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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Statement for the Record Subcommittee on Border, Maritime, and Global 
Counterterrorism, Committee on Homeland Security, House of 
Representatives:

To accompany the Committee hearing record of Thursday, October 4, 2007. 

Combating Terrorism: 

Law Enforcement Agencies Lack Directives to Assist Foreign Nations: 

Statement for the Record by Jess T. Ford: 
Director International Affairs and Trade: 

GAO-08-144T: 

GAO Highlights:

Highlights of GAO-08-144T, a statement for the record to the 
Subcommittee on Border, Maritime, and Global Terrorism, Committee on 
Homeland Security, House of Representatives. 

Why GAO Did This Study:

Three U.S. national strategies, developed in the wake of the 9/11 
attacks, directed U.S. law enforcement agencies (LEA) to focus on the 
prevention of terrorist attacks. The strategies called for LEAs to 
intensify their efforts to help foreign nations identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists. This testimony addresses (1) the guidance for 
LEAs to assist foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute 
terrorists and (2) the extent to which LEAs have implemented this 
guidance.

What GAO Found:

Following the 9/11 attacks, the President issued a series of strategies 
that provided broad direction for overseas law enforcement efforts to 
assist foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. 
However, these strategies did not articulate which LEAs should 
implement the guidance to enhance efforts to help foreign nations 
combat terrorism or how they should do so. In December 2004, Congress 
passed the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, 
which charged the NCTC with developing a plan to use all elements of 
national power, including LEAs, to combat terrorism. NCTC officials 
told us they had drafted a general plan, which was approved by the 
President in June of 2006. According to NCTC, State, Justice, and DHS 
officials, implementing guidance for the plan is under development, and 
they would not discuss the contents of the plan or the guidance. 

LEAs have increased efforts to help foreign nations identify, disrupt, 
and prosecute terrorists. For example, DHS has implemented its 
Container Security Initiative to screen U.S.-bound cargo at foreign 
ports, and State has expanded its Antiterrorism Assistance program. 
However, we found that because most LEAs, with the exception of the 
FBI, have not been given clear guidance, they lacked clearly defined 
roles and responsibilities on helping foreign nations identify, 
disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. In one country we visited, the lack 
of clear roles and responsibilities between two U.S. LEAs may have 
compromised several joint operations intended to identify and disrupt 
potential terrorist activities, according to the U.S. and foreign 
nation LEAs.  In addition, we found LEAs generally lacked guidance on 
using resources to assist foreign nations in addressing terrorist 
vulnerabilities and generally lacked performance monitoring systems and 
formal structures for sharing information and collaborating. We also 
found that, because comprehensive needs assessments were not conducted, 
LEAs may not be tailoring their full range of training and assistance 
to address key terrorism vulnerabilities in foreign countries.

Photograph: U.S. ATA-Trained Foreign Police Conduct Counterterrorism 
Exercises.

What GAO Recommends:

In our recent report on this issue, we recommended that the National 
Counterterrorism Center (NCTC), ensure that the implementing guidance 
for its plan for combating terrorism articulates a clear strategy for 
using LEAs to help foreign nations combat terrorism. We also 
recommended that State, Justice, and DHS explore enhancements to 
overseas coordination mechanisms and develop clear guidance and 
performance monitoring to enhance efforts to help foreign nations 
combat terrorism.

NCTC stated it had already begun to implement our recommendations. DHS 
generally agreed with our recommendations. State and Justice stated 
they would consider ways to improve overseas coordination, but did not 
indicate whether they concurred with our other recommendations.

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.GAO-08-144T]. For more information, contact Jess 
Ford at (202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov.

[End of section] 

Madam Chairwoman and Members of the Subcommittee: 

I am pleased to submit this statement for the record on U.S. law 
enforcement efforts to help foreign nations to combat terrorism abroad 
[Footnote 1]. In the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, combating 
terrorism has become the nation’s top national security goal and the 
highest strategic objective of U.S. embassies worldwide. Law 
enforcement agencies (LEA) from the departments of State (State), 
Justice (Justice), and Homeland Security (DHS)—including the Federal 
Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Immigration and Customs Enforcement 
(ICE), and State’s Bureau of Diplomatic Security (DS)—operate from U.S. 
embassies overseas and assist foreign nation governments on a broad 
array of law enforcement issues, such as investigating crime, reducing 
illegal drug activity, controlling borders and immigration, and 
protecting U.S. embassies and diplomats from attack. 

