|
Keynote Address
Science at a Time of National Emergency: Be Bold,
Think Big, Think Out of the Box
Martin Apple
President and CEO, Council of Scientific Society Presidents
(PDF
version of the keynote address for printing)
I will address five key points:
- We are at the nexus of tense coexistence of
multiple eras of societal evolution and of disparate generations
of our people; we must work together to solve several major national
emergencies, not just 9-11.
- The role of the university is to create enduring
value; we ensure this by being the fountain of really bold new
thinking under a renewed social contract.
- Everyone loves a tax cut, but did Washington
really misplace $5 trillion dollars, and what does it mean for
science in the coming decade?
- Science and secrecy are polar opposites,
and their growing tension needs resolution now.
- Homeland security requires a new defense paradigm,
a streamlined, high agility, increasingly competitive operational
system and different sets of expertise to address prevention as
well as mitigation.
What Does it Mean to be at a Time of National
Emergency?
World leadership requires us to lead the world
to a better tomorrow. Because of this, we are indeed in a time of
national emergency, but not just a post 9-11 response. There are
several national emergencies in the United States today; they are
all important and many interact. Each one undermines our future
and many challenge our right to lead.
Here are some examples:
- We repeatedly fail to plan and sustain an
effort for sustainable energy autonomy.
- Our children finish high school at the bottom
of the world in math and science.
- In many cities, a majority of births occur
in one-parent families.
- We squander unique opportunities provided
by the last decade of economic growth.
- Addicting street drugs and sexually transmitted
diseases are runaway epidemics.
- Our personal privacy and Constitutional rights
are fast becoming historic relics.
- Justly judged guilty and sentenced to death
has become "oops, another mistake."
- Half our citizens ignore all evidence and
condemn the teaching of evolution as "heresy."
- Although the global standoff on whether we
should annihilate all life on Earth has ended (Cold War), it has
now evolved into perpetual tribal warfare, with us as the world's
policeman.
- We overfish coastal areas, causing catastrophic
eco-collapses, while invasive species remake or destroy our landscape,
and limit its future productivity.
- Fresh, clean water is moving from being a
commodity to being a crisis and we despoil the air, the water,
the land, to avoid the expense of converting the nation to sustainable
systems, and thus severely limit the future of our children.
- Networks of smart, resourceful, imaginative,
impatient, fanatic murderers from the pre-industrial age devastate
the infidels who dare to live happily in the post-industrial age.
What is the Role of Universities?
Society has problems, while universities have
departments. Scientists need to be absorbed in many pressing issues,
not just the latest problem of national security. It is time for
universities to assert their leadership. While all our institutions
and commercial enterprises operate in the present, we, in contrast,
are the constituency for the future. Many universities are giving
up their most useful role - the perpetual stimulation of new ideas.
This is where breakthroughs happen. Universities are becoming redirected
as a temporary answer to today's corporate R&D malaise, serving
short-term profits. We should reach the pinnacle of our journey
as universities by adding the maximum value to society. Too often
we confuse success with excellence, and stop along the way measuring
proxies of value (e.g., awards, money, rankings) and then become
arrested into the pursuit of these proxies instead of value.
We live in a period in which we have a contentious
interaction of coexisting pre-agrarian, agrarian, newly industrializing,
industrial and postindustrial societies around the world. At the
same time, we have colliding generations in the U.S. (named by Lynne
Lancaster): the traditionalists, baby boomers, generation-X and
the new millennials - each shaped by a wholly different history
and expressing a strongly held, very disparate, world view. Each
appears confident that they are right, and the other folks will
"see the light" as they have, in due time.
Thus we are at a time in which the universities
are challenged to assert their leadership, to experiment with very
new ideas, to lead - not follow - the evolution of our free society.
Adding one more national emergency, even this one, is never a time
to fail in this obligation to our society; instead it makes the
case for doing so even more compelling.
Now is the time for each of you to build the
intellectual underpinnings for the long-term capacity to be a free
and just society. Each university should be pursuing a bold, imaginative,
even startling research agenda.
This is the time to examine and clarify these
questions: What should be the twenty-first-century social contract
between society and universities?
between government and universities?
