‘Strong
Angel III’ Tests Military-Civil Disaster Response
By
Donna Miles
AFPS
SAN
DIEGO, California (AFPS) – Power is down. Lights are
out, and water is cut off. Internet and phone access is blocked.
Local
governments
struggle to
provide humanitarian assistance relief without an established telecommunications
infrastructure.
This is the scenario behind Strong Angel III, a disaster-response
exercise underway here. The exercise simulates a
worldwide viral pandemic
that stretches emergency response efforts toward the breaking point. At the
same time, a terrorist network launches a wave of cyber-attacks that disable
communications throughout the United States when they’re needed most.
More than
600 military members, Defense Department employees and contractors,
first responders, nongovernmental organization representatives
and technologists are using the exercise as to improve their
ability to coordinate.
Helping prepare
for such a contingency, and promoting civil-military cooperation
in meeting its challenges, is the goal of Strong Angel III,
explained Navy Cmdr. (Dr.) Eric Rasmussen, exercise director
and chairman of the Department of Medicine at Naval Hospital
Bremerton, Wash.
Rasmussen
is no stranger to disasters. He’s been involved in civil
affairs and humanitarian and disaster response in Bosnia, Africa
and Iraq, served as head of a civil-military coordination team
after the 2005 tsunami in Indonesia and deployed to New Orleans
with Joint Task Force Katrina.
Throughout
these experiences, Rasmussen said, he continually identified
a nagging problem that he hopes efforts like Strong Angel III
will help resolve: military and civil responders simply don’t
know how to communicate and work with each other.
“There’s
a misunderstanding about the level of professionalism on both
sides,” he said as he overlooked a flurry of activity
on an open-air balcony at San Diego’s Fire-Rescue Department
Training Facility. Military people often think of non-governmental
organization members as “do-gooders” who lack either
experience or a long-term commitment. NGO staffers think of
the military as too rigid or shortsighted to see the job through.
“Neither
is true,” Rasmussen said. “And if you have them
come together to the same place to do something hard that requires
them to work together toward a common purpose, that’s
how they come to recognize each others’ professionalism.”
But the challenges
go beyond mere perceptions, Strong Angel III participants acknowledged.
In some cases, classified military networks don’t interface
with other first responders’ open networks. As a result,
the two entities can’t talk to each other or coordinate
their efforts.
Army Lt.
Col. Ed McLarney from U.S. Joint Forces Command’s Joint
Experimentation Directorate is here working to help break down
those network boundaries. McLarney is part of a team testing
a prototype that enables users to transfer information from
a simulated classified network to a user on the open Internet.
“The
idea is to selectively transfer specific information from a
classified network, as needed, to networks where others can
access it,” he said. In a real disaster response, those
involved could better share information, requirements and assistance.
The concept
follows what McLarney called the Army adage of “train
as you fight.” “And the way we fight today is as
coalitions, so it is important that we be able to share information,” he
said.
Other DoD
participants in Strong Angel III are exploring different ways
to promote military-civil cooperation.
Michael McGonagle,
knowledge management chief for JFCOM’s Standing Joint
Force Headquarters, is here promoting HARMONIEweb.org, which
the command recently developed as a clearinghouse for disaster
assistance responders. The site, with the acronym for Humanitarian
Assistance Response Monitoring and Operations Network Internet
Enterprise, presents a single link where all responders can
share information and coordinate their efforts, McGonagle explained.
“It’s
a link between those who have and need things,” he said. “It’s
a way of pulling together existing sites so there’s a
single place for people to get information.”
Feedback
from Strong Angel III participants will help JFCOM further
fine-tune the site and make it more useful, he said.
Not far from
McGonagle’s work station, Lowell Pennington, an analyst
from the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, is part of
a team exploring ways to help bring better situational awareness
to first responders.
In one exercise
scenario, an unknown white gas was pouring from a stopped vehicle.
McGonagle and his fellow analysts charted the vehicle’s
location, calculated wind conditions to determine what areas
might be affected by the smoke plume and worked to get that
information to responders who needed it.
“The
bottom line is getting geospatial intelligence to the lowest
tactical level,” Pennington said. “We’re
trying to find out what we need to do to make the system better
and more interactive for the future.”
Across the
balcony area, Marine Corps Lt. Col. Michael Zwingle, Marine
emergency preparedness liaison officer for the Federal Emergency
Management Agency’s Region 9, was coordinating with other
Strong Angel III players to determine what military resources
were available to meet their needs.
“They
tell me what capability they need, and I tell them what assets
we have and what we can do,” he said. “They are
looking for assets. I look for resources and offer suggestions.”
Meanwhile,
Martin Hill, a research analyst for the Naval Health Research
Center in nearby Point Loma, was here in the training facility
courtyard sharing information about a software program the
Marine Corps uses for medical planning before a deployment.
The goal, he said, isn’t to get civilian first responders
to adopt the Marine Corps system. It’s to identify what
changes the system needs to better suit those responders’ requirements.
“What
we’re looking at is developing it into a tool for civilian
first responders,” he said. “So we’re here
talking to people, collecting data, and we will take that back
and figure out a course of action that will be mutually beneficial.”
As participants
in Strong Angel III learn from each other and field test ways
of delivering life-saving humanitarian relief and rapidly deployable
communication systems in response to major disasters, Rasmussen
said he’s overwhelmed by how quickly they are coming
together as a team. “Stuff is happening all over this
balcony,” he said, looking out over a vast array of makeshift
work stations at the Fire-Rescue Department Training Facility, “where
people are coming together who would not otherwise have touched.”
Strong Angel
III is helping these responders smooth out their differences
and form working relationships before an actual disaster occurs. “I
can tell you from experience that it’s deeply advantageous
to know each other beforehand,” Rasmussen said.
That way,
they’re better prepared to face crises and better able
to help the people who need them. “Our major goal is
to establish a model of community resilience in the face of
adversity,” Rasmussen said.