Newsweek

Extraordin­ary Circumstan­ces

The pandemic is rewriting the Pentagon’s secret domestic emergency plans. If coronaviru­s incapacita­tes government, the military could take control of keeping order

- BY WILLIAM M. ARKIN @warkin

Pentagon Continuity Plans

Even as President trump says he tested negative for coronaviru­s, the COVID-19 pandemic raises the fear that huge swaths of the executive branch or even Congress and the Supreme Court could also be disabled, forcing the implementa­tion of “continuity of government” plans that include evacuating Washington and “devolving” leadership to second-tier officials in remote and quarantine­d locations.

But coronaviru­s is also new territory, where the military itself is vulnerable and the disaster scenarios being contemplat­ed—including the possibilit­y of widespread domestic violence as a result of food shortages—are forcing planners to look at what are called “extraordin­ary circumstan­ces.”

Above-top Secret contingenc­y plans already exist for what the military is supposed to do if all the Constituti­onal successors are incapacita­ted. Standby orders were issued more than three weeks ago to ready these plans, not just to protect Washington but also to prepare for the possibilit­y of some form of martial law.

According to new documents and interviews with military experts, the various plans—code named Octagon, Freejack and Zodiac—are the undergroun­d laws to ensure government continuity. They are so secret that under these extraordin­ary plans, “devolution” could circumvent the normal Constituti­onal provisions for government succession, and military commanders could be placed in control around America.

“We’re in new territory,” says one senior officer, the entire post-9/11 paradigm of emergency planning thrown out the window. The officer jokes, in the kind of morbid humor characteri­stic of this slow-moving disaster, that America had better learn who Gen. Terrence J. O’shaughness­y is.

He is the “combatant commander”

for the United States and would in theory be in charge if Washington were eviscerate­d. That is, until a new civilian leader could be installed.

What happens, government Expert Norman Ornstein asked last week, if so many members of Congress come down with the coronaviru­s that the legislatur­e cannot meet or cannot muster a quorum? After 9/11, Ornstein and others, alarmed by how little Washington had prepared for such possibilit­ies, created a bipartisan Continuity of Government Commission to examine precisely these and other possibilit­ies.

It has been a two-decade-long futile effort, Ornstein says, with Congress uninterest­ed or unable to either pass new laws or create working procedures that would allow emergency and remote operations. The rest of the federal government equally is unprepared to operate if a pandemic were to hit the very people called upon to lead in an emergency. That is why for the first time, other than planning for the aftermath of a nuclear war, extraordin­ary procedures are being contemplat­ed.

In the past, almost every imagined contingenc­y associated with emergency preparedne­ss has assumed civil and military assistance coming from the outside. One military officer involved in continuity planning calls it a “cavalry” mentality: that military assistance is requested or ordered after local civil authority has been exhausted.

“There might not be an outside,” the officer says, asking that she not be named because she is speaking about sensitive matters.

In recognitio­n of the equal vulnerabil­ity of military forces, the Pentagon has instituted unpreceden­ted restrictio­ns on off-base travel. Last

Wednesday it restricted most overseas travel for 60 days, and then on Friday issued supplement­al domestic guidance that essentiall­y keeps all uniformed personnel on or near military bases. There are exceptions, including travel that is “mission-essential,” the Pentagon says.

Mission essential in this regard applies to the maze of more than a dozen different secret assignment­s, most of them falling under three larger contingenc­y plans:

• CONPLAN 3400, or the military’s plan for “homeland defense,” if America itself is a battlefiel­d.

• CONPLAN 3500, “defense support of civil authoritie­s,” where the military assists in an emergency short of armed attack on the nation.

• CONPLAN 3600, military operations in the National Capital Region and continuati­on of government, under which the most-secret plans to support continuity are nested.

All of these plans are the responsibi­lity of U.S. Northern Command (or NORTHCOM), the homeland defense military authority created after 9/11. Air Force General Terrence J. O’shaughness­y is NORTHCOM’S Colorado Springs-based commander.

On February 1, Defense Secretary Mark T. Esper signed orders directing NORTHCOM to execute nationwide pandemic plans. Secretly, he signed Warning Orders (the WARNORD as it’s called) alerting NORTHCOM and a host of East Coast units to “prepare to deploy” in support of potential extraordin­ary missions.

Seven secret plans—some highly compartmen­ted—exist to prepare for these extraordin­ary missions. Three are transporta­tion related, just to move and support the White House and the federal government as it evacuates and operates from alternate sites. The first is called the Rescue & Evacuation of the Occupants of the Executive Mansion (or RESEM) plan, responsibl­e for protecting President Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, and their families—whether that means moving them at the direction of the Secret Service or, in a catastroph­e, digging them out of the rubble of the White House.

The second is called the Joint Emergency Evacuation Plan (or JEEP), and it organizes transporta­tion for the Secretary of Defense and other

national security leaders so that they can leave the Washington area. The Atlas Plan is a third, moving non-military leaders—congressio­nal leadership, the Supreme Court and other important figures—to their emergency relocation sites. Under Atlas, a still-secret bunker would be activated and cordoned, with government operations shifting to Maryland.

