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The Role of Science and Technology in Counter Terrorism. Jay Davis National Security Fellow Center for Global Security Research Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory DOE/OBES Workshop Gaithersburg, February 28, 2002. My perspective on counter terrorism comes from career experiences.
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The Role of Science and Technology in Counter Terrorism Jay Davis National Security Fellow Center for Global Security Research Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory DOE/OBES Workshop Gaithersburg, February 28, 2002
My perspective on counter terrorism comes from career experiences • Having my own laboratory bombed when I was at Wisconsin • A basic research career in nuclear physics and in managing basic research in the broad geosciences, toxicology, nutritional science and combustion research • Applied experiences in arms control, the NEST program and as an inspector in Iraq • Three years as the founding director of the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, a DoD combat support agency with counter terrorism as a major focus • Thirty years as an organization builder and strategic planner
Let me begin with the dilemmas of counter terrorism • There is no central ownership of this mission and it is almost no one’s first mission • The technological and the sociological quickly become combined • One is seeking resources to invest against rare events with high consequences • The ultimate customer is not one having great familiarity with the S&T community
What is the narrow role of science and technology in national security? • To assure that we have the weapons and knowledge to deter those with evil intent • To assure that if war, terrorism or conflict come, our doctrine, people and equipment are superior to any • To assure that we fight our battle, preferably one that the enemy does not expect, rather than their battle Note that the social sciences play a large role in these desires
What is the broad role of science and technology in national security? • To assure that we can anticipate and cope with surprise in any discipline • To assure that the American economy can compete on all levels and support the world’s best defense system • in both people and equipment • To explain honestly what is and is not possible in defense. Basic scientists have a large role in these matters
How does DoD look at solving a problem? • Is there a solution in doctrine, operations or in technology? • Who will provide the logistics and training support for a twenty year system lifetime? • How is the system, gadget or widget compatible with existing doctrine, operations or training? • Can I get promoted if I sponsor this?
Where in counter terrorism do S&T have the most leverage? • Deterrence • Detection • Response • Recovery • Forensics and Attribution Note that the first and last couple together -- and may offer our highest and most cost effective opportunities
What are the strengths of the basic S&T community? • Knowledge of the future of your fields • particularly important in the “post-nuclear” and “post-physics” world • Potentially higher credibility with the new funders and the general public • Potentially lower operational burdens than the rules and inhibitions of the national security organizations that handle classified and/or controlled materials • Cost, cost, cost
What are the grand technical challenges in counter terrorism? • Forensics for attribution and deterrence • Technologies for detection of agents and rapid diagnosis of infection or insult • Integration of sparse and uncertain data into predictive models for event management • this has enormous political importance • Integrated models that span dispersion to morbidity and mortality • for both low level and acute exposure • for “address-based” triage • Education on risk and risk tradeoff
What are the critical tests of you and your ideas? • Can you work as a subcontractor? • Anything important will be a team activity -- you are an unlikely leader • Who will deliver and sustain your technology in production and operation? • A real government agency contribution could be to select the production operational contractors • Does this product deliver incremental improvement in existing systems without excessive opportunity cost in their present configuration? • Is the first responder willing to use this?
What are the grand contributions you can make? • Service in a mission-driven agency • they need your perspectives and knowledge • Support to the intelligence and security communities in predicting future threats • and the capabilities to counter them • Work in the international communities to establish norms of transparency and ethics • and the penalties for failure in these • Education and support of both the local and national communities in determining what is possible • expectations management is vital
You might ask yourself the following questions • What new contexts do I need to master? • Where or by what extrapolation does my currently funded work or capability contribute? • What new relationships do I need? • What are my responsibilities beyond the laboratory?
Understand the political and operational difficulties of counter terrorism • This is no one’s first job -- except for Governor Ridge • Authority and resource needs are determined by the event • an anathema for political systems • The first responders are the most important players • and are poorly coupled to our communities • There will be no silver bullets • either technical or political However, I am optimistic because we as a nation are now fully engaged with this topic