US airline security has suffered its most appalling breach in history.
At
least four separate teams of extremists boarded planes and hijacked
them -
all within hours of each other.
"I have said before that if I were a terrorist wanting to hit US aviation
I
would do it via an internal flight" -- David Learmount,
Flight International
But security experts say the terrorists had been presented with virtually
an
open goal. Security on US domestic flights is so relaxed that organised,
determined extremists would have had few problems breaching it. Key
parts of
international procedure - such as making sure bags are accompanied,
and
X-raying hold baggage - are absent.
The culture, say critics, puts passengers' freedom to travel efficiently
above the need for watertight security. "I have said before that if
I were a
terrorist wanting to hit US aviation I would do it via an internal
flight,"
said David Learmount, Operations and Safety Editor of Flight International.
"I am not staggered by this. It's very simple - the US has high security
on
international flights, and virtually no security on internal flights.
"Frankly as one travels around America on internal flights, one can
see only
too well that the Americans don't take security in their airports as
seriously as we do in this country" -- Security expert Daniel
Plesch
"It seems appalling that on a single day so many people could get through."
Another security expert, Daniel Plesch, told the BBC the Americans
had simply
not believed this could happen to them. "Frankly as one travels around
America on internal flights, one can see only too well that the Americans
don't take security in their airports as seriously as we do in this
country," he said.
"And at conferences in America, I have seen many security lapses which
would
make your hair stand on end. "There isn't the same culture there as
is in
Israel or Britain to deal with these kind of threats. America is just
too
open." Top-level attempts have been made to boost security. UK has
tougher
airport security because of known threats.
Within the last decade, a major commission headed by then US Vice-President
Al Gore recommended increasing security to international levels - but
the industry
opposed the idea so strongly that the plan was never adopted, say industry
insiders.
One expert called that "one of the most astounding decisions ever taken".
Now, with the appalling events of Tuesday, security is likely to be
ratcheted
up to its highest-ever level. No-one knows what weapons the extremists
used,
but it was clearly enough to take over four separate planes.
'Sophisticated'
But even with much tougher security, an attack as staggering as this
in its
ambition and planning might still have succeeded. Phil Butterworth-Hayes,
the
civil aviation editor with the Janes information group, says it would
have
been difficult to prevent such a sophisticated attack.
"Aviation security tends to be retrospective. New measures are only
put in
place after something has happened" -- Phil Butterworth-Hayes,
Janes information group
Terrorists are "always one step ahead" of the institutions that really
need protection, he said.
"When you get people determined to commit acts of terrorism, it is
almost impossible to stop them,"
he said. "Aviation security tends to be retrospective. New measures
are only put in place after
something has happened.
'Most audacious attack'
"Aviation thought that it had sorted out the bombs-in-holds problem
after
Lockerbie, but now there is a fresh problem to resolve." Chris Yates,
aviation security editor of Jane's Defence Weekly, said the attack
would have
been way beyond the reach of ordinary security measures.
"This is perhaps the most audacious terrorist attack that's ever taken
place
in the world," he said. "It takes a logistics operation from the terror
group
involved that is second to none."