Following the 9/11 attacks, the President issued a series of national 
strategies that have called for using all elements of national power to 
combat terrorism, including changing the role of LEAs. In particular, 
these strategies have directed that law enforcement activities be 
increasingly focused on the prevention of further terrorist attacks, 
including helping foreign nations identify, disrupt, and prosecute 
terrorists. This includes technical assistance, such as antiterrorism 
training and the provision of technologies used to identify terrorist 
threats, and operational assistance, such as joint U.S.-foreign nation 
investigations and operations against terrorists. 

This statement discusses the findings from our recent report regarding 
(1) the guidance for LEAs to help foreign nations combat terrorism, and 
(2) the extent to which LEAs have implemented this guidance. I should 
point out that our review was limited to U.S. law enforcement efforts 
overseas. It did not focus on U.S. domestic law enforcement efforts or 
other instruments of national power—including military, intelligence, 
diplomatic, and financial—currently being used to combat terrorism. 

During the course of our review, we analyzed the National Security 
Strategy of the United States of America, the National Strategy for 
Homeland Security, and the National Strategy to Combat Terrorism. We 
discussed this and other guidance with representatives from State, 
Justice, and DHS, along with embassy and LEA officials involved with 
working with foreign nation counterparts. We also reviewed State, 
Justice, and DHS strategic plans and annual performance reports and 
conducted detailed work in four countries with key roles in combating 
terrorism where we met with LEA, embassy, and foreign nation officials. 
We also met with officials from the National Counterterrorism Center 
(NCTC)[Footnote 2] to brief them on our observations and to determine 
the status of ongoing efforts to develop a plan to use all elements of 
national power, including LEAs, to combat terrorism. NCTC officials 
would not discuss the plan, its contents, or any issues raised in our 
report. During the course of our work we experienced considerable 
delays obtaining information from Justice and State, which resulted in 
our report being issued several months later than initially planned. We 
were eventually able to obtain information sufficient for answering our 
objectives. The work used to support this statement was conducted in 
accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards.

Summary: 

The national strategies issued after the 9/11 attacks collectively 
called for reorienting U.S. LEAs to proactively work to prevent 
terrorist attacks at home and abroad. However, they lacked key 
components, such as clearly defined objectives, roles, and 
responsibilities necessary for a strategic plan and for facilitating 
interagency collaboration. Further, they did not articulate which LEAs 
should implement the general guidance provided in the strategies or how 
they should do so. For example, of the seven LEAs in our review, only 
the FBI received and has issued some implementing guidance—for example, 
stating that it planned to increase its presence abroad and increase 
joint operations with foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists. In December 2004, Congress passed the 
Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act (the 2004 Intelligence 
Reform Act)[Footnote 3], which charged the NCTC with developing a plan 
to use all elements of national power, including LEAs, to combat 
terrorism. NCTC officials told us they had drafted a general plan, 
which was approved by the President in June 2006. According to NCTC 
officials, the implementing guidance for the plan was still under 
development as of May 2007, and they would not discuss the plan, its 
contents, or the implementing guidance. 

Some LEAs have taken steps to increase their efforts to help foreign 
nations identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. For example, the 
FBI has increased its overseas activities and DHS has worked with 
foreign nations to implement the Container Security Initiative to 
screen U.S.-bound cargo at foreign ports. However, almost 6 years after 
the 9/11 attacks, the United States lacks clear implementing guidance 
for integrating the variety of overseas LEA activities to help foreign 
nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. We found that, 
because most LEAs have not been provided clear directives, they 
generally lacked (1) clearly articulated roles and responsibilities to 
assist foreign nations; (2) guidance on setting funding priorities and 
providing resources; (3) performance monitoring systems to assess LEA 
progress; (4) formal structures to coordinate LEA operational and 
technical assistance to foreign nation LEAs; and (5) comprehensive 
country needs assessments to tailor LEA technical and operational 
assistance to specific foreign nation needs. 

