By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, April 7, 2015 – Four months into his tenure as
leader of North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command,
Navy Adm. Bill Gortney conducted a Pentagon press briefing today on priority efforts
in homeland defense.
Currently the Defense Department’s only bilateral command,
58-year-old NORAD brings Americans and Canadians together, Gortney said. NORAD
works in tandem with Northcom, established in 2002, to protect the homeland
from external threats as well as respond to natural disasters, homeland
extremists and cyberattacks, he explained.
“[The mission set] encompasses the traditional NORAD role of
air defense, as well as … maritime warning,” Gortney said.
Northcom, the admiral noted, rounds out the mission set with
its maritime defense and control elements and includes Operation Noble Eagle,
U.S.-Canadian homeland security operations that have been ongoing since just
after 9/11.
The commands’ responsibilities also include homeland
ballistic missile defense and countering transnational criminal networks to
thwart smugglers or others who engage in nefarious activity, he said.
Federal military forces provide defense support of civil
authorities, which Gortney said has expansive functions across myriad mission
requirements.
“Many people think [that support] involves Hurricane Katrina
or Super Storm Sandy, an earthquake or a flood, but it encompasses much more
than that,” the admiral said. “It’s helping our interagency … and law
enforcement partners, predominantly homeland security, in their particular
missions.”
Importance of Homeland Partnerships
Gortney described homeland partnerships as NORAD’s and
Northcom’s “center of gravity,” with not only a large interagency and law
enforcement presence, but some 60 senior federal and senior executive service
employees whose tasks cross mission sets.
NORAD and Northcom, he added, also work with governors, the
Army National Guard and Air National Guard, and the functional and geographic
combatant commands. “[They all work] together to close those seams that the
enemy will try and exploit to get after us,” Gortney said.
International Partnerships
Gortney said that as the unified command plan directs, his
people emphasize international partnerships with Canada, the Bahamas and Mexico
to assess and solve shared problems.
DoD is also “the advocate of the arctic,” Gortney said,
adding that he and his team are working to better define roles and doctrine by
determining operational requirements, necessary investments and partnerships
that will best inform DoD plans for the region.
Focus on Professionalism, Warfighters, Families
Along with professionalism and excellence, which Gortney
described as full-time jobs, he told reporters NORAD and Northcom’s people
focus on warfighters and their families.
“We rely on those who wear the cloth of our nation to defend
our nation,” Gortney said. “It’s both an away game and a near game, and our
families are the very stitches that hold [it] together.”
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