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Politics : I Will Continue to Continue, to Pretend....

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To: Sully- who wrote (13717)9/3/2005 2:04:34 AM
From: Sully-   of 35834
 
A bit of perspective

Power Line

James Robbins at NRO debunks the notion that New Orleans suffered because of the deployment of National Guard units in Iraq.

Robbins notes that, according to the chief of the National Guard Bureau, 75 percent of the Army and Air National Guard are available nationwide and the federal government has agreed since the conflict in Iraq started not to mobilize more than 50 percent of Guard assets in any given state, in order to leave sufficient resources for governors to respond to emergencies. There's no evidence that, with 750,000 guardsmen in the U.S., and two-thirds of the Louisiana Guard available, the deployment in Iraq is causing suffering in New Orleans or elsewhere along the Gulf Coast. In any case, the notion that, in a time of war, we should set keep higher percentages of our Guard on the sidelines just in case there's a natural disaster of unprecedented proportions seems difficult to defend.

Moreover, in Robbins' view the actual response of the Guard has been "commendable." He notes that National Guard troops were mobilized immediately and 7,500 troops were on the ground within 24 hours. And, in response to allegations by carping from the New York Times of a "man-made disaster," he points out the following:
     The DOD response is well ahead of the 1992 Hurricane 
Andrew timetable. Back then, the support request took
nine days to crawl through the bureaucracy. The reaction
this time was less than three days officially, and DOD
had been pre-staging assets in anticipation of the aid
request from the moment Katrina hit.
DOD cannot act
independently of course; the Federal Emergency Management
Agency (FEMA) is the lead agency. Requests for assistance
have to be routed from local officials
through FEMA to
U.S. Northern Command and then to the necessary
components. In practice, this means state officials have
to assess damage and determine relief requirements; FEMA
has to come up with a plan for integrating the military
into the overall effort; DOD has to begin to pack and
move the appropriate materiel, and deploy sufficient
forces. This has all largely been or is being
accomplished.
Robbins concludes that, although a disaster of this magnitude is bound to be politicized, "it is hard to understand what more should, or realistically could have been done up to this point."

powerlineblog.com

nationalreview.com

ngb.army.mil

nytimes.com@wiNJ
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