Looking forward, the United States needs to develop clear implementing 
guidance for integrating the variety of overseas LEA activities 
assisting foreign nations to combat terrorism. In our recent report, we 
recommend that the Director of the NCTC, in consultation with the 
National Security Council (NSC), ensure that the implementing guidance 
for the NCTC’s plan for combating terrorism clearly articulates the 
specific objectives for each LEA, clarifies their roles and 
responsibilities, and proposes actions linked to available resources 
and directed at the most pressing needs for assisting foreign nations 
to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. In addition, since 
these activities are central to the overall U.S. effort to combat 
terrorism, DHS, Justice, and State need to ensure that their component 
agencies have clear guidance to implement the national security 
strategies’ goal of using the full capabilities of LEAs to assist 
foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists, and 
also need to assess progress toward objectives and provide regular 
reporting to Congress on the results, impediments, and planned 
improvements. NCTC stated it had already begun to implement our 
recommendations. DHS generally agreed with our recommendations. State 
and Justice stated they would consider ways to improve overseas 
coordination.

Background: 

State, Justice, and DHS each include LEAs that operate from U.S. 
embassies. LEAs abroad work on a wide array of law enforcement issues, 
including those that cover criminal enterprises, drug cartels, visa and 
immigration fraud, financial crimes, criminal and terrorist threats 
against U.S. embassies and personnel, and fugitive capture and 
extraditions. In this statement, we are focused primarily on ICE, FBI, 
and DS operations abroad, although in our report we also reviewed the 
overseas counter-terrorism activities of the Drug Enforcement 
Administration; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and 
Explosives; the U.S. Marshals Service; Customs and Border Protection; 
and the U.S. Secret Service. 

ICE investigates threats to U.S. border security and works to eliminate 
the potential threat of terrorist acts against the United States. The 
FBI is charged with protecting the United States from terrorist 
attacks; preventing, disrupting, and defeating terrorist operations; 
and expanding operational partnerships with foreign nation law 
enforcement and intelligence agencies to disrupt and prevent terrorism. 
DS is State’s law enforcement arm and is responsible for protecting 
U.S. embassies, diplomats, and their families from criminal and 
terrorist attacks. 

The 2004 Intelligence Reform Act created the NCTC and charged it with 
integrating all instruments of national power—including diplomatic, 
financial, military, intelligence, homeland security, and law 
enforcement activities—within and among agencies, with the ultimate 
goal of preventing future attacks against America and its interests 
worldwide. The NCTC is a part of the Office of the Director of National 
Intelligence and reports to the Director on matters of intelligence 
collection and analysis; however, on matters of strategic operational 
planning for counterterrorism, the Director of the NCTC reports 
directly to the President. As a result, the NCTC works under the policy 
direction of the NSC on matters of counterterrorism planning.

National Strategies Provide Broad Guidance, but Lack Key Elements for a 
Strategic Plan and Interagency Collaboration: 

A series of national strategies have provided broad guidance for U.S. 
LEAs to help foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute 
terrorists. However, the strategies lack essential elements of a 
strategic plan and for facilitating interagency collaboration, and they 
do not clearly delineate what role, if any, the various LEAs should 
play in assisting foreign nations to combat terrorism. The 2004 
Intelligence Reform Act requires the NCTC to develop U.S. 
governmentwide strategic operational plans to combat terrorism, which 
should include the mission, objectives, tasks to be performed, 
interagency coordination of operational activities, and assignment of 
roles and responsibilities among participating agencies. NCTC officials 
told us that, in response to the act, they had drafted a general plan, 
which was approved by the President in June 2006, but the implementing 
guidance for the plan was still under development. 

National Strategies Provide Broad Guidance for LEAs to Assist Foreign 
Nations to Combat Terrorism: 

A series of national strategies have provided some strategic-level 
guidance for U.S. LEAs to help foreign nations identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists. For example, the National Security Strategy, 
issued in 2002 and updated in March 2006, states that the United States 
will continue to encourage regional partners to take up a coordinated 
effort that isolates the terrorists, and help ensure that foreign 
nations have the law enforcement, military, political, and financial 
tools necessary to disrupt and destroy terrorist operations before they 
reach American borders. 

Additionally, the 2002 National Strategy for Homeland Security 
primarily focuses on domestic efforts to secure America from further 
terrorist attacks. It clarifies the role of LEAs in the post 9/11 
world, stating that, “Our Nation’s highest law enforcement objective 
must be the prevention of terrorist acts—a significant shift from pre-
9/11 objectives.” The strategy also notes that, in a world where the 
terrorist threat pays no respect to traditional boundaries, the 
American strategy for homeland security cannot stop at the country’s 
borders. 

