations.
- Expanded international efforts to secure and keep dangerous
biological materials out of the hands of terrorists.
- Deployed early warning environmental sampling systems -- the
BioWatch program -- making it possible to detect biological
weapons attacks against major cities. To date, the BioWatch program
has analyzed more than one million samples.
- Increased biodefense medical research and development within the
Department of Health and Human Services to more than $1.5 billion per
year since 2003, thirty times the investment in 2001.
- Expanded funding five-fold for the Strategic National Stockpile of
medicines for treating victims of terror attacks, ensuring that "push
packages" can be anywhere in the United States within 12 hours.
- Stockpiled enough smallpox vaccine for every American and
vaccinated over 600,000 members of the armed services.
Trained hundreds of thousands of first responders to recognize and
respond to the effects of WMD.
- Created the National Biodefense Analysis and Countermeasure Center
to systematically apply, for the first time, cutting-edge science
to the study of classified intelligence about foreign weapons programs
and develop first-class forensics in support of law enforcement
investigations of biological crimes.
- Initiated a major new agriculture and food program to defend
against diseases, pests, or poisons that could intentionally by
delivered by acts of terrorism.
- Protecting Critical Infrastructure: The Administration has made unprecedented efforts to protect America's critical infrastructure
against the threat of terrorism -- including strengthened security for
chemical plants, nuclear facilities, and other potential targets of
terrorists. The President's FY 2005 budget includes $864 million for
DHS information analysis and critical infrastructure protection -- a
seven-fold increase over FY 2002 levels.
Progress in the Global War on Terror