* The intended attackers have
bluntly warned us they're going to
do it.
* They're already begun testing
school-related targets here.
* They've given us a catastrophic
model to train against, which we've
largely ignored and they've learned
more deadly tactics from.
"We don't know for sure what they
will do. But by definition, a
successful attack is one we are not
ready for," declared one of the
instructors, Lt. Col. Dave Grossman.
Our schools fit that description to
a "T"-as in Terrorism and Threat.
Grossman, the popular law
enforcement motivational speaker,
and Todd Rassa, a trainer with the
SigArms Academy and an advisory
board member for The Police Marksman
magazine, shared a full day's agenda
on the danger to U.S. schools at a
recent three-day conference on
terrorist issues, sponsored by the
International Assn. of Law
Enforcement Firearms Instructors
(IALEFI) in Atlantic City .
They reminded the audience that
patrol officers, including perhaps
some with their own children
involved, will inevitably be the
first responders when terrorists
hit. And they documented chilling
descriptions of the life-or-death
challenges that likely will be
faced.
In Part 1 of this three-part report
on highlights of their presentations
we focus on what's known about the
threat to our schools to date, why
terrorists have selected them as
targets, and what tactics you're
likely to be up against in
responding to a sudden strike.
In Parts 2 and 3, we'll explore
Grossman's and Rassa's
recommendations for practical
measures you and your agency can
take now to get ready, including
some defensive actions that don't
require any budget allocations.
Why schools?
Two
reasons:
1.
Our values. "The most
sacred thing to us is our children,
our babies," Rassa said. Killing
hundreds of them at a time would
significantly "boost Islamic morale
and lower that of the enemy" (us).
In Grossman's words, terrorists see
this effort as "an attempt to defile
our nation" by leaving it "stunned
to its soul."
2. Our lack of preparation.
Police agencies "aren't used to
this," Rassa said. "We deal with
acts of a criminal nature. This is
an act of war," but because of our
laws "we can't depend on the
military to help us," at least at
the outset.
Indeed, Grossman claimed, "the U.S.
in the one nation in the world where
the military is not the first line
of defense against domestic
terrorist attacks. By law, you the
police officer are our Delta Force.
It is your job to go in, while in
most other nations cops will wait
for the military to come save their
kids."
School personnel, Rassa said, "are
not even close" to being either
mentally or physically prepared.
"Most don't even have response plans
for handling a single active
shooter. Their world is taught to
nurture and care for people. They
don't want to deal with this."
The American public, "sticking their
heads in the sand, can't be mentally
prepared," he said. "They're going
to freak when it happens," their
stubborn denial making the crisis
"all the more shocking."
Noting that "sheep have two speeds:
'grazing' and 'stampede,'" Grossman
predicted that "not a parent in the
nation will send their kids to
school the next day"-perhaps for
many days-after a large-scale
terrorist massacre. If day-care
centers-"also on the terrorists'
list"-are hit as well, "parents will
drop out of the work force" en masse
to protect their children and "our
economy will be devastated."
How we know they're coming.
Al-Qaeda has publicly asserted the
"right" to kill 2,000,000 American
children, Rassa explained, and has
warned that "operations are in
stages of preparation" now. He
played vivid videotapes confiscated
in Afghanistan, showing al-Qaeda
terrorists practicing the takeover
of a school. The trainees issue
commands in English, rehearse
separating youngsters into
manageable groups and meeting any
resistance with violence. Some
"hostages" are taken to the rooftop,
dangled over the edge, then "shot."
"Any place that has given [Islamic
terrorists] trouble, they've come
after the kids," Grossman said.
Muslim religious literature,
according to Rassa, states clearly
that the killing of children not
only is "permitted" in Islam but is
"approved" by Mohammed, so long as
the perpetrators "are striving for
the general good" as interpreted by
that religion.
He cited instances in Indonesia
where girls on their way to school
have been beheaded and in other
countries where children have been
shot, mutilated, raped or burned
alive.
