Contents Notes |
Over the past decade, the United States has endeavored to increase its ability to detect, prevent, and respond to terrorist threats and incidents. The agriculture sector and the food industry in general, however, have received comparatively little attention with respect to protection against terrorist incidents. This study aims to expand the current debate on domestic homeland security by assessing the vulnerabilities of the agricultural sector and the food chain to a deliberate act of biological terrorism. The author presents the current state of research on threats to agricultural livestock and produce, outlines the sector's importance to the U.S. economy, examines the capabilities that are needed to exploit the vulnerabilities in the food industry, and explores the likely outcomes of a successful attack. The author addresses the question of why terrorists have yet to employ agricultural assaults as a method of operation and offers proposed recommendations for the U.S. policymaking community. Research methods -- The importance of the agricultural sector to the U.S. economy -- Organization of this report -- Concentrated and intensive contemporary farming practices -- Increased susceptibility of livestock to disease -- Insufficient farm/food-related security and surveillance -- Inefficient passive disease-reporting system -- Inappropriate veterinarian and diagnostic training -- A focus on aggregate rather than individual livestock statistics -- Capability requirements for carrying out an agroterrorist attack -- Economic disruption -- Loss of political support and confidence in the government -- Social instability -- Agroterrorism to generate financial capital and as a form of blackmail -- Biological assaults against agriculture and terrorists' modus operandi. |