It also calls for a sustained and systematic international agenda to 
counter the global terrorist threat and improve homeland security, and 
identifies a number of initiatives in this area, including (1) 
intensifying international law enforcement cooperation and helping 
foreign nations fight terrorism and (2) augmenting the FBI’s overseas 
presence by increasing the number of LEGATs around the world. It states 
that Justice, in cooperation with State, is to work with foreign nation 
counterparts on these law enforcement issues.

Also, the National Strategy for Combating Terrorism, issued in 2003 and 
updated in 2006, focuses on the United States’ efforts to combat 
terrorism abroad. It also provides greater detail on the objectives and 
strategies for U.S. LEAs in working with their foreign nation 
counterparts. According to the strategy, the United States is to: 

* Expand, where appropriate, the U.S. law enforcement presence abroad 
to further the investigative and operational assistance related to the 
interdiction, investigation, and prosecution of terrorist suspects;

* Increase technical and operational assistance efforts to help foreign 
nation LEAs acquire the necessary capabilities to fight terrorism 
through a variety of means, including (1) improved legislation, (2) 
technical assistance, (3) new investigative techniques, (4) 
intelligence sharing, and (5) law enforcement training;

* Enhance operational assistance to expand international cooperation to 
combat terrorism through expanded sharing of law enforcement 
information.

In 2006, the White House released updates of the National Security 
Strategy and the National Strategy to Combat Terrorism. Both updated 
strategies reinforce the basic concepts of using U.S. LEAs to assist 
foreign nations in identifying, disrupting, and prosecuting terrorists 
abroad. For example, the National Strategy to Combat Terrorism supports 
intensifying training and other types of assistance to improve foreign 
nation LEA capacities to identify and disrupt terrorists threats, as 
well as implementing legal reforms aimed at ensuring that foreign 
nations have the necessary laws to carry out this effort, and that 
investigators, prosecutors, and judges have the capacity to effectively 
prosecute terrorists using these new laws. The strategies state that 
this approach has succeeded in identifying, disrupting, and prosecuting 
terrorists since the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The National Strategies Lack Key Elements for a Strategic Plan and 
Interagency Collaboration: 

Our past work has stressed the importance of developing a strategy to 
combat terrorism that would establish goals, objectives, priorities, 
outcomes, milestones, and performance measures.[Footnote 4] In March 
2003, we reported that strategic plans should clearly define objectives 
to be accomplished, identify the roles and responsibilities for meeting 
each objective, ensure that funding necessary to achieve the objectives 
is available, and employ monitoring mechanisms to determine progress 
and identify needed improvements. For example, our past work has found 
that identifying clear roles and responsibilities for each federal 
agency combating terrorism is a major challenge in implementing 
national strategies related to terrorism. 

In addition, the Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA) requires 
each federal agency to develop strategic plans that cover a period of 
at least 5 years and include the agency’s mission statement; identify 
the agency’s general goals and objectives; and describe how the agency 
intends to achieve those goals through its activities and human, 
capital, information, and other resources. Under GPRA, strategic plans 
are the starting point for agencies to set annual performance plans for 
programs and to measure the performance of the programs in achieving 
those goals. Our past work has found that GPRA has the potential for 
greatly enhancing agency performance. For example, managers can use 
performance information to identify problems in existing programs, to 
try to identify the causes of problems, and to develop corrective 
actions. [Footnote 5]

Moreover, in a large-scale interagency effort where interagency 
collaboration is essential, we have found that agencies should (1) 
define and articulate a common outcome; (2) establish mutually 
reinforcing or joint strategies; (3) identify and address funding needs 
by leveraging resources; (4) agree on roles and responsibilities; (5) 
establish compatible policies, procedures, and other means to operate 
across agency boundaries; (6) develop mechanisms to monitor, evaluate, 
and report on results; (7) reinforce agency accountability for 
collaborative efforts through agency plans and reports; and (8) 
reinforce individual accountability for collaborative efforts through 
performance management systems. [Footnote 6] We have specifically noted 
that, given the number of agencies involved in U.S. government efforts 
to combat terrorism, it is particularly important that there be 
mechanisms to coordinate across agencies. [Footnote 7] 