In this country this year ['06],
Rassa said, there have been several
school bus-related incidents
involving Middle Eastern males that
raise suspicion of terrorist
activity. These include the surprise
boarding of a school bus in Florida
by two men in trench coats, who may
have been on a canvassing mission,
and the attempt in New York State by
an Arab male to obtain a job as a
school bus driver using fraudulent
Social Security documents. The
latter gave an address in Detroit,
home to a large colony of
fundamentalist Muslims.
Rassa claimed that floor plans for
half a dozen schools in Virginia,
Texas and New Jersey have been
recovered from terrorist hands in
Iraq.
The terrorists' tactical model.
A "dress rehearsal for what
terrorists plan to do to us" has
already taken place, Rassa and
Grossman agreed. That was the brutal
takedown in 2004 of a school that
served children from 6 to 17 years
old in Beslan, Russia.
Some 100 terrorists were involved,
nearly half of whom were discreetly
embedded in the large crowd of
parents, staff and kids who showed
up for the first day of school; the
rest arrived for the surprise attack
in SUVs, troop carriers and big
sedans. Across a three-day siege,
700 people were wounded and 338
killed, including 172 youngsters.
If a similar assault were launched
against a school in your
jurisdiction, how would you and your
agency respond?
Consider this modest sampling of
challenges that were deliberately
planned or arose from the ensuing
chaos at Beslan, as outlined by
Rassa:
* The school was chosen because it
was one of the taller buildings in
the area and had a very complicated
floor plan, making a rapid and
effective counter-assault by
responders extremely difficult.
Offender weaponry included AK-47s,
sniper rifles, RPGs and explosives,
with everything the terrorists
needed carried in on their backs.
RPGs were fired at a responding
military helicopter and at troops.
* More than 1,000 men, women and
children, including babies, were
penned in an unventilated gym and a
cafeteria. As the days passed
without food or water and inside
temperatures rose to 115 degrees,
survivors were eating flowers they'd
brought for teachers and fighting
for urine to drink out of their
shoes in desperation. Women and some
children were repeatedly and
continuously raped.
* Adult males and larger male
students were used as "forced labor"
to help fortify the building, then
shot to death. Bodies were thrown
out of an upper-story window, down
onto a courtyard. Attempts at
negotiation by responders were used
by the terrorists strictly as an
opportunity to buy time to solidify
their fortifications.
* Surviving hostages were surrounded
by armed guards standing on deadman
switches, wired to explosives. All
entrances to the building as well as
stairwells and some interior
doorways were booby-trapped.
Youngsters were forced to sit on
window sills to serve as shields for
snipers. "Black widows" (potential
suicide bombers) were rigged so
their bomb belts could be detonated
by remote control when leaders
considered the timing was right. The
terrorists stayed cranked up on some
type of amphetamine to keep awake.
* Armed, outraged parents and other
civilians, some of them drunk,
showed up and started "rolling
gunfights" outside in a futile
effort to defeat the takeover. The
crowd identified one embedded
terrorist and "literally ripped him
apart." The media was everywhere,
unrestrained. So many people were
milling around that responders often
could not establish a clear field of
fire.
* When troops finally stormed the
school in a counter-assault on the
third day, "pure pandemonium"
reigned. Soldiers and the kids they
were trying to rescue were gunned
down mercilessly. Explosions touched
off inside started multiple fires.
* Responders who made it inside had
to jump over trip wires as they
"ran" up stairs under fire from
above. By then terrorists were
holding hostages in virtually every
room. Rescue teams were subjected to
continual ambushes. Gunfights
occurred predominately within a
6-ft. range, with some responders
having to fight for their lives in
places so cramped they couldn't get
off their hands and knees.
* Some children successfully rescued
from the building were so crazed by
thirst that they ran to an outdoor
spigot and were killed by a grenade
as they filled their hands with
water.
