More than a week after Hurricane Maria, the response is finally being federalized as the island struggles to distribute supplies and restore power.
By Ingrid Arnesen
SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico—The U.S. Army will take over recovery operations in Puerto Rico,
Col. Jorge Santini of Puerto Rico's National Guard state command told
The Daily Beast. The announcement is expected Thursday afternoon.
U.S.
Northern Command appointed Army Brig. Gen. Richard Kim on Wednesday to
oversee operations. The Army will oversee every facet of the massive
mission and coordinate with the National Guard, FEMA, and Gov. Ricardo
Rossello’s office, Santini said. Approximately 2,600 U.S. military
personnel and Guard members are currently involved in Hurricane Maria
relief efforts, the Pentagon said.
"We
need more manpower, more resources, more help, quickly and
efficiently," Santini said. "We needed to federalize the recovery plan."
Ret. Gen. Russel Honore, who led the military effort in Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina, told NPR on Thursday morning and far more troops are needed.
“Puerto
Rico is a bigger and tougher mission than Katrina,’ Honore said, adding
20,000 federal troops and 40,000 National Guard were under his command.
Honore said twice as many are needed for Puerto Rico.
“We started moving about four days too late,” Honore said.
Click here for the full article.
Source: The Daily Beast
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