The 9/11 Commission Report: Reflecting On A Generational Challenge
The nation has committed enormous resources to national security and to countering terrorism. Between fiscal year 2001, the last budget adopted before 9/11,and the present fiscal year 2004,total federal spending on defense (including expenditures on both Iraq and Afghanistan), homeland security, and international affairs rose more than 50 percent, from $354 billion to about $547 billion.The United States has not experienced such a rapid surge in national security spending since the Korean War.
This pattern has occurred before in American history.The United States faces a sudden crisis and summons a tremendous exertion of national energy. Then, as that surge transforms the landscape, comes a time for reflection and reevaluation. Some programs and even agencies are discarded; others are invented or redesigned. Private firms and engaged citizens redefine their relationships with government, working through the processes of the American republic.
The 9/11 Commission Report: What To Do? A Global Strategy: Reflecting On A Generational Challenge