TheSkeptical

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Saturday, May 25, 2013

Benghazi ARB Follow-Up: Quick Comment, Part 3

Posted on 5:43 PM by Unknown
Just waiting for a security upgrade















Consumer Notice: This post is certified 100% free of Matters of Official Concern that are not referenced from publicly available sources of information.

In Part 2, I referred to the difficultly of upgrading the security of temporary, and/or hastily acquired, facilities. I also cited Undersecretary for Management Patrick Kennedy (here) saying that at least half of the State Department's overseas office buildings fail to fully meet the standards established by the Overseas Security Policy Board.

Why is it so hard to upgrade those buildings until they meet standards? Is it insufficient funding? Lack of will? Total bureaucratic indifference? Technical incompetence?

Opinions about all of that will differ, but anyone who has actually tried to upgrade the security of one of those buildings has realized the inherent limitations of conventionally constructed buildings - that is, of the normal kinds of office and residential buildings that you find the world over. Unless and until you build a building to suit yourself, i.e., a Fortress Embassy, you will have to settle for something less than fully satisfactory.

The situation was explained very well in a General Accountability Office report from 2008, GAO-08-162, which was succinctly entitled "Embassy Security: Upgrades Have Enhanced Security, but Site Conditions Prevent Full Adherence to Standards." A few quotes from that report will do:

At the 11 posts we visited with ongoing or completed CSUP [Compound Security Upgrade Program] projects, we found that the projects had enhanced posts' compliance with State's physical security standards as detailed in the "Foreign Affairs Handbook" and "Foreign Affairs Manual." The projects we viewed added or enhanced pedestrian and vehicle access points, replaced perimeter fencing to meet anti-climb requirements, installed bollards and barriers at key points to meet anti-ram requirements, built safe areas for post officials in case of attack, enhanced the hard line separating post employees from visitors, and installed forced entry/ballistic-resistant windows and doors.

Nevertheless, without building a new facility, many posts are unable to meet all security standards for a variety of reasons beyond the scope of CSUP. We found that none of the posts we visited adhered fully with current security standards because of conditions that were outside the scope of CSUP projects. For example, most of the posts we visited were located in dense urban areas that prevented them from achieving a 100-foot setback from the street, one of the key security standards. OBO [Overseas Buildings Operations] and DS [Diplomatic Security] officials acknowledged that, at many locations, it is not feasible to increase the setback by acquiring land and closing off nearby streets. In other cases, officials stated the buildings themselves were not structurally capable of handling heavy forced entry/ballistic-resistant windows or other upgrades. And in other cases, officials commented that host nations or cities would not allow certain upgrades to be implemented, such as removing trees to create a clear zone around the embassy or changing the facade of historic buildings.

That's about the size of it. The U.S. government occupies hundreds of office buildings overseas, and has done so since the 1800s. Despite the pace of new embassy construction, which kicked into high gear only in 2000, many of the buildings we occupy today were acquired long before we had any type of security standards. We can upgrade them to a greater or lesser degree but can't make them Fortresses retroactively, for all the reasons the GAO noted - locations that lack significant setback distance from public streets, structures that can't support the weight of serious physical barriers, and host governments that won't permit certain changes.

The most serious of these reasons is structural limitation, which means that you can't add more weight to a building than its load-bearing structure will allow. The structural limitations of the typical building that you can acquire overseas might not be obvious, but trust me, adding Fortress-level amounts of concrete or steel to it isn't an option. (By the way, an excellent general-interest primer on this topic is Why Buildings Stand Up: The Strength of Architecture, in case you are really motivated to read into the subject.)

You can try this yourself at home. Steel plate of a useful thickness weighs 10 pounds per square foot, the forced entry/ballistic-resistant doors used in Fortress Embassies weight almost 1,000 pounds each, and equivalent windows weigh 44 pounds per square foot. (I take that information from the brochure of a company that sells Department-certified security products.) Call a building contractor and ask what it would take to plate your house in steel and replace the doors and windows with forced-entry/ballistic resistant ones.

Unless you live in something made of reinforced concrete, you'll probably find it isn't feasible. And in that event, you would most likely settle for something less. The U.S. government does the same.

I'll have one last quick comment in response to the Benghazi ARB, to be posted sometime this Memorial Day weekend.

Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in benghazi, Diplomatic Security, Fortress Embassy, Office of Overseas Building Operations | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home
View mobile version

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • H. R. 1006, Jerusalem Embassy and Recognition Act of 2011, Introduced By Rep. Burton
    Twice a year, every year since 1995, every occupant of the White House has signed a waiver of the Jerusalem Embassy Act (see this ), thereby...
  • I Strongly Second This Motion
    In the wake of today's news about the reinstatement of four mid-level officials who were placed on administrative leave after the Bengh...
  • Wait ... Muslim Brotherhood, Myra Breckinridge? ... I'm Confused
     It's been a crazy week, I grant you, but my crazy-o-meter just pegged when I saw the Muslim Brotherhood re-tweeting the late Gore Vid...
  • A Dane Is Unimpressed With Our Presidential Rhetoric
    America is indeed blessed to have so many close and strong allies, all of whom punch above their weight. Maybe one of them could loan the Wh...
  • Amplifying The Counter-Extremism Narrative In Pakistan
    As I wait for the New Year's ball to drop in Times Square, I see the Associated Press has some good news to end the year on, US Ups Extr...
  • The Longest Day, But Not the Longest Memory
    We're too busy to remember now, but please call us next year Last year on June 6, the White House sent out a lousy tweet to commemorate ...
  • Joyeux Quatorze Juillet
    On the eve of France's National Day, bonne fĂȘte!
  • I'm Hiding From The Cops Under Arrest
    I like a news story with a happy ending : William Velasquez Castillo, an illegal immigrant in Lucedale, Miss., was arrested May 19 by U.S. M...
  • Most Eyebrow-Raising Headline of the Week - Special Eid Edition
    " Sacrificial Ram Butts Owner to Death " - Emirites 24/7
  • What We Can Conclude After OBL's Demise
    Steve Coll's Notes on the Death of Osama bin Laden is the best commentary I've seen today on what we can reasonably conclude from y...

