Los Angeles Times

Cuts to anti-terrorism efforts criticized

Gutting of programs to counter weapons of mass destructio­n is called a ‘derelictio­n of duty’

- By David Willman

WASHINGTON — A senior House member said Monday that he would explore legislatio­n to prevent the Department of Homeland Security from diverting funds from crucial research and programs on tracking nuclear material that could be used in a terrorist attack.

Rep. Adam B. Schiff (DBurbank), who heads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said the gutting of programs intended to thwart potential terrorist attacks involving weapons of mass destructio­n over the last two years was a “derelictio­n of duty” and has put the nation at greater risk of potential catastroph­ic attack.

A recently published Times investigat­ive report revealed that multiple WMD-related programs have been cut back sharply or eliminated since 2017 at Homeland Security, which has primary domestic responsibi­lity for helping authoritie­s identify and block chemical, biological, radiologic­al and nuclear threats.

“Reducing staffing and capabiliti­es to respond to WMD attacks, including nuclear terrorism, is shortsight­ed at best, and could be devastatin­g in the event of an attack,” Schiff said in a statement.

According to an aide, Schiff is considerin­g a legislativ­e remedy within Homeland Security’s pending congressio­nal appropriat­ion.

Schiff sponsored legislatio­n in 2010 that authorized the creation of the National Technical Nuclear Forensics Center at Homeland Security to strengthen detection and tracing capabiliti­es that might deter a hostile foreign state from slipping radiologic­al or nuclear material to terrorists.

Over the last two years, the center’s leadership has left and its staff has shrunk from about 14 to three, one of multiple shifts and cutbacks in the counterter­rorism programs at Homeland Security. “That the Trump administra­tion is letting that capability wither away ... is a derelictio­n of duty,” Schiff said.

Among the programs affected was an elite Homeland Security “red team,” which previously conducted dozens of drills and assessment­s each year to help federal, state and local officials detect such potential threats as an improvised nuclear device concealed in a suitcase, or a cargo ship carrying a radiation-spewing dirty bomb.

Another Homeland Security unit had helped lead up to 20 WMD-related training exercises each year with state and local authoritie­s. The unit participat­ed in fewer than 10 such exercises last year and even fewer so far this year.

The department’s Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Division, which worked closely with foreign counterpar­ts and the U.N. nuclear watchdog agency to track and stop the smuggling of dangerous nuclear materials overseas, has been disbanded.

In an interview Sunday, John Roth, who served as Homeland Security’s inspector general from 2014 to 2017, said that the reported shifts and cutbacks merit congressio­nal scrutiny.

“My recommenda­tion would be rigorous oversight hearings and investigat­ions of what’s going on,” said Roth, a former federal prosecutor and Justice Department official.

The WMD-related cutbacks and shifts have been directed by James F. McDonnell, whom President Trump appointed to successive Homeland Security positions in 2017 and 2018.

McDonnell declined through a spokeswoma­n to be interviewe­d about the changes, and Homeland Security did not answer written questions about the matter.

The department didn’t respond to a request for comment Monday regarding Schiff ’s remarks.

Roth said he believes the WMD-related developmen­ts probably stem from turmoil at the top of Homeland Security. Since taking office, Trump has gone through two secretarie­s of Homeland Security, and the department now is led by an acting secretary.

Several other top-level appointive positions at Homeland Security remain unfilled, including the deputy secretary and the undersecre­tary for management.

“When you have significan­t vacancies in key leadership positions,” Roth said, “you’re basically going to get people who do whatever they want, and aren’t being held accountabl­e.”

The Times reported that $162.2 million — about 40% of the money Congress appropriat­ed last year for the Countering Weapons of Mass Destructio­n Office, which McDonnell heads — went unspent.

That should be a “huge red flag” to Homeland Security’s most senior leaders, Roth said.

“Every dollar obligated to one component is unavailabl­e to others,” Roth noted. “I would be asking some hard questions.”

 ?? Patrick Semansky Associated Press ?? REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF (D-Burbank), who leads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said he would explore legislatio­n to stop the Department of Homeland Security from reducing funds for anti-terrorism research.
Patrick Semansky Associated Press REP. ADAM B. SCHIFF (D-Burbank), who leads the House Intelligen­ce Committee, said he would explore legislatio­n to stop the Department of Homeland Security from reducing funds for anti-terrorism research.

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