.between industry and universities?
Between virtual
education and personal interaction?
Contributions of Science
What is the mission of the twenty-first century
university? How do we define it? When will we put behind us the
elements of the industrial revolution that no longer fit? When will
we institute, and when should we begin to replace, the elements
of the information society?
Scientists need to develop and widely communicate
the grand challenges of the twenty-first century. All science is
foundational. From this foundation, we generate more new ideas and
knowledge and can create new amenities. Scientists, in the everyday
course of doing research and inquiring into Nature, create much
change. The ability to transplant genes, grow whole mammals from
any cell nucleus, and hundreds of other discoveries, occur far more
rapidly than the ability of our institutions to cope with the implications
of the changes created.
Scientists have generated considerable value
to the society. In the twentieth century we saw so many revolutions
that they often overtook us. A century ago, we did not imagine such
advances as these, but they were achieved:
- synthetic hormones and antibiotics
- producing human insulin in bacteria
- humans living in a space station far from
earth
- cracking the universal genetic code
- conceiving a baby in a test tube
- discovering lasers and NMR and using them
as medical lifesaver
- the transistor, personal computers
- walking on the moon
- conducting electricity without resistance
- the Internet
- storing an encyclopedia on a credit card
- flying a jet across the ocean in 2 hours
- live broadcasts by color TV from around the
world in real time
- transplanting hearts from the dead to the
living
- remote digital copiers and cell phones
Scientists save lives, create jobs, and provide
a unique workforce that can overtake our challenges. Thus scientists
are always a constituency for the future. We live at the edge of
knowledge and can have the thrill of stepping off into the unseen
and the unknown - the future - every day. We can envision the future
we would like to create and it is exciting. We will make important
new discoveries that benefit humankind. We will create new sciences
never thought of before.
Grand Challenges of the Twenty-first Century
Some overarching goals for our future are:
- Discovering new truths of nature;
- Enhancing the value of universities to society;
- Converting the nation, even the world into
entirely sustainable systems;
- Developing all the human cognitive capabilities
and potentials to learn;
- Healthier lives, built on pre-emptive prevention,
rather than treatment, of disease;
- Stimulating our economic engines and inventing
new economic paradigms that prosper without further population
growth and environmental damage;
- Developing affordable, sustainable, distributed,
universal energy autonomy;
- Understanding and fully developing affirmative
and beneficial human behavior.
Federal Resources
The White House and the Congress told the American
people last year that we would accumulate a $5 trillion surplus
in the next decade and that we should pay down the debt and return
one-third of it in tax cuts now. Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) data projected that over the next decade we would spend $800
billion in interest on the National Debt, but then it would be fully
paid off. So we voted to cut taxes only to find out that it was
not true, and we will be saddled with debt interest payments of
$1.8 trillion over the next decade, and the debt will still be there,
and the growing government debt is competing with business expansion
for new capital. Last year's Bush budget left no margin for error
in forecasting the next decade of surpluses. If we look over the
last four decades of deficits and surpluses, covering the Johnson,
Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush-I, Clinton and Bush-II eras, we
find that war and defense were not the factors that produced the
largest federal deficits; in the only two cases that the deficit
spun out of control, the Reagan-Bush-I and Bush-II periods, it was
from enacting a huge tax cut that was not required to be linked
to actual federal revenue gains to prevent huge deficits.
2003 Federal Budget: Revenues
and Allocations
| |
FY 2001
|
FY 2002
|
FY 2003
|
| US GDP |
$9,745
|
~$10,360
|
~$10,920
|
The burden of tax payments is not on corporations
in America, but on us.
2003 Federal Budget: Federal Revenues
| Tax Burden on Individuals: |
$ in Billions
|
| Individual income taxes |
1,100
|
| Payroll taxes |
720
|
| Excise taxes |
75
|
| Estate taxes |
30
|
| Miscellaneous |
45
|
| Tax Burden on Corporations: |
|
| Corporate and profits |
220
|
| Customs |
25
|
| Total Federal Tax Revenues |
2,050
|
notes from Martin Apple
The non-defense appropriations are the only real
discretion that the White House and Congress have in determining
how the huge federal revenues are spent.