* Terrorists who escaped during the
melee ran to homes of embedded
sympathizers who hid them
successfully and were not
immediately suspected because they
were considered "non-strangers" in
the community. Some townspeople who
volunteered to help as stretcher
bearers for the injured were, in
fact, embedded terrorists.
* During the siege "at least four
people or agencies claimed to be in
charge. Actually, no one was in
charge and no one wanted to be."
"Osama bin Laden has promised that
what has happened in Russia will
happen to us many times over,"
Grossman warned. "And Osama tries
very hard never to lie to us."
Probably not so many terrorists
involved at a single location.
Moving that big a contingent into
place would likely attract too much
attention and thwart the attack.
Grossman describes a more likely
possibility, in his opinion:
Terrorist cells of four operatives
each will strike simultaneously at
four different schools. They'll
probably pick middle schools with no
police officers on site, where the
girls are "old enough to rape" but
students are not big enough to fight
back effectively.
The targets will probably be in
states "with no concealed-carry laws
and no hunting culture" and in
communities where "police do not
have rifles."
Rural areas may be favored, where 30
minutes or more could be required
for responders to arrive in force.
The attackers will "mow down every
kid and teacher they see" as they
move in to seize the school. They'll
plant bombs throughout the
buildings, and "rape, murder and
throw out bodies like they did in
Russia."
Emergency vehicles responding and
children fleeing will be blown up by
car bombs in the parking lot.
In all, 100 to 300 children could be
slaughtered in a first strike.
Terrorists capable of this are
already embedded in communities "all
over America," Grossman and Rassa
agreed. More will probably gain
entry surreptitiously from Mexico,
making southern California
potentially a prime target.
It's a grim picture, for certain.
"But if we think there's nothing we
can do to prepare, that is a
defeatist mentality," Rassa said.
"We ought to be trying. If we're not
trying, we're failing. We may as
well give up our guns and surrender
now.
"I can't think of a better thing to
train up for than protecting our
kids. If we try but fall short, look
at how much else we'll still be able
to handle than we can now.
"What made most of us do
active-shooter training? The
killings at Columbine. Are we going
to wait for something far worse than
that before we do the most that we
can to stop the terrorists who are
coming for our schools?"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"4 Ds" For Thwarting Terrorists'
Plans To Massacre Our School
Children
By Chuck Remsberg
Senior PoliceOne Contributor
[Editor's
Note: In
Part 1, we
documented the plans of Islamic
terrorists to strike U.S. schools in
murderous raids, claiming the lives
of hundreds of children, as reported
at a recent anti-terrorism
conference, sponsored by the
International Assn. of Law
Enforcement Firearms Instructors
(IALEFI). In Part 2, we summarize
countermeasures proposed by one of
the conference instructors, Lt. Col.
Dave Grossman, author of the popular
books
On Killing and
On Combat.]
As Instructor Todd Rassa pointed out
in our first installment, if we are
not trying to prepare for and thwart
the daunting terrorist threat to our
schools and children, we are, in
effect, conceding defeat and
surrendering without a battle to
those who would obliterate us.
There is no simple master plan for
an easy victory. But the cumulative
effect of many seemingly small
countermeasures, effectively applied
on a large scale by individual
officers and their agencies, can
have a powerful impact.
Here are some of the practicalities
that Trainer Dave Grossman suggested
we consider in beginning to address
the critical problem of terrorists
coming for our kids.
That's overcoming denial. And where
schools and terrorist attacks are
concerned, denial abounds.
U.S. schools continue to take
extensive and overt measures to
guard students against the threat of
fire, with drills, alarms, sprinkler
systems, building codes, etc.-even
though there has not been a single
child killed by fire in any American
school in the last 25 years,
Grossman declared.
In contrast, well over 200 deaths
have occurred from school violence
by active shooters and other
non-terrorist offenders over the
last dozen years, and Islamic
fundamentalists are believed to be
plotting attacks that will claim
hundreds of child casualties in a
single blow. Yet efforts to
significantly harden schools as a
target of violence have, for the
most part, been slow, timid or
nonexistent.