We found that while the national strategies, as well as their updates 
in 2006, provided broad guidance, they lacked key strategic elements, 
including those to promote LEA collaboration in assisting foreign 
nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. For example, 
none of the three national strategies established joint agency 
strategies that would capitalize on the unique capacity of each LEA to 
combat terrorism. Further, none of them identified funding needs or 
leveraged resources; reached agreement on roles and responsibilities; 
or established procedures to operate across agency boundaries. 
Moreover, none of the strategies included mechanisms to monitor, 
evaluate, and report on their overall results, nor did they reinforce 
agency accountability for collaborative efforts through agency plans 
and reports.

NCTC Has Drafted Plan for Combating Terrorism, but Implementing 
Guidance Is Still under Development: 

In December 2004, Congress passed the 2004 Intelligence Reform Act, 
creating the NCTC and charging it with developing strategic operational 
plans to combat terrorism using every element of national power, 
including those of U.S. LEAs. Under the act, the NCTC is expected to 
(1) conduct strategic operational planning for counterterrorism 
activities; (2) integrate all instruments of national power in such 
planning, including law enforcement, diplomatic, military, 
intelligence, and financial activities; (3) assign roles and 
responsibilities to lead departments and agencies; (4) ensure that 
agencies have access to intelligence and intelligence support needed to 
execute their counterterrorism plans and accomplish their assigned 
activities; and (5) monitor implementation of these operational plans. 

In June 2006, the NCTC Director testified before Congress that the lack 
of a detailed plan to ensure full implementation of the national 
security strategy had been a void that stretched back for decades. 
[Footnote 8] According to the director, what has long been missing is a 
plan to ensure that national strategies are implemented at the 
operational level in a coordinated, integrated fashion, and that there 
has been no formal process to translate the national strategies into 
strategic and tangible objectives, assigned to lead agencies, with 
roles and responsibilities clearly defined. In addition, there has been 
no plan to ensure the coordination, integration, and synchronization of 
joint departmental operations, or any effort to monitor the combined 
impact of the multiple agencies engaged in implementing the national 
security strategy. 

NCTC officials told us that, in response to the act, they had drafted a 
general plan, which was approved by the President in June of 2006. 
According to NCTC officials, implementing guidance for the plan was 
still under development as of May 2007, and they would not discuss the 
plan, its contents, or the implementing guidance.

Several Factors Limit LEA Efforts to Assist Foreign Nations to 
Identify, Disrupt, and Prosecute Terrorists: 

Although some LEAs have taken steps to increase their efforts to help 
foreign nations identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists, most LEAs 
have not been given clear guidance for helping foreign nations to 
identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. We found that LEA efforts 
to assist foreign nations identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists 
have been hindered because the LEAs generally lacked (1) clearly 
articulated roles and responsibilities from NCTC to assist foreign 
nations; (2) guidance on setting funding priorities and providing 
resources; (3) performance monitoring systems to assess LEA progress; 
(4) formal structures to coordinate LEA operational and technical 
assistance to foreign nation LEAs; and (5) comprehensive country needs 
assessments to tailor LEA technical and operational assistance to 
specific foreign nation needs. 

Some LEAs Have Taken Steps to Assist Foreign Nations to Combat 
Terrorism: 

Some LEAs have increased their efforts to help foreign nations combat 
terrorism. For example, the FBI is attempting to operationally assist 
foreign nations to identify and disrupt terrorist attacks before they 
occur, and it has responded to specific terrorist attacks by assisting 
foreign nations to identify and prosecute the suspected terrorists. In 
addition, new programs have been specifically designed to assist 
foreign nations to identify and disrupt potential terrorist threats, 
such as the DHS Container Security Initiative (CSI). Moreover, some 
existing technical assistance programs, like State’s Antiterrorism 
Assistance (ATA) program, have been expanded in an effort to improve 
foreign nation capabilities. While this list is not all inclusive, 
these represent some significant U.S. efforts to use U.S. LEAs to 
assist foreign nations to combat terrorism. We found that these three 
efforts were limited by a variety of factors. 