Allocations of Proposed Federal
Budget
| |
FY2001
|
FY2002
|
FY2003 estimate ($ in billions)
|
| Federal Budget |
$1,865
|
$2,050
|
$2,130
|
| Tax Receipts |
1,990
|
1,945
|
2,050
|
Allocations:
Entitlements
(Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security)
|
1,056
|
1,189
|
1,233
|
| Debt Interest |
206
|
178
|
181
|
|
Discretionary - Total
Defense
Non-Defense
|
657
309
348
|
741
348
393
|
789
379
410
|
notes from Martin Apple
Did Washington really lose $5 trillion of our
planned surplus in less than 2 years?
Ten Year Real Surplus (excluding
social security) in Trillions of Dollars
|
White House Report Date
|
Projection for 2002-2011
|
Update for 2003-2012
|
| April 2001 |
+$3.046 Trillion
|
|
| August 2001 |
+$0.575 Trillion
|
|
| February 2002 |
-$1.650 Trillion
|
-$1.464 Trillion
|
Data from OMB
When you manage to lose $5 trillion, it is quite
appropriate to demand to know where it went. We all assume, based
on the deliberate daily Washington press spin that it has gone into
our new defense requirements. But that turns out not to be the truth.
For example, analysis of the OMB's own data shows that the big tax
cut created about 45% of the new projected deficit already, the
slowing economy accounted for about 25-30%, and all other legislative
actions - including all defense buildups - accounted for only about
15-17% of the deficit.
Historical Defense Buildups as
Percents of GDP
| Buildup Episode |
Prior Low
|
Buildup Peak
|
Increase
|
| World War II |
1.7% (1940)
|
37.9% (1944)
|
36.2%
|
| Korea |
3.6% (1948)
|
14.1% (1953)
|
10.5%
|
| Vietnam |
7.4% (1965)
|
9.4% (1968)
|
2.0%
|
| Reagan |
4.6% (1979)
|
6.2% (1986)
|
1.6%
|
| Current |
3.0% (2001)
|
3.5% (2003)
|
0.5%
|
Prepared by the staff of the House Budget
Committee
Source: OMB 2/26/02
In addition, we see a growing squeeze on discretionary
spending.
High Growth
Sectors are Increasingly Squeezing the Federal Budget ($ billion)
| Federal Outlays |
1970
|
1980
|
1990
|
2000
|
2003 est.
|
| Entitlements |
$61
|
$262
|
$568
|
$951
|
$1159
|
| Defense |
$82
|
$135
|
$300
|
$295
|
$379
|
Projected
for FY 2003 Federal Science and Technology
[Discovery of new knowledge]
Proposed Budget - $billions
| Agency |
FY 2001
|
FY 2002
|
FY 2003
|
| NIH |
$20.4
|
$23.4
|
$27.3
|
| NASA |
7.8
|
8.1
|
8.7
|
| Energy |
4.9
|
5.1
|
5.0
|
| Defense |
4.9
|
4.9
|
4.9
|
| NSF |
4.4
|
4.8
|
5.0
|
| Agriculture (+USFS) |
1.9
|
1.9
|
1.9
|
Commerce
(OAR+NOAA+NIST) |
0.8
|
1.0
|
0.9
|
| Interior |
0.9
|
0.9
|
0.9
|
| EPA |
0.7
|
0.7
|
0.8
|
| Transportation |
0.5
|
0.7
|
0.5
|
| Education |
0.3
|
0.4
|
0.4
|
| TOTAL |
$48.1
|
$52.3
|
$57.0
|
Not adjusted for inflation
notes from Martin Apple
Federal Research Trends (NAS and NSF Data)
The 1990s economy prospered, the 1990s federal
budget surplus was generated, but
Fields with Severe Funding Cuts
since 1993
| Academic Disciplines |
1993-1997
|
Academic Disciplines |
1993-1999
|
| Physics |