"We need to treat the threat of
violence like the threat of fire.
But if you try to prepare for
violence, people think you're crazy,
paranoid," Grossman said.
"Denial is the enemy. It's a big,
fluffy white blanket we pull up over
our eyes to convince ourselves the
bad men are never going to come. And
while we pull that blanket up, bad
guys come and kick us in the groin.
"Let's face the lessons terrorists
have already taught us in blood and
lives. They are coming, and they may
well come for our schools, our kids.
We've had all the warning in the
world. And if we continue living in
denial, then all the lives they've
claimed to date have been sacrificed
for nothing."
Besides working to eliminate the big
D (denial), Grossman cited four
others we need to focus on:
An armed police presence in a school
can provide strong deterrence
against attack, Grossman argued.
"Terrorists are willing to die, but
they desperately don't want to die
for nothing, without completing
their tactical objective. They want
a body count."
To squelch would-be attackers, some
Israeli schools deploy on-site
police at squad-level strength, and
armed guards accompany all class
fieldtrips, usually one per 10
students. But even with a single
armed officer in a school, "the
prospects of a massacre go way
down," Grossman said.
Having
unarmed security in or
around schools is both pointless and
ethically derelict, in his opinion.
"Don't give someone responsibility
for human lives and not give them
the tools to do the job. You
wouldn't give a firefighter just a
hat, uniform and badge, and no hose
or water."
Should teachers be armed? At least
two states (Utah and New Hampshire)
now authorize concealed-carry
permits in schools, according to
Grossman, and the Federal Safe
Schools Act allows for it. Faculty
with military experience and a
willingness to receive additional
training could be a starting point.
"Even one or two armed teachers in a
school can make a difference,"
Grossman said. But given the current
American mind-set, "you have to push
this envelope very gently."
"The ultimate achievement is a
terrorist takeover that doesn't
start," Grossman said. And officers
being suspicious-"doing
what cops do"-are well positioned to
interrupt attack plans before they
culminate.
Follow good criminal patrol
procedures on traffic stops, for
instance, by asking probing
questions and being alert for
contradictions, inconsistencies,
irrationalities, unduly nervous
behavior and other indicators of
deceit and guilty behavior. Be aware
of what you can see inside vehicles
or on subjects that may merit closer
investigation.
Watch for signs of static or mobile
surveillance of potential targets.
Terrorists "always conduct a recon,"
which may involve photographing or
videotaping a prospective site,
Grossman said. Don't limit your
suspicions just to persons who fit
the stereotypical terrorist profile.
"There are terrorists who are blond
and blue eyed."
Inform schools to report any calls
from people inquiring about
security. Someone claiming to be a
concerned parent wanting to know if
any armed officers are on the
premises may in fact be an operative
gauging the vulnerability of the
location. The staffer taking the
call should jot down the caller ID
number and note the precise time and
the phone line the call came in on
to facilitate further checking. "Any
time terrorists bounce off a hard
target is a chance to catch them."
If terrorists do strike, "one man or
woman with effective fire from
behind cover inside the school can
hold off a group of attackers for 5
minutes," saving lives by buying
time until police responders "can
get in the door," Grossman claimed.
Meantime, at the first hint of
trouble, teachers and children
should kick in to a preplanned and
frequently rehearsed three-step
"lock-down model," he recommended.
"Sheltering" children in place, as
has been attempted in various school
shootings, is more likely to be
dangerous than protective. Instead,
Grossman advises potential victims
to:
* Move away from violence, which
otherwise tends to be "mesmerizing
and paralyzing"
* Move to a pre-selected secure
location, someplace "secure enough
to keep the bad guys out until the
cops come in"
* Move again if you have reason to
feel threatened at that spot.
"Lock-down does not mean hunker down
and die," Grossman said.
"As a last resort," there may be
times when a teacher would need the
courage to "go
toward an attacker."
