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Charles S. Faddis, the Central Intelligence Agency's most respected former Middle East counterterrorism officer, was trained through years in the field to stand in the shoes of a terrorist and appraise targets. In Willful Neglect, he applies a critical lens to the state of America's Homeland Security system and asks, "Have our vast new bureaucracies and the billions spent since 9/11 translated into real protection? Or has complacency set in?" Faddis methodically assesses the actual protection afforded our vital infrastructure¿military installations, passenger and freight rail systems, chemical…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Charles S. Faddis, the Central Intelligence Agency's most respected former Middle East counterterrorism officer, was trained through years in the field to stand in the shoes of a terrorist and appraise targets. In Willful Neglect, he applies a critical lens to the state of America's Homeland Security system and asks, "Have our vast new bureaucracies and the billions spent since 9/11 translated into real protection? Or has complacency set in?" Faddis methodically assesses the actual protection afforded our vital infrastructure¿military installations, passenger and freight rail systems, chemical plants, liquefied natural gas facilities, water treatment plants, dams, and nuclear power plants. America is still a land of opportunity, he finds¿for its enemies. Faddis points to countless situations in which "security" measures have nothing to do with the threat of terrorist attack. For example, sensitive facilities are "protected" by mere signage, and by guards who ask to look inside purses or peer inside a car¿not exactly a match for a group of Al-Qaeda operatives carrying AK-47s and driving a truck jammed with thousands of pounds of explosives.While we are drawing new lines on wiring diagrams and formulating plans to convene task forces that will propose further study, Faddis warns, Al-Qaeda is moving forward with concrete plans. We need to confront those plans with defensive measures no less concrete. We need to hire more guards, equip them better, and give them enhanced training. We need to put in place physical barriers, and move particularly dangerous facilities away from major population centers. We need action, not equivocation.
Autorenporträt
Charles S. Faddis served twenty years in the Central Intelligence Agency as an operations officer, holding positions as a department chief at the CIA's Counterterrorism Center in Washington, D.C., and as a chief of station in the Middle East. He is the author of Beyond Repair (October 2009, Lyons Press), a scathing critique of today's CIA, and the coauthor of Operation Hotel California (October 2008 hardcover, May 2010 paperback; Lyons Press), which recounts how he led the first CIA mission into Iraq in 2002 in preparation for the pending invasion.