-27.8%
|
Physics |
-24.6%
|
| Electrical Engineering |
-35.0%
|
Chemical Engineering |
-25.9%
|
| Mechanical Engineering |
-49.8%
|
Electrical Engineering |
-29.0%
|
| Geology |
-20.1%
|
Mechanical Engineering |
-53.9%
|
| Agriculture Sciences |
-17.1%
|
Geology |
-25.9%
|
Full-Time
Graduate Students in many Key Sciences has Declined
| Field of Research |
1993
|
1999
|
% Change
|
| Physics |
|
|
|
| Graduate Students |
12,397
|
9,661
|
-22.1%
|
| Federally Supported
Graduate Students |
4,916
|
3,807
|
-22.6%
|
| Federally Supported
Research Assistants |
4,103
|
3,248
|
-20.8%
|
| Geosciences |
|
|
|
| Graduate Students |
5,970
|
5,239
|
-12.2%
|
| Federally Supported
Graduate Students |
1,647
|
1,263
|
-23.3%
|
| Federally Supported
Research Assistants |
1,338
|
1,040
|
-22.3%
|
| Ocean Sciences |
|
|
|
| Graduate Students |
2,177
|
2,130
|
-2.2%
|
| Federally Supported
Graduate Students |
1,037
|
932
|
-10.1%
|
| Federally Supported
Research Assistants |
865
|
788
|
-8.9%
|
| Mathematical
Sciences |
|
|
|
| Graduate Students |
14,530
|
11,792
|
-18.8%
|
| Federally Supported
Graduate Students |
1,474
|
1,104
|
-25.1%
|
| Federally Supported
Research Assistants |
736
|
594
|
-19.3%
|
| Materials Engineering |
|
|
|
| Graduate Students |
4,249
|
3,537
|
-16.8%
|
| Federally Supported
Graduate Students |
1,605
|
1,336
|
-16.8%
|
| Federally Supported
Research Assistants |
1,393
|
1,202
|
-13.7%
|
Data from NAS study
What Does This Portend
for US Science?
New projections by the
Bush Administration will have profound implications for our twenty-first
century world leadership and the growth of scientific research.
Preliminary Agency Projections 5
Years Ahead
$ billions of constant dollars
| AGENCY |
FY 2002
|
%Change by FY 2007
|
| NIH |
$22.8 BN
|
+16%
(most of it this year)
|
| NASA |
10.2 BN
|
+9%
(most of it this year)
|
| DOD
(6.1+6.2+6.3) |
10.0 BN
|
+9%
|
| Energy |
8.4 BN
|
-2%
|
| NSF |
3.5 BN
|
+3%
|
| Agriculture |
2.3 BN
|
-7%
|
| Commerce
|
1.1 BN
|
-1%
|
| Interior |
0.7 BN
|
-6%
|
| Transportation |
0,8 BN
|
-6%
|
| EPA |
0.6 BN
|
+6%
|
| |
|
|
| Non-DOD,
minus NIH |
$26.9 BN
|
+1.6%
|
Congressional research appropriations are concentrated into eight
sub-committees that make all discretionary financing decisions.
The members of these subcommittees will decide soon. They need to
hear from the science and university communities about the consequences.
| Subcommittee that Decides |
Total Spending
($ billions)
|
Research Investment
|
| Labor, HHS, Education |
$131 BN
|
$27.7 BN
|
| VA, HUD, Independent Agencies |
93 BN
|
15.8 BN
|
| Defense (6.1+6.2+6.3) |
360 BN
|
10.0 BN
|
| Energy and Water |
25 BN
|
7.6 BN
|
| Agriculture |
17 BN
|
2.0 BN
|
| Interior |
20 BN
|
1.9 BN
|
| Commerce, Justice |
41 BN
|
1.2 BN
|
| Transportation |
20 BN
|
0.7 BN
|
Notes from Martin Apple
Why Do We Believe We Cannot Fall Behind
in Crucial Leadership?
Recent examples tell us a different story.