We found that the FBI has both responded to specific terrorist attacks 
by operationally assisting foreign nation LEAs to identify and 
prosecute terrorists involved in those attacks, as well as tried to 
proactively assist foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute 
terrorists. In one country we visited, the FBI provided limited but 
vital operational assistance to locate terrorist suspects and provided 
key evidence for their successful prosecution. In another country we 
visited, the FBI was working proactively with ICE and with foreign 
nation counterparts to track suspicious migrants and identify and 
disrupt potential terrorists before they entered the United States. 
However, as we will discuss below, we found that the impact of the 
FBI’s efforts to combat terrorism has been limited in some posts 
overseas. 

DHS’s CSI effort targets for inspection at foreign seaports high-risk 
cargo shipments before they leave for the United States. It was created 
after the 9/11 terrorist attacks and requires U.S. law enforcement 
personnel to be physically colocated with foreign nation LEAs to 
identify and disrupt terrorist threats to America. In 2005, we reported 
that CSI had led to improved information sharing between U.S. and 
foreign customs staff and a heightened level of bilateral cooperation 
and international awareness of the need to identify and disrupt 
terrorist threats. [Footnote 9] However, we also found that several 
issues limited its effectiveness, such as the inability to fully staff 
some ports because of diplomatic constraints.

LEAs Lack Clear Roles and Responsibilities: 

Despite such actions, we found that most LEAs have not been given clear 
guidance for helping foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists. We found that neither NCTC nor the executive 
departments have clearly translated the national strategies’ broad 
strategic objectives to agency-specific roles and responsibilities. In 
addition, we found that, with one exception, neither Justice, DHS, nor 
State had issued guidance to their component LEAs to implement this new 
national security goal of assisting foreign nations to identify, 
disrupt, or prosecute terrorists. Only Justice had issued some guidance 
to the FBI. As a result, most U.S. LEAs lacked clearly defined roles 
and responsibilities for implementing their efforts to assist foreign 
nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. 

We found problems because of this lack of guidance on roles and 
responsibilities. For example: 

* Although Justice told us in February 2007 that the FBI was designated 
the lead federal LEA on investigating terrorism-related crimes abroad, 
this view was not shared by the other LEAs or even the FBI itself. 
LEAs, including DHS’s ICE, Justice’s FBI, and State’s DS all told us 
there was no lead LEA charged with using the combined capabilities of 
federal LEAs to assist foreign nations identify, disrupt, and prosecute 
terrorists.

* In one country we visited, the lack of clear roles and 
responsibilities between two U.S. LEAs may have compromised several 
joint operations intended to identify and disrupt potential terrorist 
activities, according to the U.S. and foreign nation LEAs. ICE was 
responsible for tracking special interest aliens, while the FBI was 
responsible for identifying terrorists trying to enter the United 
States. Because it was unclear whether some of these special interest 
aliens were migrants or potential terrorists—and ICE and FBI were not 
given clear guidance to determine which LEA had the lead role—foreign 
nation and agency officials noted instances where joint U.S.-foreign 
nation investigations or operations were poorly coordinated. As a 
result, ICE and FBI, unknowingly working with different foreign nation 
LEAs, moved in on the same subject. According to the foreign nation law 
enforcement and FBI officials, such actions may have compromised 
several of their investigations.

* DS’s Regional Security Officers (RSO) have been given no post 9/11 
guidance from State on how to assist foreign nations to identify, 
disrupt, and prosecute terrorists, and RSOs voiced confusion about this 
role. In three of the four countries we visited, RSOs told us that they 
were not working with foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists, while in another country, the RSO played a 
critical role in embassy efforts to help the foreign nation capture and 
prosecute terrorists responsible for attacks against Americans and 
others.

* At the four embassies we visited, we found State had not provided 
guidance on how to use LEA assets to assist foreign nations to 
identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. Ambassadors or deputy 
chiefs of mission at each embassy we visited voiced their concern that, 
despite combating terrorism being the embassy’s highest priority, they 
received little to no guidance on how to design a coordinated 
assistance program using the full capacities of U.S. technical and 
operational assistance from LEAs, and ensure that LEAs had the 
necessary goals, skills, capabilities, and time to work closely with 
foreign nation officials to stop terrorists attacks.

