Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. To build and implement a robust strategy to protect our critical infrastructures and key assets from further terrorist exploitation, we must understand the motiva-tions of our enemies as well as their preferred tactics and targets. We must complement this understanding with a comprehensive assessment of the infrastructures

  2. The National Strategy for Physical Protection of Critical Infrastructures and Key Assets serves as a critical bridge between the National Strategy for Homeland Security and a national protection plan to be developed by the Department of Homeland Security.

  3. This document defines the road ahead for a core mission area identified in the President's National Strategy for Homeland Security-reducing the Nation's vulnerability to acts of terrorism by protecting our critical infrastructures and key assets from physical attack.

  4. 1 de oct. de 2004 · The National Strategy for the Physical Protection of Critical Infrastructures and Key Assets (NSPP) details a major part of the Bush administration’s overall homeland security strategy. Implementing this Strategy requires clear definition of “critical infrastructures” and “key assets.”

  5. 8 de ago. de 2012 · Local and state governments, private sector and individual citizens can help improve security of infrastructure and assets in a cooperative environment. Terrorists long-term objectives are (1) attacks on critical infrastructures or key assets through direct attacks on a critical system, which leads to immediate disruption of critical facilities;

  6. Page 1 - into six critical mission areas: intelligence and warning, border and transportation security, domestic counterterrorism, protecting critical infrastructures and key assets,...

  7. 14 de nov. de 2017 · This chapter reveals space, undersea, and belowground as three privileged sectors of human endeavor were critical infrastructures, resources, and assets coexist in the guise of complex systems that tend to assume a leading position in the overall, global CIKRKA system of systems. This chapter sets the stage for the remainder of the book.