Supercomputers
| Year |
Fastest Computer |
Micro-Processors,
if used
|
Number of processors
|
Speed in Gigaflops*
|
| 2002 |
NEC Earth Simulator |
|
5,104
|
35,600
|
| 2001 |
I.B.M. ASCI White-Pacific |
IBM SP Power 3
|
7,424
|
7,226
|
| 2000 |
IBM ASCI White-Pacific |
IBM SP Power 3
|
7,424
|
7,226
|
| 1999 |
Intel ASCI Red |
Intel Pentium II Xion
|
9,632
|
2,379
|
| 1998 |
IBM ASCI Blue-Pacific |
IBM SP 604E
|
5,808
|
2,144
|
| 1997 |
Intel ASCI Option Red |
200 MHz Pentium Pro
|
9,152
|
1,338
|
| 1996 |
Hitachi CP-PACS |
|
2,048
|
368
|
| 1995 |
Intel Paragon XP/S MP |
|
6,768
|
281
|
| 1994 |
Intel Paragon XP/S MP |
|
6,768
|
281
|
| 1993 |
Fujitsu NWT |
|
4
|
20
|
| 1991 |
Fjuitsu VP 2600/10 |
|
1
|
4
|
* Billions of mathematical
operations per second
Source: Jack Dongarra, Univ. of Tennessee
The New National Crisis - Responding to 9-11:
Key Actions for Scientists
The most important challenge may not be eliminating
the bad guys. It may be preserving the freedoms and values we are
trying to protect while we are doing so.
Office of Homeland Security
It would be helpful to get the Office of Homeland
Security organized in a way that shows practical streamlined functioning.
The official version does not lend itself to this. It puts the cart
before the horse - it first defines who will be collected together,
and then decides what they will do and when, by whom, etc. In the
process, it leaves out crucial scientific and intelligence capabilities.
Here's an example: if all on one day a major and different type
of incident of terrorism occurs in a US harbor, and a football stadium,
and on three dozen farms, and at hub airports, and on a block of
urban skyscrapers, and a senior official of each group named in
the new HSO hierarchy were coincidental witnesses at each site,
who would be in charge of the next five steps of action? How would
their actions be coordinated over the next hour? The next 24 hours?
What is the plan of action they would follow? It is now nine months
since 9-11 and no one seems to know the answer to this simple query.
Our defense strategy needs a new paradigm. Business as usual by
the Department of Defense, the state governors, and local police
is not likely to be optimally effective.
Here are the lessons taken from the twentieth-century
wars around which we built the US Department of Defense:
- Negotiated truces almost always fail and decisive
military victories almost always redirect the future to the victors.
- Winners of wars are those who have the most
surviving military people, the most weapons, and/or the most willingness
to continue killing. Losers lack one or more of the three.
- War requires both sides to protect, defend,
or lose territory, and both opponents must live within those defined
territories.
- Bigger is better - more troops, more tanks,
more ships, more warheads; bigger guns, bigger tanks, bigger ships,
more computer power, etc.
- Project enough force abroad and new wars will
be prevented, or if they occur, they will be conducted on the
enemy territory, not our homeland.
I suggest we need these attributes for rethinking
our new self-defense paradigm:
- Decisive victories, not truces
- Time is the enemy, not a friend
- Agility, not hierarchy
- Dispersion, not concentration
- Brain, not brawn
- Networks, not armies
- Perpetual learning, not doctrines
- Systems vulnerabilities, not obvious targets
- Deep knowledge across disciplines, not narrow
expertise
- Imagination, creativity, not replay of prior
victories
- Instant information and analysis, not meet
next week
- Pernicious insiders, not foreign armies
Security, Secrecy and Science
Another major concern is the growth of secrecy
and its impact for both science and security.
The system of science knowledge is based on
evidence that must be tested and confirmed by others. To succeed,
all scientists must share data, methods and materials. The free
exchange of ideas is the indispensable prerequisite that makes science
grow and prosper. In recent years our focus on commercial profits
for faculty and universities - and now security concerns - may be
stifling and eroding the quality of our scientific enterprise, and
it may eventually dismantle the integrity that ensures quality and
leadership. Unless we maintain leadership, we will ultimately decrease
our security.
This is the major conundrum for science and for
universities:
- The free exchange of information and ideas
is an essential element of scientific research and university
effectiveness.
- Access to information is essential for the
democratic process to function and succeed.