In commenting on our findings in February 2007, officials from DHS, 
Justice, and State agreed that there had been a lack of clear guidance 
instructing LEAs to assist foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists. Officials noted that the NSC and now the NCTC 
have the authority to compel U.S. LEAs to work together in a 
coordinated, systematic fashion to help stop terrorist attacks. 
Officials said that no executive department has the authority to direct 
the LEAs from other departments to focus on this goal, and they noted 
that recommendations to individual agencies would not result in a 
unified multidepartmental effort to help foreign nations combat 
terrorism. 

LEAs Lack Guidance on Prioritizing Funds: 

Officials from DHS, Justice, and State told us that they are attempting 
to fund a broad array of LEA activities abroad with limited staffing 
and funds, and without guidance from the NSC on reprioritizing funds 
from other activities. As a result, their efforts to assist foreign 
nations to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists have been 
hindered. For example:  

* DHS officials from ICE and Customs and Border Protection said they 
were limited in their ability to undertake new overseas 
counterterrorism initiatives or to fully staff existing positions 
already approved by embassies; 

* Although FBI’s Strategic Plan states that it will expand the role of 
its LEGAT offices to undertake joint investigative and operational 
partnerships with foreign nation LEAs to identify and stop terrorist 
attacks against U.S. interests, we found several problems that reduced 
their ability to meet this goal. For example, the LEGATs in three of 
the four countries we visited said they generally lacked the resources, 
time, and staff to develop the close, collaborative relationships 
necessary to conduct joint investigations or operations;  

* A 2006 report from State’s Office of Inspector General found that 
State lacked adequate resources to meet its mandate to coordinate all 
U.S. counterterrorism assistance abroad, and was too under-funded to 
provide advice, coordination, and action on counterterrorism issues to 
its embassies;  

* In all four countries we visited, terrorist transit and border 
vulnerabilities were identified as primary terrorist threats; yet, in 
three of these countries, funding had not been realigned to support 
this effort, so the respective embassies could not provide specific 
assistance to address these needs; 

* In all four countries we visited, there was more funding to assist 
foreign nations combat illegal drugs and crime than to combat 
terrorism, despite the fact that efforts to combat terrorism were the 
highest priority of each embassy. For example, in one country with an 
extremely high terrorist threat to American interests globally, State 
provided more than six times the amount of funding to stop illicit 
drugs and crime ($220.2 million) than it did for antiterrorism 
assistance ($34.5 million) from fiscal years 2002 to 2006.  

LEAs Lack Performance Monitoring Systems:  

DHS, Justice, and State officials said that they lacked systems to 
assess their performance and progress in assisting foreign nations to 
identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. As a result, none of the 
LEAs had in place a method for determining progress or documenting 
their accomplishments in assisting foreign nations to identify, 
disrupt, and prosecute terrorists, either for technical or operational 
assistance.  

Because the LEAs lack such a monitoring system, they could not provide 
a comprehensive list of key accomplishments in assisting foreign 
nations to identify, disrupt, or prosecute terrorists from 2001 to 
2005. As a result, we could not conduct a full assessment of the LEAs’ 
progress in these efforts. 

LEAs Lack Mechanisms to Foster Joint Collaboration:  

We found that neither NCTC, State, Justice, nor DHS had developed 
policies to facilitate joint LEA investigations and operations abroad. 
As a result:  

* LEAs told us that the embassies had not been reoriented to harness 
the combined capabilities of all LEAs in a collective effort to prevent 
another terrorist attack on the United States or its interests;  

* In three of the four embassies we visited, we found that the 
embassies generally retained pre-9/11 structures for information 
sharing among LEAs. Although embassies generally use law enforcement 
working groups to share information, we found they were not focused on 
joint investigative or operational efforts to identify and disrupt 
terrorist acts. For example, in one country we visited with an 
extremely high terrorist threat, an FBI official told us that the law 
enforcement working group had never been asked to try to identify or 
disrupt any of the terrorists on the most wanted lists of the 
departments of State or Defense, or of the foreign nation itself. 

LEAs Lack Comprehensive Country Needs Assessments:  

In each country we visited, we found that there were no comprehensive 
needs assessments being conducted that consider all U.S. assistance 
available for addressing the country’s needs in combating terrorism. As 
a result, we found that State, Justice, DHS, and their LEAs may not be 
targeting their full range of training and assistance to help foreign 
countries to identify, disrupt, and prosecute terrorists. For example:  

* According to embassy officials in three of the four countries we 
visited, terrorist transit across their borders was a key 
vulnerability. However, there was no comprehensive effort by State, 
Justice, DHS, or their LEAs to provide training to the foreign nation 
border patrols, immigration officers, and customs agents to identify 
and disrupt terrorists transiting their borders.  

Conclusion:  

In closing, the enhanced missions of LEAs to work with foreign nations 
to combat terrorism and the creation of the NCTC are potentially 
significant steps to resolving some of the serious national security 
problems identified by the 9/11 Commission. However, in our recent 
report, we found important gaps between the broad goals of the national 
strategies and what was actually being implemented in the field. While 
the national strategies articulated changes in the direction and 
emphasis of overseas LEA activities, they have not provided specific 
roles, objectives, or mechanisms for determining success. As a result 
of these and other weaknesses, LEAs, a key element of national power, 
are not being fully utilized abroad to help protect U.S. citizens and 
interests from future terrorist attacks. Looking forward, the United 
States needs to develop clear implementing guidance for integrating the 
variety of overseas LEA activities assisting foreign nations to combat 
terrorism. As such, it is imperative that the NCTC plan for combating 
terrorism be clear in assigning roles and responsibilities and ensuring 
that each LEA has the means, the incentives, and the procedures to work 
with other agencies to assist foreign nations to identify, disrupt, and 
prosecute terrorists.  

Recommendations to Improve U.S. LEA Efforts to Assist Foreign Nations 
to Combat Terrorism:  

In our report, we recommended that the NCTC ensure that the 
implementing guidance for the NCTC’s plan for combating terrorism 
articulates a clear strategy for using LEAs to help foreign nations 
combat terrorism. We also recommended that State, Justice, and DHS 
explore enhancements to overseas coordination mechanisms and develop 
clear guidance and performance monitoring to enhance efforts to help 
foreign nations combat terrorism. NCTC stated it had already begun to 
implement our recommendations. DHS generally agreed with our 
recommendations.  

State and Justice stated they would consider ways to improve overseas 
coordination, but did not indicate whether they concurred with our 
other recommendations.  

I would be pleased to meet with you or your staff to answer any 
questions you may have or to discuss this statement. 

Contact and Staff Acknowledgments:  

For questions regarding this testimony, please contact Jess T. Ford at 
(202) 512-4128 or fordj@gao.gov. Individuals making key contributions 
to this statement include: Dave Maurer, Assistant Director; Edward J. 
George; J. Addison Ricks; and Joe Carney.  

[End of section]  

Footnotes:  

[1] GAO, Combating Terrorism: Law Enforcement Agencies Lack Directives 
to Assist Foreign Nations to Identify, Disrupt, and Prosecute 
Terrorists, GAO-07-697 (Washington, D.C.: May 25, 2007).  

[2] The NCTC was created by Congress as part of the Intelligence Reform 
and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004 (P.L. 108-458). NCTC’s mission 
includes developing plans that coordinate the use of all elements of 
national power, including LEAs, to combat terrorism and prevent 
terrorist attacks. As detailed in the background section of this 
report, the NCTC reports directly to the President on matters of 
strategic operational planning for counterterrorism and works under the 
policy direction of the NSC. 

[3] P.L. 108-458, section 1021 (50 U.S.C. 404o).  

[4] GAO, Combating Terrorism: Observations on National Strategies 
Related to Terrorism, GAO 03 519T (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 3, 2003).  

[5] GAO, Managing for Results: Enhancing Agency Use of Performance 
Information for Management Decision Making, GAO 05 927 (Washington, 
D.C.: Sept. 9, 2005).  

[6] GAO, Results-Oriented Government: Practices That Can Help Enhance 
and Sustain Collaboration among Federal Agencies, GAO-06-15 
(Washington, D.C.: Oct. 21, 2005).  

[7] GAO-03-519T.  

[8] Admiral John Scott Redd, in testimony before the Senate Committee 
on Foreign Relations, June 13, 2006.  

[9] GAO, Container Security: A Flexible Staffing Model and Minimum 
Equipment Requirements Would Improve Overseas Targeting and Inspection 
Efforts, GAO 05 557 (Washington, D.C.: Apr. 26, 2005).  

[End of section]  

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