Categories

  • . (1)
  • accountability review board (3)
  • ADE 651 (3)
  • Af/Pak (6)
  • Af/Pk (2)
  • Afghanistan (10)
  • Ahmed Ghailani (1)
  • AIPAC (1)
  • al Qaeda (3)
  • Ambassador Carlos Pascual (2)
  • Ambassador Patricia Hawkins (1)
  • Anna Chapman (1)
  • ATF (1)
  • Aunt Zeituni (2)
  • Barrio Azteca (1)
  • Behring Breivik (1)
  • Beirut (1)
  • benghazi (22)
  • Bing (1)
  • Bureau of Overseas Building Operations (12)
  • Bureau of the Public Debt (1)
  • Burka Woman (1)
  • CIA (1)
  • Ciudad Juarez (2)
  • Cold War History (1)
  • Commission on Wartime Contracting (1)
  • Condoleezza Rice (1)
  • Consulate General Dubai (1)
  • Country Reports on Terrorism (1)
  • D-Day (1)
  • Dar es Salaam (1)
  • Department of Homeland Security (1)
  • Department of State (3)
  • Design Excellence (1)
  • DHS (1)
  • Diamond Jubilee (2)
  • Diplomatic History (3)
  • Diplomatic Security (23)
  • Diplomatic Security Service (4)
  • Dominique Strauss-Kahn (2)
  • Drug Enforcement Administration (1)
  • DSS (1)
  • Eyebrow-Raising Headline (1)
  • Fast and Furious (1)
  • FBI (2)
  • Federation of American Scientists (1)
  • Foreign Relations of the United States (3)
  • Fortress Embassy (23)
  • FRUS (4)
  • Gaddafi (1)
  • Gitmo (5)
  • Gitmo Gang (4)
  • Gitmo North (1)
  • Google (1)
  • GT-200 (1)
  • Guantanamo (1)
  • Herat (2)
  • Hillary Clinton (1)
  • Holy City of Washington (1)
  • Hotel Mazar (1)
  • Human Rights Council (1)
  • Internet Freedom (3)
  • Iraq (1)
  • Israel (1)
  • Jane Loeffler (1)
  • Jared Cohen (1)
  • Jerusalem Embassy Act (1)
  • jihobbyist (1)
  • Julian Assange (1)
  • KAOPOTUS (1)
  • Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (1)
  • KUOPOTUS (1)
  • Lahore (1)
  • Lesley Enriquez Redelfs (2)
  • Library of Congress (1)
  • Libya (29)
  • Lome (1)
  • Making Sense of Jihad (1)
  • Marine Security Guards (1)
  • Mazar-e-Sharif (3)
  • Memorial Day (1)
  • Mexican Drug Wars (4)
  • Mexico (9)
  • Michael Scheuer (1)
  • MSG (1)
  • Nairobi (1)
  • National Film Registry (1)
  • National Security Archive (1)
  • New Embassy Complex (1)
  • Niamey (1)
  • Nigel Farage (1)
  • Niger (1)
  • Northern Distribution Network (1)
  • Norway (1)
  • NPR (1)
  • OBO (5)
  • Office of Overseas Building Operations (1)
  • Office of Overseas Buildings Operations (7)
  • Office of Overseas Schools (1)
  • Office of the Historian (5)
  • Overseas Buildings Operations (2)
  • P.J. Crowley (2)
  • Pakistan (32)
  • Pan Am 103 (2)
  • Political Violence Against Americans (1)
  • President Obama (1)
  • Public Diplomacy (7)
  • Qaddafi (6)
  • Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR) (1)
  • Queen Elizabeth (2)
  • Rambo (1)
  • Raymond Davis (18)
  • Raymond Ibrahim (1)
  • Rewards for Justice (1)
  • Sanaa (1)
  • SECCA (2)
  • Secret Service Scandal (8)
  • Senator Kerry (1)
  • Sniffex (1)
  • Taliban (1)
  • Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (1)
  • terrorism (3)
  • The Covert Comic (1)
  • The Time Warp (1)
  • The War Nerd (1)
  • Transitional National Council (1)
  • U.S Consulate Lahore (1)
  • U.S Embassy Mexico (1)
  • U.S. Army (1)
  • U.S. Congress (1)
  • U.S. Consulate General Ciudad Juarez (2)
  • U.S. Consulate Karachi (4)
  • U.S. Consulate Lahore (5)
  • U.S. Consulate Matamoros (1)
  • U.S. Consulate Peshawar Pakistan (4)
  • U.S. Consulate Rio de Janeiro (1)
  • U.S. Consulate Tijuana (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Baghdad DipNote (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Islamabad Pakistan (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Islamabad Phttp://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifakistan (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Libya (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Lusaka (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Mexico City (2)
  • U.S. Embassy Sarajevo (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Tunis (1)
  • U.S. Embassy Valletta (1)
  • U.S. Peace Corps (2)
  • U.S. State Department (1)
  • UK (1)
  • Unabomber (2)
  • Uncle Omar (3)
  • United Nations (2)
  • Unredacted (2)
  • Uzbekistan (1)
  • Vietnam (1)
  • Vladimir Putin (1)
  • Washington DC (1)
  • White House Leaks (1)
  • Wikileaks (13)

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (40)
    • ►  September (1)
    • ►  August (9)
    • ►  July (2)
    • ►  June (1)
    • ▼  May (10)
      • ARB Benghazi: Quick Comment, Part 4
      • Google Versus Bing, Memorial Day 2013
      • Benghazi ARB Follow-Up: Quick Comment, Part 3
      • The Embassy Security Bill Comes Due, And It's A Ba...
      • Benghazi ARB Follow-Up: Quick Comment Part 2
      • Most Eyebrow-Raising Headline Of The Week
      • Benghazi ARB Follow-Up: Quick Comment, Part 1
      • Credit WaPo With An Assist
      • Talk Is Cheap, And Talking Points Are Even Cheaper
      • A Benghazi Witness Who Will Not Be At the Table We...
    • ►  April (4)
    • ►  March (2)
    • ►  February (5)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ►  2012 (138)
    • ►  December (4)
    • ►  November (3)
    • ►  October (12)
    • ►  September (5)
    • ►  August (11)
    • ►  July (10)
    • ►  June (12)
    • ►  May (19)
    • ►  April (15)
    • ►  March (10)
    • ►  February (15)
    • ►  January (22)
  • ►  2011 (267)
    • ►  December (14)
    • ►  November (13)
    • ►  October (14)
    • ►  September (19)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (25)
    • ►  June (18)
    • ►  May (25)
    • ►  April (25)
    • ►  March (25)
    • ►  February (32)
    • ►  January (28)
  • ►  2010 (55)
    • ►  December (37)
    • ►  November (18)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile