Blogs and Stories
'Wide Open to Attack'
Jason R. Krawczyk, U.S. Army, UPI / Landov
As Fort Hood mourns the death of 13 soldiers at an Army psychiatrist’s hand, the ex-chief of the CIA’s WMD unit says security at U.S. military bases nationwide is grossly inadequate.
Charles Faddis, a 20-year CIA counterterrorism veteran, says U.S. domestic military bases are "wide open to attack."
"I know exactly what is and is not being done, and, frankly, as an operator, I would say that in most cases, there is nothing standing between al Qaeda and a successful attack on a U.S. military base," Faddis said in an exclusive interview with The Daily Beast the day after an Arrmy psychiatrist killed 13 soldiers at Fort Hood in Texas.
"If you drive around the United States today, other than security measures in place at airports, you will see very little has changed in the last eight years," said Faddis, who has visited several U.S. military bases in the past year while researching an upcoming book on homeland security, Willful Neglect.
"We remain wide open to attack. That is true in the nation as a whole, and it is true on military bases as well," said Faddis, 51, who retired in 2008 as chief of the CIA's weapons of mass destruction terrorism unit. Before the 2003 invasion of Iraq, he led a counterterrorism team into northern Iraq in search of an al Qaeda base. He has authored two withering critiques of his former employer, most recently Beyond Repair: The Decline and Fall of the CIA, published last month.
“They know how to secure an installation,” says Faddis. “They are not failing to do so because they do not know what to do. They are failing to do so, because somehow, some way, we have convinced ourselves that an attack cannot happen here.”
"You may have to show a photo ID at some locations, but even that is not always true. Even if you have to show an ID, a civilian driver's license will often suffice," he said. "Most bases remain open to civilian visitors with even the most cursory of explanations for why they are coming on post. "
Even the Fort Meade, Maryland, headquarters for both the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command and the super-sensitive National Security Agency, has porous security, said Faddis, who has visited the sprawling post within the last few weeks. "There are no barriers (at the gate)," he said. "If you want to stop, you do so. If you want to go by the gate and onto the base at 60 miles an hour, you do so.
"Once you are on base," the former CIA official continued, "you go wherever you want. There are no armed guards. There are no checkpoints. There is no visible security. Even entering buildings, the only kind of security you are going to see is the kind designed to deter unauthorized personnel who are trying to sneak in, steal secrets. and sneak back out."
An armed response to an intruder or madman, as at Fort Hood yesterday, will come too late to save scores of lives, or to prevent a bomb from being set off, Faddis said. This, despite a General Accounting Office report in June warning that there were "significant weaknesses" and "numerous potential vulnerabilities" to a possible terrorist attack at U.S. military bases.
• Lee Siegel: America’s Mass Murder Addiction
• Reihan Salam: The Collateral Damage to Muslims
• Mimi Swartz: Fort Hood’s Bleak WorldFaddis, a former Marine, lives near Annapolis, Maryland, and often passes by the gates of the U.S. Naval Academy. Here, too, security is virtually nonexistent, he said. "This is an extremely high-profile target. There are literally thousands of future naval officers jammed together in dormitories there. The sentry at the front gate has no mechanism to compel incoming vehicles to stop. He is alone. He has a sidearm. There is no gate which he has to open to allow admittance."
Unlike a number of key government installations elsewhere, the Naval Academy's gate lacks a vehicle barrier, said Faddis. He finds the Naval Academy's lack of security astounding. "It is 2009. There have been hundreds of [car bomb] attacks against U.S. forces worldwide, and yet we have one of our most storied installations wide open."
Faddis adds: "If you go through that gate in a car bomb, you will be at a target building, i.e. a building jammed with midshipmen, in seconds, literally. The only 'security measure' in place is a slight bend in the road, which is intended to make cars slow down as they approach the sentry. The exit lane, on the other side of the guard shack, has no such bend in it. Apparently, the theory is that you might be willing to stage an attack on the installation, but you would never dare to drive the wrong way on a one-way street."
The Fort Hood attacks and Faddis' findings come six months after two New Jersey men were sentenced for conspiring to attack Fort Dix in New Jersey. "The individuals responsible for security of bases in the U.S. are likely individuals who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan," said Faddis.
"They know how to secure an installation. They are not failing to do so because they do not know what to do. They are failing to do so, because somehow, some way, we have convinced ourselves that an attack cannot happen here."
Jeff Stein wrote the SpyTalk blog at Congressional Quarterly from 2005 through September 2009.
For more of The Daily Beast, become a fan on Facebook and follow us on Twitter.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.









Well, if military bases aren't very secure there really isn't any hope for the rest of us is there? (Plastic sheeting and duct tape be damned!)
All this may very well be true and as someone who has served abroad and domestically I can tell you that I was concerned that security in preventing those from the outside was a concern. But, part of the problem is bases like Ft. Hood itself. it is huge and it is a city unto itself alongside a fair sized place like Killeen. What is amazing is that there have not been outside attacks.
But, with all that being said, this attack came from the inside and from one of the Army's own. I'm not sure how you stop that. We can speak about limiting the possesion of side arms while moving about on the base outside of shooting and combat training areas, but , if you are a Specialist or a Supply Sargeant and an oakleaf comes to you and wants a sidearm, I can tell you that the major will get his sidearm no matter what the established procedures are- rank has its priviledges .
There was a long negative paper trail on Husain throughout his Army education and and subsequent career appointments. A constant stream of complaints were documented from his peers, and clients logged in his personnel reviews. I'm planning to request my representives to Congress and Senate for hearings on why he was promoted to Major General rather than dismissed from the Army. Those in Command at Fort Hood share a hugh responsibility in the terrorist attack that occurred this week.
Major General?? He is a major, an O-4. Better get your fact together before you get your representatives looking for the major general who shot all those troops.
Alarmist and irrelevant.
I don't know if bcaldwell knows or not but the Major used personal weapons and didn't get them from some Supply Sargent - and also in all the units in which I served the Supply Sargeants did not issue weapons.
The only way to make Fort Hood secure is to issue every military and civilian family member a weapon. Please, get real.
Oh, come on! Let's just focus on protecting the buildings, people, and other major property up there. The base is huge but most of it is for tanks to run around on to train. I don't think we should spend our fortunes (if there are any left) on trying to make Ft. Knox's everywhere. I live near NAS, Corpus Christi, TX and they seem to have it about right. Yes, you can run the gate but I don't think you would make it too far. You just can't protect us all from crazies.
G-d help us all if they,or anybody really want to attack us. That said, there is a problem, with the religon,that Allah,rewards you in heaven for an innocent, massacer, or for exploding yourself and others.I read very ugly comments about jews, But the G-d of Israel does not reward you for suicide, for attacking americans,for attacking innocent people having lunch,for hiding among children and women, and for commiting suicide, you do not come into heaven and become Blessed. you are thrown out into neverland. This said, there are many good and wonderful muslims,probable hurting, for this event, But they do not make their point loud and clear.!!!Deep inside,a religion that calls for jihad, and rewards killing infidels, warps sick minds. I believe this man was sick, a terrorist would be quiet and not post killing thoughts and whatever. I do think, somehow people did not realize what he was saying. Out of every tragedy, we all learn,,and maybe it will give tools to spot future situations. My sincerest thank you, to all the soldiers and law enforcement. My highest respect to those wounded and suffering and wish you a healthy recovery, those
Im sorry, I cut of, and my deepest condolences to all. There is no answer for a man who was a Dr. and a Major, and something is very wrong. thank you to all who put your lives in danger for all of us It makes us proud to be americans, and we should stop arguing and work together, to be the best we can be.I share in the horror,and sorrow, these families feel.They do need to make very deep investigations.ghmbfisher. I read what you posted now at the end, you do have a point.At least some armed with weapons in charge.
I add my voice to those saying this is irrelevant. An officer, posted at a facility like Fort Hood, is not going to be stopped by bomb-sniffing dogs, trunk searches or whatever.
I served at both foreign and domestic installations (including Germany during the operational days of the Red Army Faction) and have seen how quickly security can ramp up when needed. Fast reaction is the appropriate tactic, as this tragedy demonstrated.
But American military facilities are more than their mission: they are communities. Communities with a purpose, but communities none-the-less. And they can't be run like top-secret installations or prisons. This iis a shameful method to hype a book.
I wish Mr. Stein further investigated which President(s) took the guns away from our soldiers on domestic bases. I've heard the names Carter and Clinton mentioned; anyone know for sure?
GOP Lies. All troops are disarmed in the company of ALL presidents.
It's been official policy for years. Look at the honor guards. No magazines in the weapons. Most troops are only issued live ammunition on the shooting range, or just before combat deployment.
Not sure and I spent 27 years in the Navy. I can tell you that you don't want our troops running around with loaded weapons. The weapons belong with the security force assigned, period. In caase you weren't paying attention, there was a female security person who acted quickly and brought this killer down. That is what we need.
Because it called Decentralization, if you cut the top off the lower ones could functioning that's the US army. They suppose to trust each others as brotherhood and that's the best feeling in the world, not being paranoid and that makes this Army the strongest. So instead of criticizing them, why don't join them and see it for yourself or trying to get deploy oversea, see how fun it could be for you. It's easy to just sit on the couch, watching tv and knowing everything, and having giant sandwiches. Fat Retards.
Best recruiting ad I've seen in years.
Just curious, but is English your native language? Are you drunk or illiterate? Just trying to figure out your pitiful, barely-coherent post. If you are/were in the military, I guess the reports of drastically lowered standards are , sadly, true.
Yes Teacher, I am illiterate and what you gonna do ? because the majority of your country is no longer speaking English I know that's hurt for you. Speaking English doesn't measure anything, you were born with it but that doesn't mean you speak good English either. How many vocabulary you have used daily? 'know what I'm saying?
Where were the Military Police? We are now down to hiring
civilian mothers to protect our military? Why couldn't this military private civilizen bring down this monster immediately. It took too many shots and waited too long for too many soldiers to be killed! 12 dead and 31 wounded IS NOT GOOD ENOUGH and she is no hero.
The real problem is why are civilians wearing military uniforms when they are not in the military but sub-contractors? Why are they private contractors given ranks when they are not in the military. To fool the American Public! There was no security at this air base
Why keep lying to the American public and not tell the truth the civilian mother was not in the milirary, had very little training, 12 killed and 31 injured!
MP WOULD HAVE STOPPED THIS TERRORIST ATTACK
FROM A RELIGIOUS RADICALIST WHO ONLY WANTED A FREE RIDE FROM OUR GOVERNMENT IN OBTAINING A MEDICAL DEGREE AND THEN WANTED TO WELCH ON REPAYING BACK HIS MILITARY OBLIGATION. WHY ARE WE SPENDING TAXPAYERS MONEY ON THESE CREEPS MUCH LESS PERMITTING THEM INTO OUR COUNTRY!
WHY ARE WE WASTING OUR BOY'S BLOOD IN FIGHTING THEM OVERSEAS WHILE AT THE SAME TIME PERMITTING THEM INTO OUR COUNTRY/
INSANITY BY OUR GOVERNMENT!
Why not present the truth to the American public that the
Alarmist and totally irrelevant! By the standards espoused by some here one would think that hundreds had died in a coordinated attack involving more than one person.
Military (Army) personnel have not carried loaded weapons in a barracks environment since at least prior to the Spanish American War of 1898, sure we carry weapons to the field with us. On base no one is armed but law enforcement and security, it is a federal installation.
Here, we have an individual shot by civilian LEA (Law Enforcement Agency), Federal civilian police are on Bases so that Military Police can do their job. Contrary to public opinion, Military Police are not around to secure domestic bases or conduct law enforcement on bases, those are peacetime roles secondary to their mission to secure the Army's rear area in combat.
As far a security goes, there are just simply too many gates on too many installations of import around the nation. Military bases, port facilities, airports, police stations, power grid facilities, communications facilities, power generation facilities, chemical plants, water distribution and treatment centers, food processing, etc... We as a nation can either commit to fear, or acknowledge we are a country at war and take our lumps when they come.
In this case we have an individual who, with actual and proper identification entered on to his home base. Perhaps we should make the Army even more intrusive on soldiers than it already is by requiring a strip search at every gate. At least make them walk around barefoot in case they have shoe bombs. Seriously? This is a tragedy but why make it more difficult by making the victims jump through security hoops designed to appease the feelings of New Jersey housewives? Remember all those mothers who demanded security outside juniors grade school after 9-11?
Oh yeah, and the reason English is important is because in fact the vast majority of Americans only speak English. Unfortunately, your commentary is totally unintelligible thus failing in the communication aspect. Me and the others reading have no idea what you are talking about.
Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.
Please log in to leave comments.