The primary purpose of validating capabilities throughdrills and exercises, as defined by theHomeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP), isidentifying planning gapsand areas for improvement. Exercises provide a "no-fault" environment to test whether the policies, procedures, and resources described in an Emergency Operations Plan (EOP) actually work in a simulated real-world scenario. Without validation, a plan is merely a set of untested assumptions.
Validation through exercises serves several critical functions:
Clarifying Roles:Ensuring every agency knows its specific responsibilities under theIncident Command System (ICS).
Resource Verification:Confirming that the equipment and personnel "typed" in the plan are actually available and functional.
Revealing Gaps:Identifying if communications are not interoperable, if triage protocols are too slow, or if the "span of control" is too wide.
While Option B (Preventing unwanted outcomes) is a long-term goal of theentirepreparedness program, an exercise itself cannot "prevent" a real-world disaster; it can only prepare you for it. Option C (Collecting threat data) is part of theTHIRA/HVAprocess that happensbeforethe exercise is designed. According to theCEDPcurriculum, the "output" of an exercise is theAfter-Action Report (AAR)and theImprovement Plan (IP). These documents formally list the identified gaps and assign tasks to fix them. By systematically identifying and closing these planning gaps, an organization builds a higher level of "Realized Capability," ensuring that when a real disaster occurs, the response is characterized by competence and coordination rather than confusion and failure.