Grossman cited a case in which an
active shooter broke a window in a
classroom door and reached through
to release the locked knob. Teacher
and students cowered inside and just
waited, whereas a teacher might have
"grabbed a chair and attacked his
hand" and possibly have delayed or
deterred a fatal assault.
Plans on paper "mean nothing,"
Grossman reminded. "You have to get
the schools to rehearse"
anti-terrorist scenarios.
"Principals have been fired for not
doing fire drills," and yet the
terrorist threat these days is so
much greater. Where are our
priorities?
As a responding officer, you have to
be fully prepared, mentally and
physically, to use deadly force to
stop the threat. "It is your job to
put a chunk of steel in your fist
and kill the sons-of-bitches who are
coming to kill your kids," Grossman
declared in an emotional crescendo
in his presentation.
"Fight from the very beginning.
Don't wait, thinking you'll fight
later." Referring to the terrorist
massacre at the school in Beslan,
Russia, which we described in Part 1
of this series, Grossman said:
"Every minute the Russians waited,
the target got harder." If you
hesitate in responding, "you'll die
with a bullet in the back of your
head in front of children."
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
How
To Prepare Yourself For Terrorist
Attacks On Our Schools
By Chuck Remsberg
Senior PoliceOne Contributor
[Editor's
note: In
previous installments,
we documented the plans of Islamic
terrorists to murder hundreds of
U.S. school children, as reported at
a recent anti-terrorism conference
sponsored by the International Assn.
of Law Enforcement Firearms
Instructors (IALEFI), and we
summarized counter measures proposed
by Lt. Col. Dave Grossman.
In this final report, we explore
recommendations of another
conference speaker, Todd Rassa, a
trainer with the SigArms Academy and
a member of the advisory board for
The Police Marksman
magazine. We conclude with
Grossman's suggestions of what LE
agencies can do to defend our
schools despite current budget
restraints.]
Trainer Todd Rassa considers
active-shooter training, which is
now being embraced by more and more
departments, as "a good start," but
he warned that much more is needed
to adequately protect our children
from terrorist attacks on schools.
Here are some of the items he
enumerated for a conscientious "to
do" list:
1.
Train
every patrol officer in
bomb awareness, crowd management,
riot control, ballistic shield
tactics, team firing drills and
other response skills likely to be
needed for a mass school takedown.
Responsibility for an immediate
effective response will most
probably fall heavily on street
cops, given the activation time for
most SWAT teams.
2.
Proper equipment needs to be
readied. "Patrol rifles are needed
now-as many as possible with as much
ammunition as possible," Rassa
stressed. Also ballistic shields,
helmets and other protective devices
for
every officer. Have a
plan in place to get large amounts
of additional ammo to the scene
ASAP.
Soft body armor may prove
inadequate, but extras should be
available anyway in a better-than-nothing
effort to protect fleeing hostages
by draping vests and ballistic
blankets over them. Armored
transport vehicles may prove
crucial. Less-lethal rounds may be
useful for crowd control, but will
be futile to attempt against
terrorists.
3.
Work with school officials to
anticipate problems and
realistically rewrite their
emergency plans. "They are not going
to fix themselves," Rassa predicted.
Cross-train with school personnel
and consider involving community
leaders with training on
crowd-control tactics and intel
collection. Manpower and tactics
will be needed to handle "outraged,
violent parents" if a siege
develops.
SROs, who likely will be targeted by
terrorists as first casualties, need
training on "surveillance awareness,
including real-life testing of
school security" by would-be
invaders.
4.
Expand your active-shooter training
to include "large, complicated,
multi-adversary scenarios and
exercises," Rassa urged. Practice
against a booby-trapped environment,
simultaneous attacks from multiple
levels, ambushes from the rear.
Rehearse tactics for CQB with both
pistol and rifle.
Also practice counter-assaults on
school buses. "What if terrorists
hijacked a couple of buses and drove
them into a school? What if they
hijacked several and spread them out
across your town?"
5.
