Wednesday, November 15, 2017

IED Precursor Chemical Study Published

Today the DHS Chemical Facility Anti-Terrorism Security (CFATS) web site was updated to include links to a pre-publication copy of the report of the National Academies report on possible modes of regulating improvised explosive device (IED) precursor chemicals. This study was commissioned by DHS in August 2016 as part of their efforts to craft effective regulations for the prevention of the use of ammonium nitrate in IEDs.

A quick review of the 191-page document would indicate that the study committee has taken a very nuanced look at the issue of controlling precursor chemicals to prevent their use in the construction and use of IEDs by terrorists. There is no quick fix proposed by the study. Instead they have produced six broad recommendations:

Federal, state, local, and private sector entities attempting to reduce the threat of IED attacks by restricting access to precursor chemicals should focus on both person-borne and vehicle-borne IEDs.

Federal, state, local, and private sector entities attempting to reduce the threats from person-borne and vehicle-borne IEDs should consider multi-chemical, rather than single-chemical, strategies.

Federal, state, local, and private-sector entities attempting to reduce the threats from person-borne and vehicle-borne IEDs should focus on retail-level transactions of precursor chemicals, especially e-commerce.

Federal, state, local, and private-sector entities should explore strategies for harmonizing oversight of the sale and use of commercially available kits that contain precursor chemicals that are specifically designed to be combined to produce homemade explosives.

US DHS should engage in a more comprehensive, detailed, and rigorous analysis of specific provisions for proposed mandatory and voluntary policy mechanisms to restrict access to precursor chemicals by malicious actors.

The federal government should provide additional support for voluntary measures, activities, and programs that can contribute to restricting access by malicious actorsto precursor chemicals used to manufacture IEDs.


I will be taking more detailed reviews of various portions of the study in future blog posts.

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