Tape: Bush, Chertoff warned before Katrina (AP) Updated: 2006-03-02 08:51
"I hope people don't draw conclusions from the president getting a single
briefing," presidential spokesman Trent Duffy said, citing a variety of orders
and disaster declarations Bush signed before the storm made landfall. "He
received multiple briefings from multiple officials, and he was completely
engaged at all times."
Homeland Security spokesman Russ Knocke said his department would not release
the full set of videotaped briefings, saying most transcripts from the sessions
were provided to congressional investigators months ago.
"There's nothing new or insightful on these tapes," Knocke said. "We actively
participated in the lessons-learned review and we continue to participate in the
Senate's review and are working with them on their recommendation."
New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin, a critic of the administration's Katrina
response, had a different take after watching the footage Wednesday afternoon
from an AP reporter's camera.
"I have kind a sinking feeling in my gut right now," Nagin said. "I was
listening to what people were saying 锟斤拷 they didn't know, so therefore it was an
issue of a learning curve. You know, from this tape it looks like everybody was
fully aware."
Some of the footage and transcripts from briefings Aug. 25-31 conflicts with
the defenses that federal, state and local officials have made in trying to
deflect blame and minimize the political fallout from the failed Katrina
response:
? Homeland Security officials have said the "fog of war" blinded them early
on to the magnitude of the disaster. But the video and transcripts show federal
and local officials discussed threats clearly, reviewed long-made plans and
understood Katrina would wreak devastation of historic proportions. "I'm sure it
will be the top 10 or 15 when all is said and done," National Hurricane Center's
Max Mayfield warned the day Katrina lashed the Gulf Coast.
"I don't buy the `fog of war' defense," Brown told the AP in an interview
Wednesday. "It was a fog of bureaucracy."
? Bush declared four days after the storm, "I don't think anybody anticipated
the breach of the levees" that gushed deadly flood waters into New Orleans. He
later clarified, saying officials believed, wrongly, after the storm passed that
the levees had survived. But the transcripts and video show there was plenty of
talk about that possibility even before the storm 锟斤拷 and Bush was worried too.
White House deputy chief of staff Joe Hagin, Louisiana Gov. Kathleen Blanco
and Brown discussed fears of a levee breach the day the storm hit.
"I talked to the president twice today, once in Crawford and then again on
Air Force One," Brown said. "He's obviously watching the television a lot, and
he had some questions about the Dome, he's asking questions about reports of
breaches."
? Louisiana officials angrily blamed the federal government for not being
prepared but the transcripts shows they were still praising FEMA as the storm
roared toward the Gulf Coast and even two days afterward. "I think a lot of the
planning FEMA has done with us the past year has really paid off," Col. Jeff
Smith, Louisiana's emergency preparedness deputy director, said during the Aug.
28 briefing.
It wasn't long before Smith and other state officials sounded overwhelmed.
"We appreciate everything that you all are doing for us, and all I would ask
is that you realize that what's going on and the sense of urgency needs to be
ratcheted up," Smith said Aug. 30.
Mississippi begged for more attention in that same briefing.
"We know that there are tens or hundreds of thousands of people in Louisiana
that need to be rescued, but we would just ask you, we desperately need to get
our share of assets because we'll have people dying 锟斤拷 not because of water
coming up, but because we can't get them medical treatment in our affected
counties," said a Mississippi state official whose name was not mentioned on the
tape.
Video footage of the Aug. 28 briefing, the final one before Katrina struck,
showed an intense Brown voicing concerns from the government's disaster
operation center and imploring colleagues to do whatever was necessary to help
victims.
"We're going to need everything that we can possibly muster, not only in this
state and in the region, but the nation, to respond to this event," Brown
warned. He called the storm "a bad one, a big one" and implored federal agencies
to cut through red tape to help people, bending rules if necessary.
"Go ahead and do it," Brown said. "I'll figure out some way to justify it.
... Just let them yell at me."
Bush appeared from a narrow, windowless room at his vacation ranch in Texas,
with his elbows on a table. Hagin was sitting alongside him. Neither asked
questions in the Aug. 28 briefing.
"I want to assure the folks at the state level that we are fully prepared to
not only help you during the storm, but we will move in whatever resources and
assets we have at our disposal after the storm," the president said.
A relaxed Chertoff, sporting a polo shirt, weighed in from Washington at
Homeland Security's operations center. He would later fly to Atlanta, outside of
Katrina's reach, for a bird flu event.
One snippet captures a missed opportunity on Aug. 28 for the government to
have dispatched active-duty military troops to the region to augment the
National Guard.
Chertoff: "Are there any DOD assets that might be available? Have we reached
out to them?"
Brown: "We have DOD assets over here at EOC (emergency operations center).
They are fully engaged. And we are having those discussions with them now."
Chertoff: "Good job."
In fact, active duty troops weren't dispatched until days after the storm.
And many states' National Guards had yet to be deployed to the region despite
offers of assistance, and it took days before the Pentagon deployed active-duty
personnel to help overwhelmed Guardsmen.
The National Hurricane Center's Mayfield told the final briefing before
Katrina struck that storm models predicted minimal flooding inside New Orleans
during the hurricane but he expressed concerns that counterclockwise winds and
storm surges afterward could cause the levees at Lake Pontchartrain to be
overrun.
"I don't think any model can tell you with any confidence right now whether
the levees will be topped or not but that is obviously a very, very grave
concern," Mayfield told the briefing.
Other officials expressed concerns about the large number of New Orleans
residents who had not evacuated.
"They're not taking patients out of hospitals, taking prisoners out of
prisons and they're leaving hotels open in downtown New Orleans. So I'm very
concerned about that," Brown said.
Despite the concerns, it ultimately took days for search and rescue teams to
reach some hospitals and nursing homes.
Brown also told colleagues one of his top concerns was whether evacuees who
went to the New Orleans Superdome 锟斤拷 which became a symbol of the failed Katrina
response 锟斤拷 would be safe and have adequate medical care.
"The Superdome is about 12 feet below sea level.... I don't know whether the
roof is designed to stand, withstand a Category Five hurricane," he said.
Brown also wanted to know whether there were enough federal medical teams in
place to treat evacuees and the dead in the Superdome.
"Not to be (missing) kind of gross here," Brown interjected, "but I'm
concerned" about the medical and mortuary resources "and their ability to
respond to a catastrophe within a catastrophe."
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