Emergency-response managers from most major cities say they need more federal funds and information than they currently receive if they are to properly respond to a terrorist attack involving a radiological dispersal device (RDD) or an improvised nuclear device (IND), the Government Accountability Office says in a new report.

The report said that of 27 major cities interviewed, most had assessed their ability to respond to an attack from a radiological or nuclear device and had ranked the risk of these attacks as lower than the risk of other hazards they face.

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