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Silent Vector
The Silent Vector exercise dealt with decision-making given a
very credible, but non-specific, threat against
the energy sector in the northeastern U.S. Led by
the Center for Strategic and International
Studies and with support from the Anser Institute
for Homeland Security and MIPT, this simulation involved former senior
policymakers, working-level experts, and
representatives from the private sector. Silent
Vector allowed these role-players to consider and
evaluate appropriate crisis management responses
before a critical infrastructure disaster
materializes. It provided a forum for frank
discussions of vulnerabilities, threats,
consequences, and responses within the energy
sector. Key observations from Silent Vector were:
- When leaders can't say what is happening,
rumors become facts.
- Ambiguous warnings pose the central dilemma
for the public.
- Relaxing protective measures is more
difficult than imposing them.
- Hair-trigger reactions can lead to severe
economic disruptions.
- The distinction between foreign and
domestic intelligence no longer holds.
- The National Alert System breaks down in
the private sector, states, and localities.
- General aviation security remains a problem.
- The vulnerabilities within the chemical
industry are a key concern.
- The current Federal-State government
interface is insufficient.
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2000 - 2008 Lawson Terrorism Information Center
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P.O. Box 889 Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73101
Phone: 405.278.6311 | Fax: 405.232.5132
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