By
Jim Garamone
American Forces
Press
Service
WASHINGTON,
Oct. 17, 2003
- In its short existence, the Office of the Assistant Secretary of
Defense
for Homeland Defense has established good working relationships with
all
homeland security players, said one of the office's top officials.
Peter Verga,
principal
deputy assistant defense secretary for homeland defense, said the
relationship
among law enforcement agencies, the new Department of Homeland
Security,
the newly operational U.S. Northern Command and his office are helping
to make the United States more secure.
The setup
could have been
a disaster, with competing lines of authority and conflicting missions.
Instead, it has been a collegial exercise in which all players are
working
together to formulate plans and processes to protect the United States
and its citizens, he said.
Verga
explained the differences
between DoD's homeland defense mission and that of the Homeland
Security
Department.
"We have a
national strategy
for homeland security, which is the protection of the (United States)
from
terrorist attacks, the reduction of vulnerability from terrorist
attacks,
and the mitigation and
recovery from
terrorist
attacks, should they occur," he said. "That mission belongs to the
Department
of Homeland Security.
"In DoD," he
continued,
"we undertake homeland defense, which is the traditional military
defense
of United States people, U.S. territory (and) critical infrastructure
against
external threats and aggression."

Both
Operation Enduring
Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom are part of the homeland defense
mission,
Verga said. In two short years, the U.S. military has routed the
Taliban
and freed Afghanistan from an oppressive, autocratic regime.
The U.S.
military also
has deposed Saddam Hussein, liberating 23 million Iraqis. Both of these
operations take the war to the terrorists, Verga said.
"Our
principal role in
the defense of our nation is to attack the enemies of the United States
where they live, as opposed to letting them attack us where we live,"
he
said. "That overseas, worldwide war on terrorism is the department's
principal
contribution to making the homeland more secure."
Still, he
said, the U.S.
military has a role in homeland defense, and the department had made
changes
that made the country more secure even before the Sept. 11, 2001,
terrorist
attacks. Since Sept. 11, that pace accelerated, he added. The military
made changes in the worldwide command structure, most notably
establishing
the U.S. Northern Command, which went to full operations capability on
Sept. 11, 2003.
This command
unified the
three areas of defense of the United States: maritime, air and land.
"For the
first time, they
are under a single unified commander," Verga said. "The combatant
commander
is responsible for all three domains." In the past, the North American
Aerospace Defense Command -- a combined U.S.-Canadian command --
managed
air defense, and U.S. Joint Forces Command handled land and sea defense.

The other
major reorganization
was establishing Verga's office. That office formally stood up in March.
"We are
charged with the
overall supervision of the homeland defense activities of the
department,
and provide the guidance and policy direction necessary to provide that
homeland defense," he said. Former Congressman Paul McHale is the
assistant
secretary of defense for homeland defense.
Verga said
communication
is superb among all the homeland security players, on both an
individual
level and at the highest levels of government. All are working to
formulate
the homeland defense vision and are drafting their plans to implement a
unified layered defense of
the territory
of the
United States, he said.
The new
office is the
advocate within the department's budgetary process for the resources
necessary
to carry out the homeland defense function. Verga said his office works
more closely with U.S. Northern Command than other DoD offices do. He
said
the relationship is similar to the way the assistant secretary of
defense
for special operations and low-intensity conflict works with U.S.
Special
Operations Command.
Verga said
senior leaders
from U.S. Northern Command visit Washington frequently, and members of
his office work in Colorado Springs, Colo., with members of the command.
On the
homeland security
side, there is a close working relationship between DoD and DHS. Verga
said 65 DoD employees work with the Department of Homeland Security "to
ensure close and seamless cooperation between the departments."
Still, even
with a good
beginning there is more to do, he said. Verga said what keeps him up at
night is what he isn't worrying about.
"I'm worried
we're not
worrying about something we haven't even thought of," he said. "That is
the greatest challenge. DoD plans better than anyone in the world, but
you have to know what we're up against. We're working on that."
from Armed
Forces Press Service