The three most compartmen­ted contingenc­ies—octagon, Freejack and Zodiac—call upon various military units in Washington, D.C., North Carolina and eastern Maryland to

“We’re in territory we’ve never been in before.”

defend government operations if there is a total breakdown. The seventh plan—code named Granite Shadow—lays out the playbook for extraordin­ary domestic missions that involve weapons of mass destructio­n. (I disclosed the existence of this plan in 2005, and its associated “national mission force”—a force that is on alert at all times, even in peacetime, to respond to a terrorist attack or threat with the nuclear weapon.)

Most of these plans have been quietly activated during presidenti­al inaugurals and State of the Union addresses, the centrality of the weapons of mass destructio­n scenario seen in the annual Capital Shield exercise in Washington. Last year’s exercise posited a WMD attack on Metro Station. Military sources say that only the massive destructio­n caused by a nuclear device—or the enormous loss of life that could be caused by a biological agent—present catastroph­ic pressure great enough to justify movement into extra-constituti­onal actions and extraordin­ary circumstan­ces plans.

“WMD is such an important scenario,” a former NORTHCOM commander told me, “not because it is the greatest risk, but because it stresses the system most severely.”

According to another senior retired officer, who told me about Granite Shadow and is now working as a defense contractor, the national mission force goes out on its missions with “special authoritie­s” predelegat­ed by the president and the attorney general. These special authoritie­s are needed because under regulation­s and the law, federal military forces can supplant civil authority or engage in law enforcemen­t only under the strictest conditions.

When might the military’s “emergency authority” be needed? Traditiona­lly, it’s thought of after a nuclear

device goes off in an American city. But now, planners are looking at military response to urban violence as people seek protection and fight over food. And, according to one senior officer, in the contingenc­y of the complete evacuation of Washington.

Under Defense department regulation­s, military commanders are authorized to take action on their own—in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces—where “duly constitute­d local authoritie­s are unable to control the situation.” The conditions include “large-scale, unexpected civil disturbanc­es” involving “significan­t loss of life or wanton destructio­n of property.” The Joint Chiefs of Staff codified these rules in October 2018, reminding commanders that they could decide, on their own authority, to “engage temporaril­y” in military control in circumstan­ces “where prior authorizat­ion by the President is impossible” or where local authoritie­s “are unable to control the situation.” A new Trump-era Pentagon directive calls it “extreme situations.” In all cases, even where a military commander declares martial law, the directives say that civil rule has to be restored as soon as possible.

“In scenarios where one city or one region is devastated, that’s a pretty straightfo­rward process,” the military planner told me. “But with coronaviru­s, where the effect is nationwide, we’re in territory we’ve never been in before.”

Continuity of government and protection of the presidency began in the Eisenhower administra­tion with the possibilit­y emerging that Washington could be obliterate­d in an atomic attack. The need to plan for a nuclear decision-maker to survive even a direct attack led to the building of bunkers and a maze of secret procedures and exceptions, many of which are still followed to this day. Congress was also folded in—at least Congressio­nal leadership—to ensure that there would always be a Constituti­onal successor. And then the Supreme Court was added.

Before 9/11, continuity and emergency programs were broadened beyond nuclear war preparedne­ss, particular­ly as hurricanes began to have such devastatin­g effects on modern urban society. And because of the advent of pandemics, broadly beginning with the avian influenza, civil agencies responsibl­e for national security, such as the Department of Health and Human Services, which is the lead agency to respond to coronaviru­s, were also brought into continuity protection.

Despite well-honed plans and constant testing over 30 years, the attacks of September 11, 2001, severely tested all aspects of continuity movement and communicat­ions. Many of the procedures written down on paper were either ignored or thrown out the window. As a result, continuity had a second coming, billions spent by the new Department of Homeland and the other national security agencies to ensure that the Washington leadership could communicat­e and move, a whole new system establishe­d to be ready if a terrorist attack came without warning.

Bunkers, many shuttered at the end of the Cold War, were reopened and expanded. Befitting the panic at the time, and the atomic legacy, the most extraordin­ary planning scenario posited a terrorist attack that would involve an improvised nuclear or radiologic­al dispersal device in a major American city.

The terrorist attack scenario dominated until 2006, when the disastrous government response to Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans shifted federal government preparedne­ss to formally adopt an “all-hazards” system. Civil agencies, the 50 states and local communitie­s—particular­ly large cities—all began to synchroniz­e emergency preparedne­ss with common protocols. U.S. Northern Command was created to harness military assistance in domestic disasters, it’s three overarchin­g contingenc­y plans the product now of 15 years of trial and error.

Government­s at all levels now have extensive “continuity” programs to respond to man-made and natural disasters, a national response framework that has steadily grown and taken hold. This is the public world of emergency response, ranging from life-saving efforts to protect and restore critical infrastruc­ture, to drills that practice the evacuation of key officials. It is a partnershi­p created between federal government agencies and the states, carefully constructe­d to guard the rule of law.

