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PORT SECURITY: A CHALLENGE FOR THE HEMISPHERE Presentation to the Inter-American Committee against Terrorism (CICTE), Organization of American States 7 March, 2008 Jon Glassman Director of Government Policy Business Development & Strategy Planning Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 PORT SECURITY • Problem definition in U.S.: Protect U.S. ports from weapons of mass destruction and radiological weapons (“dirty bombs”) • But maybe a bigger and different problem in countries outside U.S.? • Problem definition in Latin America/Caribbean: Any blocking of capacity to export and import products vital to national wellbeing and growth. Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 DEPENDENCE ON FOREIGN TRADE % Relative to GDP 145 135 125 115 105 95 85 75 65 55 45 35 25 15 5 Foreign Trade Panama Honduras Jamaica Dom. Rep. Chile Ecuador Mexico Peru US/Brazil US/Brazil • Foreign trade-to-GDP ratios (measure of relative importance of external commerce): • • • • US and Brazil 26% Peru 44% Ecuador 62% Mexico 63% • • • • • Chile 73% Dominican Republic Honduras 102% Jamaica 105% Panama 136% Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 81% HEMISPHERIC COUNTRIES HAVE NEED TO PREVENT OBSTRUCTION OF FOREIGN TRADE • Need is equal or greater than for U.S. • Because 66% of increasing global commerce moves by sea, and Latin American/Caribbean maritime trade is expected to grow by 6-7% /year, it is important to improve port physical and policy infrastructure. • But Latin American/Caribbean investment in infrastructure is only equal to 2% of GDP. Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 PORT INFRASTRUCTURE IMPROVEMENT IS INSEPARABLE FROM SECURITY • Increased capacity/efficiency irrelevant if domestic or foreign actors or actions can shut down or disrupt Lat Am/Caribbean ports • Reason: Very limited number of major seaports in a given country makes re-routing difficult • Major seaports: US—361, Argentina, Brazil and Mexico—7, Ecuador and Venezuela—4, Panama—3, Guatemala—2 Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 SMALL NUMBER OF PORTS COMBINED WITH HIGH FOREIGN TRADE DEPENDENCY = VULNERABILITY • Catastrophic attack on U.S. port of Los Angeles/Long Beach would produce $45 billion loss (compared to US GDP of $11.7 trillion)—not devastating to national economy • Closing down of one or several Lat Am/Caribbean ports for physical or policy reasons would be highly damaging, particularly for countries with high foreign trade dependency Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 NEED TO CONSIDER NOT JUST DIRECT THREATS BUT ALSO SECONDARY EFFECTS OF INCIDENTS ELSEWHERE • Actual or feared catastrophic incident in U.S. could produce U.S. shutdown of shipments from a Lat Am/Caribbean transit port or ports • U.S. could also impose 100% scanning requirement or discriminate among ports based on surveillance technology investment • Good counsel: Cooperate with U.S. risk-analytic data collection and U.S. Container Security Initiative risk-based scanning to mitigate risk of U.S. domestic pressure for more extreme overseas surveillance Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 DIRECT THREATS • Outside terrorist actions against U.S. European and Israeli cargo and cruise ships in Lat Am/Caribbean ports • Multiple and continuing attacks generating sense of vulnerability of Hemispheric ports • Efforts to disrupt physical or IT/communications nodes providing access to, or enabling and controlling operations of, port complexes • Manipulation of the content of shipments, particularly related to food or pharmaceutical safety • Criminal actions: theft, narcotics Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 CREATING SECURE PORT ENVIRONMENT • Prevent damage to third parties: Producer-to-port cargo tracking/documentation • Protection against intrusion: Additional sensors, data fusion and drilldown, decision aids, operations center/command and control for interdiction • Domestic dimension: Identity management system for access to cargo custody chain, vessels and IT systems/databases, obligatory cargo handling procedures prior to port entry Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1 ELIMINATE IMAGE OF ‘SOFT TARGET” • Will generate secure, orderly throughout and revenue generation • Will remove invitation to attack and criminal theft • Will mitigate U.S. pressure for more extreme surveillance • Financing for security can be covered as part of overall infrastructure upgrades. Northrop Grumman Private/Proprietary Level 1