- Information about key defense technologies
can gravely compromise security.
- Current homeland security plans could handcuff
US science.
-- adapted from H. Kelly
Currently, the FBI and the Defense Threat Reduction
Agency (DTRA) must frequently screen the research in technology
areas, because there will be some instances of potential risk. They
classify it as secret when the risk warrants, but limit excesses
of secrecy. The Council of Scientific Society Presidents suggests
that fundamental science should remain >99.9% open with a very
small percentage of restrictions. Senior scientists can evaluate
research in progress at any institution and determine security risks.
Journal editors and reviewers are the second line of defense.
We need to restructure how the US computer-technology
research system obtains, evaluates and utilizes all future relevant
information. This requires three developments that are needed now:
- A system of much faster computers and searching
that ties together all the relevant databases in the world, even
the ones that do not at first appear to be directly useful for
such research.
- New online knowledge management processes
that intelligently store, retrieve and mine data, and discover
and report continuously to the user not only answers to predefined
questions, but all new and unique patterns, having remotely scanned
thousands of databases in minutes. Such a high-IQ next generation
search engine can be jointly developed with university artificial
intelligence labs or appropriate software companies.
- Upgrading all our global GIS systems to provide
a fully analyzed 24/7 real time surveillance of pre-defined risks
from space while coordinating novel undisclosed networks of highly
sensitive new ground sensors that can track in real time a variety
of inputs (whatever is needed) whenever it is needed. Oversight
of this activity is needed.
Tens of thousands of documents freely available
on the world wide web in 2001 have been removed, and the library
files and CD collections confiscated and destroyed. The FBI follows-up
to ensure that libraries comply with this order to destroy data,
and under the law there is no appeal. Such actions are certain to
hamper Counter-Terror efforts severely.
The Need for More Agility and Perpetual Learning
Systems: SWAT Team Model
The Council of Scientific Society proposes a
Counter-Network SWAT Team model:
- The necessary process is not a moral crusade,
and the enemies should not be called "terrorists" (that
term gives them power over us - to turn us into "fearful
victims"). The process should focus on simultaneously preventing
harm from and eliminating a specific target that we could call
"networks of fanatic murderers."
- The countervailing force includes organized
networks of teams that create and develop Scientifically Weighted
and Analyzed Tactics ("SWAT-Teams")
- CSSP SWAT team networks are each composed
of leading Ph.D. scientists with degrees and expertise in dozens
of science disciplines (e.g.: chemistry, forensics, risk analysis,
psychology, geology, toxicology, optics, operations research,
computer science, acoustics, physiology, meteorology, mathematics,
microbiology, physics, etc.) who collaborate via a secure Internet.
- SWAT teams will each start with a modus operandi
and an agenda of topics that will provide firm initial guidance,
but these teams will then each evolve independently.
- CSSP SWAT teams use a systems approach - define
a whole system; discover and rank the importance of its vulnerabilities;
and determine the optimal deterrence, threat-reduction, vigilance
and mitigation processes.
- SWAT team scientists are verifiably successful
in applying these processes - discovering/defining problems, finding
patterns and analogies, creative brainstorming, hypothesizing
testable explanation, investigating logically and systematically,
reasoning both deductively and inductively, critically evaluating,
making effective decisions, transferring understanding to new
situations.
- SWAT teams each select several special additional
members who serve as confidential 2-way information conduits -
and buffers - that ensure the identities of the SWAT team participants
are protected: one each from the FBI, CIA, DTRA, and the homeland
security agency. Each of the four special members will provide
their SWAT team a modest budget. These four serve as the regular
liaison to all other federal agencies (and other relevant groups).
The team may add leaders of relevant industrial organizations.
What are Some Advantages of the SWAT Team Strategy?
CSSP SWAT teams should ideally be able to develop
the following attributes that could develop routine superiority.
They would represent a unique part-time "National Guard"
- a strategy team whose membership is based only on high intellectual
competence and advanced knowledge.
- They are always fully dispersed and live and
travel independently.
- They set their own goals and pace.
- They are always on a rapid learning curve.
- Their leadership can rotate perpetually and
randomly.