Incorporate suicide-bomber shooting
drills into your firearms training
for every officer. That should
include "practicing head shots from
a distance with a pistol after
running." Build the ability to shoot
while moving into your
qualifications. Also integrate
self-defense DT into firearms
training-"blending two important
worlds that usually never meet."
Even consider training with AK-47s
and other "exotic" weapons that may
be in your property room, on the
chance you may have to use the
weapons of neutralized terrorists if
yours run empty.
6.
Thoroughly familiarize yourself with
your schools. Videotape them inside
and out and collect and review floor
plans, making sure they are kept up
to date as remodeling projects take
place. Work with schools to get
classroom numbers put on street
signs and mounted on the exterior.
Also check to see if computers in
your squad cars can be made
compatible with CCTV cameras inside
the building, so you can tie in to
what's going inside in event of
trouble.
7.
As a parent, you may want to falsify
your occupation on school records so
your child will not be easily
identified as a desirable hostage.
8.
And, of course, stage frequent
incident-command training and
exercises, so multiple jurisdictions
and multiple disciplines (fire,
police, EMS, city services, etc.)
learn the importance of putting
political egos and turf wars aside
in the interest of saving children's
lives.
Agency actions that don't take $$$
Dave Grossman, the well-known author
of
On Killing and
On Combat ,
concluded IALEFI's excellent
conference with suggestions of how
LE agencies can improve their
protection of schools without
further straining already tight
budgets.
1. Encourage officers always to
carry off-duty.
Always.
No one can predict where a given
officer might be when terrorists
strike. What if you were off-duty on
a visit to your child's school;
would you have the primary
life-saving tool of your profession
with you? Remember, Grossman said,
"One person behind cover with
effective fire can hold down a whole
company of invaders for 5 minutes"
while help arrives.
"If we stop them dead in one school
and kill them before they kill kids,
that will convince the country that
we
can fight back. If they
fail in one school, that will
undermine their plan.
"If you walk out off-duty without
your gun, every time you pass a fire
exit or see a fire extinguisher, say
to yourself, 'Firefighters have made
more preparations than I have.'
Plant the seed with other officers.
Once you tell them, they can't not
think about it."
2. Exploit opportunities to expand
your equipment inventory.
* Many cash-strapped agencies now
encourage officers to buy and carry
their own rifles on duty. If certain
standards and training are
maintained, that's a quick way to
strengthen your counter-force.
* Officers should also be encouraged
to prepare and ride with "go bags"
that can be slung over their
shoulder as they head into a crisis.
Loaded with backup boxes of pistol
and rifle ammo, these can be
comforting safeguards against
running dry in a firefight, where
"three magazines can easily be
burned up in less than a minute."
* Get the name and phone number of
every private owner of a helicopter
in your area and coordinate with
them ahead of time a plan for
pressing their chopper into service
in an emergency. Even news agencies
might be willing to cooperate if
promised "great footage" in exchange
for transporting officers to a siege
site.
"There will be gridlock chaos on the
ground within moments wherever an
attack comes," Grossman said.
"Helicopters can be great for
getting firepower in and wounded
out." Practice hovering over schools
and landing personnel on the flat
roofs that most have.
* Envision fire hoses as
"crew-served weapons." At a
terrorist scene, hoses can be used
not only "to put out fires that may
be caused by booby traps" but can
also "knock a combatant out of a
window 50 yards away-an incredibly
effective weapon."
A firefighter directing the hose can
be protected behind two officers
holding ballistic shields and two
officers behind the shields with
rifles, Grossman suggested.
Obviously, this tactic requires
practice well
before it's needed.
3. Build the right mind-set in your
troops.
As a police officer, "you have to
have your heart and mind ready,"
Grossman said. "In our nation, the
military is not coming to save your
kids. You are the Delta Force. It's
your job to go in like thunder when
they come to kill your kids and
destroy your way of life.
"Get training-all you can. Advance
steadily along the warrior path.
Live life in Condition Yellow,
vigilant readiness. Cultivate
hobbies that reinforce your survival
skills."