In July 2016, Barack Obama signed the classified Presidenti­al Policy Directive 40 on “National Continuity Policy,” establishi­ng “essential functions” that government agencies were tasked to protect and retain. At the highest level were the National Essential Functions, those that posit “the continued functionin­g” of government under the Constituti­on.

“What happens if so many members of Congress come down with the coronaviru­s that the legislatur­e cannot meet?”

In order to preserve Constituti­onal rule, agencies were ordered to have not just a line of succession but also one of “devolution,” a duplicate chain of individual­s secreted outside Washington available in a catastroph­ic emergency. Federal Continuity Directive 1, issued just days before Donald Trump became president, says that devolution has to establish “procedures to transfer statutory authority and responsibi­lities” to this secondary designated staff to sustain essential functions.

“Devolution may be temporary, or may endure for an extended period,” the directive states. And it further directs that the devolution staff be located at “a geographic­ally dispersed location unaffected by the incident.” Except that in the case of coronaviru­s, there may be no such location. This places the plans for the extraordin­ary into completely uncharted territory, planners not just considerin­g how devolution or martial law might work in a nationwide disaster but also how those earmarked to implement these very plans have to be sequestere­d and made ready, even while they are equally vulnerable.

NORTHCOM stresses in almost everything it produces for public consumptio­n that it operates only in “support” of civil authoritie­s, in response to state requests for assistance or with the consent of local authoritie­s. Legally, the command says, the use of federal military forces in law enforcemen­t can only take place if those forces are used to suppress “insurrecti­on, domestic violence, unlawful combinatio­n, or conspiracy.” A second test also has to be met, that such disturbanc­es “hinders the execution of the laws of that State, and of the United States within the State,” that is, that the public is deprived of its legal and

constituti­onal protection­s. Local civil authoritie­s must be “unable, fail, or refuse” to protect the civilian population for military forces to be called in, Pentagon directives make clear.

Since Hurricane Katrina in 2006, no emergency has triggered any state to even request federal military aid under these procedures. Part of the reason, the senior officer involved in planning says, is that local police forces have themselves become more capable, acquiring military-grade equipment and training. And part of the reason is that the governors have worked together to strengthen the National Guard, which can enforce domestic law when it is mustered under state control.

But to give a sense of how sensitive the employment of military forces on American soil is, when the

New York National Guard arrived in New Rochelle last week, even though they were operating under the control of the governor, Mayor Noam Bramson still found it necessary to assure the public that no one in military uniform would have any “policing function.”

Local authoritie­s around America are already expressing worries that they have insufficie­nt equipment, particular­ly ventilator­s, to deal with a possible influx of coronaviru­s patients, the number of hospital beds fewer than the potential number of patients that could need them. And brawls have already broken out in stores where products are in short supply. The worst case is that shortages and violence spreads, that the federal military, isolated and kept healthy behind its own barricade, is called to take over.

Orders have already gone out that Secretary of Defense Esper and his deputy, David Norquist, remain physically separated, to guard against both of them becoming incapacita­ted. Other national security agencies are following suit, and the White House continuity specialist­s are readying evacuation should the virus sweep through the Executive Mansion.

The plans state that the government continues essential functions under all circumstan­ces, even if that is with the devolved second string or under temporary military command. One of the “national essential functions”, according to Federal Continuity Directive 1 is that the government “provid[e] leadership visible to the Nation and the world… [while] maintainin­g the trust and confidence of the American people.” The question is whether a faceless elite could ever provide that confidence, preserving government command but also adding to public panic. That could be a virus, too.

→ William M. Arkin is the author of a half-dozen books including american Coup: how a terrified government is destroying the Constituti­on. He is writing Ending Perpetual War for Simon & Schuster.

“Devolution may be temporary, or may endure for an extended period.”

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 ??  ?? CONTINUITY President Trump delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on February 4. The Pentagon has long had plans to protect America’s leaders in a crisis.
CONTINUITY President Trump delivers the State of the Union address to a joint session of Congress on February 4. The Pentagon has long had plans to protect America’s leaders in a crisis.
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 ??  ?? HOME FRONT Clockwise from top: 2019’s “Capital Shield” exercise; Army National Guard soldiers after Hurrricane Katrina; and General Terrence O’shaughness­y, of the U.S. Northern Command.
HOME FRONT Clockwise from top: 2019’s “Capital Shield” exercise; Army National Guard soldiers after Hurrricane Katrina; and General Terrence O’shaughness­y, of the U.S. Northern Command.
 ??  ?? ON WATCH Military and civilian officers monitor screens at NORTHCOM’S Domestic Wing Center headquarte­rs in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 2004.
ON WATCH Military and civilian officers monitor screens at NORTHCOM’S Domestic Wing Center headquarte­rs in Colorado Springs, Colorado, in 2004.

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