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  Path of Destruction 
 The Devastation of New Orleans and the Coming Age of Superstorms 
 By John McQuaid  Mark Schleifstein  LITTLE, BROWN 
 Copyright © 2006   John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein 
All right reserved. ISBN: 0-316-01642-X 
    Chapter One 
  In 2002, we wrote a series for the 
Times-Picayune that explored  New Orleans's unique vulnerability to hurricanes, especially  the enormous storm surge waves they generate. Our  reporting explored an obvious but little-acknowledged fact: here  was a city that, for the six months of every hurricane season,  lived with a substantial risk of utter annihilation. New Orleans's  predicament seemed to fly in the face of sound government policy,  not to mention basic common sense: much of the city was  built on top of a swamp, below sea level and gradually sinking.  The hurricane levees around it formed a shallow bowl that, if  breached or overtopped by a storm surge, would fill with water.  Anyone there would be trapped by quickly rising floodwaters,  their escape routes cut off. As streets became rivers and neighborhoods  lakes, hundreds, maybe thousands, would drown.  
  Such horrors seemed unimaginable to most Americans, and  remote even to New Orleans residents who had heard scientists  and emergency managers describe them each summer. Hadn't  the city already survived for almost three hundred years? Didn't  it have a full guarantee ofprotection from the U.S. government,  in the form of levees designed by the Army Corps of Engineers,  with its two centuries of experience and gold-plated reputation?  The fine print acknowledged the danger. The Corps of Engineers  claimed its levees could protect the city only from the  storm surge waves produced by relatively weak hurricanes,  those in Categories 1 and 2, and some of those in Category 3  (on the Saffir-Simpson scale, used to measure hurricane  strength). If a more powerful storm struck the city, the levees  would fail-end of story. That dark fate was the result of decisions  made long ago by Congress that no one seemed interested  in revisiting. In Washington, those in power had other constituencies  requiring immediate attention, and in Louisiana the  salvation of New Orleans was surprisingly low on the to-do list.  After all, New Orleans had thus far avoided the Big One. And  its citizens and the nation thus essentially agreed to gamble  that, as hurricanes roared over the Gulf of Mexico each year, it  would keep lucking out again and again.  
  There was no rescue strategy for the city itself. If New Orleans  got hit, the plan was simply to let it be destroyed, then  clean up the mess.  
  So, when Hurricane Katrina struck and submerged most of  New Orleans on August 29, 2005, we were stunned and horrified,   but not surprised. Afterward, as we-along with hundreds  of others of journalists, congressional investigators, and forensic  engineers-began to examine what had gone wrong, the outlines  of an even greater tragedy emerged. The levee system had  been much weaker than originally advertised. In some places,  the Corps had made serious design errors, engineering screw-ups  of historic dimensions. The levees were not the only problem;  the city of New Orleans had essentially given up trying to figure  out how to evacuate residents with no transportation, and the  federal government reorganization that followed the terrorist attacks  of September 11, 2001, had, somehow, actually weakened  the nation's ability to respond to a catastrophe. Initially it had  been easy to blame the destruction of this great American city  on Mother Nature. But the more we investigated, the more obvious  it was that man had set the stage.  
  There has always been an element of folly in mankind's attempts  to control or outsmart nature. The self-important activities  of human society are brief flickers of a candle flame  compared to the mighty forces driving the rise of mountains, the  shifting of river courses, and the fury of hurricanes. Occasionally,  nature erupts in some entirely predictable way-a hurricane thrashes the coast,  a river overflows into towns on its banks, a mudslide carries off a  neighborhood-and stunned citizens and their leaders collectively remark, "What  the hell just happened?" Yet after a few years, the disaster is forgotten, and  people fall back into the patterns of living that tempt another,  even worse catastrophe.  
  Of course, life requires some risk-taking, and there is no  such thing as perfect security. But this cycle of disaster is so obvious,  and so stubbornly repetitive, that the pattern suggests it  may be hardwired into the human brain. Humans tend to be optimists  even when facts tell them otherwise, like the title character  in John Irving's The World According to Garp, who buys a  house after watching a plane crash into the upper story, figuring  the property has used up its quota of bad luck.  
  Americans are especially stubborn this way, and indeed,  America would not exist if countless explorers, patriots, and  homesteaders had not taken on grave risks. But today, technology  and the trappings of modern life mislead us; they can create  the appearance of security, making still-dangerous places feel  positively cozy. And as the twenty-first century has dawned, new  perils have arisen, among them a disturbing increase in the number  of powerful hurricanes around the globe, possibly spawned  by man-made global warming.  
  A loose-knit group of scientists and emergency managers  was the only thing standing between New Orleans and its eventual  fate. They devoted entire careers to studying hurricanes and  storm surges, and raced desperately against the doomsday clock,  hitting countless bureaucratic walls along the way, doing their  best to push New Orleans's predicament into the public eye.  But they were small voices calling attention to ingrained, systemic  problems. That their heroic efforts ultimately failed is the  result of ignorance, bad decisions, and a sorry lack of leadership.  It is too late to save the New Orleans that once was. But it may  not be too late to do something about the storms to come.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from Path of Destruction by John McQuaid  Mark Schleifstein  Copyright © 2006   by John McQuaid and Mark Schleifstein.   Excerpted by permission.
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