Commission Report Finds U.S. Unprepared for Bioterror Attacks
Christopher Weber
The commission was created last year to address concerns raised by investigations conducted after the 9/11 terrorist attacks. It warns that anthrax spores scattered by a crop-dusting aircraft could "kill more Americans than died in World War II." The economic impact, according to the commission, could top $1.8 trillion.
USA Today obtained a copy of the report:
Commission Chairman Bob Graham, a former Democratic senator from Florida, warns the White House to act more aggressively on the bioterror threat because, "the clock is ticking."Among the commission's criticisms, according to the newspaper:
• President Obama's National Security Council has no senior political appointees with a biodefense background. "That was not the case in the Clinton and Bush administrations," the report says.
• Programs created after the 9/11 attacks to develop and buy vaccines and drugs to prevent and respond to a biological attack are not being funded adequately. Although the report is critical of the White House on this topic, Congress has the power of the purse. The report cites a funding shortage for a program to ensure there are enough drugs to respond to a bioterrorist attack.
• The Obama administration asked for $305 million in its fiscal 2010 budget request. "Insufficient by a factor of 10," the report says.
• Disease surveillance programs fall short.
