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CHARLESTON, S.C. -- Every morning, representatives of the Coast
Guard, Department of Justice and Customs and Border Protection gather in
a meeting room in a secure port facility here to plan the day's
operations.
Joining them at the table are officers from Immigration and Customs
Enforcement, state and local police agencies and port authority
officers.
Looking 96 hours into the future, they run down the names and ships
due to arrive in the coming days, what kinds of cargo they are moving
and if there are any crew members aboard who might be "of
interest." Local police agencies chime in with reports of any
suspicious activity that may be occurring in the vicinity.
Project SeaHawk has been carrying out such meetings for more than
three years under the leadership of the Justice Department. The
overarching goal is to prevent the port from becoming a target of
terrorism. The Safe Port Act passed in Oct. 2006 called for the creation
of similar operational centers at "high-priority" ports by
October 2009. But one Coast Guard official told National Defense that it
will not be possible to meet that deadline. He said the future of
SeaHawk and other proposed port security centers is uncertain.
Under SeaHawk, port security officials during the past three Lyears
have developed the software, sensors and communications infrastructure
needed to maintain a 24/7 watch on this regional port--the sixth largest
in the United States based on the amount of customs revenue collected
and the numbers of containers arriving each year.
Participants acknowledged that bringing the different agencies
together to share information in the early days was a challenge, but
they extol the current benefits.
Before SeaHawk, it wasn't uncommon for the different agencies
with jurisdiction in the port to duplicate their efforts, said Capt.
Michael McAllister, Coast Guard sector commander and Charleston's
captain of the port.
"My boarding teams would run into Customs boarding teams at
the bow of a ship," he said.
Today, boardings are carried out in a more efficient manner that
allows the different agencies to make better use of their limited
resources, officials said.
Project leaders in Charleston said most of the technology that was
developed for SeaHawk can be transferred to other port security
operations centers. Congress mandated the creation of these centers
under the Safe Port Act. After October 2009, the centers, including
SeaHawk, will fall under the Department of Homeland Security's
purview.
Discussions continue among Justice and DHS officials to work out
details on which DHS agency will take charge of the center.
DHS did not request funds to open other centers in the 2008 budget.
Congress authorized, and then later earmarked, $60 million in the Coast
Guard budget to do so. The Bush administration requested only $1 million
in the 2009 budget, signaling its lack of enthusiasm for the concept.
The law also required DHS to produce a detailed plan on cost-sharing six
months after the law was passed, but it has not done so.
Ted White, command center platform manager at the Coast Guard, said
the service will not be able to meet the Safe Port Act requirement that
an operational center be stood up at every major port by October 2009.
The $60 million allocated in the 2008 omnibus bill arrived at Coast
Guard headquarters in late December, and the service has not yet decided
how it will use the funds. But it is clear that this amount of money
will not be able to fund operational centers in all 24 Coast Guard
sectors. White said he had no knowledge as to why DHS only requested $1
million for the operation centers for the next fiscal year.
As for SeaHawk, the future beyond October 2009 is also murky.
"SeaHawk wasn't stood up with a plan to stand it back
down," said Frank Gutierrez, the project's deputy director.
The five-year pilot program was to officially come to an end this
year, but the South Carolina congressional delegation pushed funding
through to ensure its operation until next year when DHS will take over
its administration.
"Who's going to inherit SeaHawk? When do we turn it over?
How is it going to be funded? Who's going to take administrative
control of the task force? These are all issues that need to be
addressed," Gutierrez said.
SeaHawk predated the creation of DHS, he explained. When the
legislation authorizing the project was passed in 2003, Justice was seen
as the best agency to take control, because it had the authority and
experience running multi-agency task forces.
After taking about one year to organize, SeaHawk was up and running
by January 2005. The FBI's joint terrorism task force co-located in
the center. Construction has also begun to relocate the Coast
Guard's sector command center and CBP's customs targeting
center in the same building.
Also key was bringing local law enforcement agencies into the
project, Gutierrez said.
Three local police department jurisdictions touch on the borders of
the area's port facilities--Charleston, North Charleston and Mount
Pleasant. The South Carolina State Police and the South Carolina Ports
Authority police also have representatives in the center.
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Local law enforcement participation was seen as crucial, and it
remains one of the more difficult issues that have to be resolved if the
project is to move forward, he added.
Federal agencies cannot duplicate the "situational
awareness" of local cops who patrol just beyond the port's
perimeters. But police departments are chronically short of personnel.
It is not uncommon for a local law enforcement agency to have 25 to 30
slots open.
SeaHawk, through Justice Department mechanisms, is able to
reimburse the local police departments and pay some of the salaries of
their representatives. How these positions will be funded after October
2009 is unclear, Gutierrez said.
White said the formula for participating in operational centers in
the future will be simple. If federal agencies or local law enforcement
departments want to participate, they will have to pay the salaries of
their own personnel. Furthermore, no agency outside of DHS can be
compelled to take part in a center.
"If they want to participate, that's going to be at their
own expense," White said.
Port officials said they believe that the SeaHawk technology could
be shared with other centers. One of the project's most significant
accomplishments is the "information portal" software that
coordinates the response to each ship approaching the port.