- They can have hundreds of independent and
highly sophisticated "antennae."
- They stay hard to identify since no two teams
start or evolve identically
- Each team can grow and reproduce by division.
- More than one team can deploy against any
one threat or vice-versa.
- Each team may create unique tactics whose
sum exceeds the potential and learning rate of their target network
of fanatic murderers.
- Based on science underway in their large community
of scientists every day, they can discard today's best solutions
and create better ones overnight.
Security Questions We Need to Answer
A. U.S. Food System Security
Why should this be a model? It was designed to
be expedient, not impregnable. It represents $1.3 trillion of the
GDP. There are many sites of vulnerability to chemical-bioweapons.
These are the questions we should ask:
1. What does the quantitative 4-D dynamic model
of the whole US food system look like?
- Where are all the vulnerability points in
the system?
- What are the quantitative relative risks and
consequences of attacks?
- What new procedures or materiel can erase
or circumvent these vulnerabilities?
- What are the costs vs. benefits of various
strategic interventions that prevent attack
- How to best protect each target type/location?
- Which are the earliest and best threat indicators?
2. Response preparation: What we need to know
now
- How to manage responses to overwhelming surges
of activity?
- When/how will we know we are under bio-attack?
- What new biosensor systems can identify a
bio-agent with certainty in minutes?
- How ready is our USDA extension network to
define risks and spot key events?
- Consequence management - What processes? People?
- Shortest search process to find and nullify
those who caused the damage?
- Deter and prevent - best use of current resources?
B. One Subset of Food Security: High-Consequence
Pathogen/Toxin Security
1. The issues, questions, and practical threat
reduction:
- modified from Salerno (personal communication)
- Pathogens at restricted laboratory facilities
exist in nature and can be obtained from many, even hundreds of
laboratories around the world.
- The absolute amount of any given organism
in an active biological or medical research facility cannot be
reliably quantified from day to day.
- A strategically significant quantity of pathogenic
material can be obtained from a single cell because it can be
easily cultured with commercially available equipment.
- Smugglings of high consequence pathogens are
not identified by current Customs procedures, technology, or Infectious
Agent Laboratory practices.
2. What is a high-consequence pathogen/toxin?
What is critical high consequence pathogen (HCP) information?
- What are the scenarios of an inappropriate
HCP acquisition?
- What and how much can be known, how far in
advance of a damaging prerelease event?
- What are the possible routes of transport
and smuggling of each HCP?
- What alters and what happens to each agent
after release (terrain-specific scenarios)?
- What terrestrial and atmospheric dynamics
alter the level of hazard after release?
- What are the high consequence target scenarios?
- What are the most cost-effective damage-preventing
changes in each of the points of bio-agent vulnerability in the
US food system that can be made this year? In each of the next
three years?
- What number of expert personnel can provide
definitive answers for these questions during 2002?
- What R&D can be defined in advance to
aim at needed answers to these questions?
- What fundamental research areas need enhancement
to ensure our world leadership with knowledge about human/plant/animal
pathogens and pathogenesis?
- What types of research should be reported,
and what agency should have oversight responsibility?
- How should we define HCP information that
should be protected?
(e.g: formulas and processes for weaponizing pathogens; formulas
and processes for creating new lethal organisms.)
- What is the best monitoring system for locations
that store, use, and/or transport high-consequence pathogens and
toxins for organisms; individuals; research?
- Who would try to steal or divert a HCP? How
could they succeed?
- What vulnerabilities exist at every specific
relevant facility or system?
- What technologies, policies, and procedures
will reduce risk to a very low level?
Restrictions and delays should not impede quality
research. Threat assessment should drive security system design,
and insiders must be considered part of the risk.
We see that we need a very different set of people,
tactics and actions to prevent an event than to mitigate damage
from a malicious event that has just occurred - which seems to be
most of our focus so far in Washington.
A recent survey by Research!America showed that
9/10 of the people across America believe it is extremely or very
important to have scientific research help prepare for and respond
to biological and chemical terrorism in the United States.
This is our time to lead. We can do
it best by thinking big, being bold, and thinking out of the box.
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