Capt. Scott Beeson, a SeaHawk Coast Guard liaison, explained how
ships are now tracked and prioritized. The captain of the port normally
receives notification of a ship's arrival 96 hours in advance. It
is then picked up by the Coast Guard's automatic identification
system (AIS), which is a beacon that transmits the ship's identity
and bearing to Coast Guard regional command centers.
Coast Guard radars can then track the ship as it approaches. As
this is happening, CBP, Coast Guard, and Immigration and Customs
Enforcement data are compiled to create a dossier. The file tells the
officer the names of crew members and the cargo manifest. It also
provides information about the crew's port of origin and whether
any of them have criminal records. The file contains a history of the
ship or the company that owns it--whether it recently changed ownership
or flags, and whether it has been caught with contraband before.
The Coast Guard now "has insight into CBP's targeting and
why they think a container or crewman is of interest," Beeson said.
The software gives each ship a color-coded designation based on
risk analysis. Blue would denote a low risk and orange a much higher
risk. A SeaHawk officer then clicks on a checklist of possible actions
that can be taken. An "admissibility review" is a thorough
vetting of the crew. If a boarding is deemed necessary, the center can
dispatch CBP canine units that specialize in either drugs or explosives
detection:
If both the Coast Guard and CBP are interested in the ship, the
center can arrange a joint boarding. Customs and Border Protection and
the Coast Guard are two of the biggest players in port security. But
they have different databases, sensors and communications systems. They
both carry out boardings as ships enter ports, but they may be looking
for different items.
As the ship approaches the port, it is captured by long- and
medium-range electro-optical and infrared cameras. Some of these cameras
belong to the Coast Guard.
The service's Hawkeye system combines the data from cameras,
radar and AIS into a common operating picture. If the ship suddenly
veers off course, that would raise a red flag, Beeson said.
SeaHawk has also installed some of its own cameras. It has one atop
the USS Yorktown, a decommissioned World War II aircraft carrier, which
is now a tourist attraction on the east side of the harbor. It has also
fixed cameras under bridges so it can keep watch on pilings.
In addition, it takes feeds from the state's Department of
Transportation cameras that monitor bridges and roads around the port
area. A local chemical company plant, with a facility close to the
water, has also agreed to let SeaHawk use its camera feeds.
Added to this melange is data from the tracking devices that are
placed on every Coast Guard, CBP, port police and local law enforcement
vehicle.
Project SeaHawk funded the deployment of radiological sensors that
are affixed to small boats and vehicles. Gutierrez was reluctant to
discuss details on the system, but said the sensors can be placed next
to ships or containers to pick up signs of radiation. "They are
amazingly sensitive," he said. The vehicles carrying these sensors
have cameras that can send back streaming video to SeaHawk terminals.
Like most modern operation centers, all these cameras, sensors and
tracking systems are displayed on a series of monitors spread along a
wall.
Kelly Shackelford, director of the project's task force, said
"the ability of all those agencies to come together to use their
resources is what we're all about. It really does allow us to make
better decisions on how to use the resources."
Much of this information technology infrastructure can be exported
to other startup operational centers, Gutierrez said. Sixty-seven
percent of SeaHawk's budget during the past five years has gone
towards developing the center's technological backbone.
"We were able to do the 85 percent solution for them to be
able to pick it up and run with it," he said. The information
portal software has already been adopted by the Coast Guard's
captains of the ports.
Each port is different, he pointed out, which requires individual
adjustments. A communications system that works in Charleston may not
work in New Orleans, where the Mississippi River makes the geography,
and the jurisdictions dramatically different from Charleston. Ports in
Florida may have more concerns with drugs and illegal immigration.
SeaHawk officials declined to provide details on counterterrorism
operations because the incidents are classified. But one false alarm did
demonstrate how the center works.
A gate guard one day noticed a strange contraption hanging off the
end of a container leaving the port by truck. He thought, "Oh my
God, what is this on the back of this container? It's got to be the
timing device for a nuclear weapon," Gutierrez said.
Immediately, SeaHawk declared a level two maritime security alert,
which shut down the port. Explosive ordnance disposal teams arrived on
the scene within minutes.
They determined that the device was a weather balloon instrument
that had fallen on a ship somewhere out at sea and wrapped itself around
the container. The port reopened 90 minutes after the guard radioed in
the report.
That short recovery time is critical because every hour a port is
closed damages the local economy, Gutierrez said. South Carolina ports
move $53 billion worth of cargo per year.
Chris Berardini, chief of staff for Rep. Henry Brown, R-S.C., said
SeaHawk should be viewed as the flagship for the next generation of
interagency port security operation centers. But he acknowledged that
future centers may not be as robust as SeaHawk. There is a chance,
however, that Seahawk's capabilities will be reduced after it
transitions to DHS control in October 2009.
"We would like it to be scaled down as little as
possible," he said.
A funding crunch and the lack of physical infrastructure to host
operations centers at some ports could lead to the creation of
"virtual" command centers, rather than brick-and-mortar hubs,
said White.
A broader question is whether the SeaHawk model could be adopted
nationwide. That seems doubtful. Not all ports have Charleston's
emphasis on container security, White said. He repeated the Coast Guard
maxim that "if you've seen one port, you've seen one
port."
SeaHawk is a "good pilot project, but it is very
Charleston-centric right now," he said.
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