What's next? Cavity searches?
“Whenever an individual manages to circumvent the security system  designed to protect our airports, airlines and the people who use them,  we ask why our countermeasures failed. And yet the real problem lies in  our determination to screen everybody in exactly the same way using  technologies that are not fit for purpose.
 
Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab,  the 23-year old alleged perpetrator of the Christmas Day attack, should  have been identified as a potential threat to the flight both in Lagos  and again in Amsterdam. Here was a passenger who had bought an expensive  ticket in cash in a country different to that of his port of  embarkation or his intended destination, was traveling without any  checked luggage for a two-week trip over the Christmas period, and about  whom some agencies, and his father, had security concerns. It’s not  rocket science we need; it’s the deployment of common sense.
 
Regrettably, regulators are loath to implement international  profiling standards that would screen different passengers in different  ways, for fear of being branded politically incorrect. Profiling is a  risk analysis of a person or situation carried out by a trained,  streetwise workforce. In terms of passengers, the aim is to analyze  their appearance and behavior, along with their travel documents, and  determine to what extent they meet our expectations for international  air travel. The key advantage of profiling is that it responds to future  threats as well as to those of the past and enables us to then select  the right technology to screen passengers with. We are not going to ask  all passengers to undergo a through-body X-ray, however safe such  technologies are, but we could use the technology to screen those we  have concerns about.
 
Detractors of profiling claim that decisions will be racially  motivated, that we will start picking on young Asian men and that all  Muslim passengers will be treated unfairly. Yet, the best examples of  profiling actually working have identified people who do not meet such a  stereotype.  Anne-Marie Murphy, a pregnant Irish woman identified as a  potential threat to an El Al flight in 1986, is the best example – and  she certainly did not fit the terrorist stereotype. As a result the 1.5  kg Semtex-based device concealed in her bag was identified.
 
The limited degree of profiling that is currently done has been  proven to work, when it is properly applied and enforced by trained  staff. Richard Reid, the “shoe-bomber,” was identified as a possible  threat on 21st December 2001 and refused boarding; he returned the next  day and managed to board. The Chechen Black Widows responsible for the  downing of two Russian airliners in 2004, each carrying explosive  charges on (or possibly in) their bodies, were initially refused  boarding. They paid bribes to be accepted, with tragic results.
 
It is up to  security trainers to ensure that profiling decisions  are based on logic rather than race, religion or skin color. In any  case, aviation security is about preventing perpetrators of all acts of  unlawful interference with civil aviation, such as unruly passengers,  criminals and asylum seekers, not only terrorists, from boarding  aircraft. Employers, meanwhile, will have to ensure that the screeners  they employ have the requisite skill-set with which to perform their  duties.
Profiling is subjective and profilers are human beings subject to  making errors of judgment. Indeed, Abdulmutallab had been through a  degree of profiling in Amsterdam on Dec. 25; whoever failed to identify  him must have been either in a Christmas frame of mind or incapable of  identifying the most obvious of documentary signs. Accordingly,  profiling is not a substitute for screening, rather a requisite addition  to the security process.
 
With this in mind, we need a system whereby a human determines which  screening methodology should be applied to each passenger. Most people  who look and act the part, as most people do, of the ‘normal’  law-abiding traveler would be subjected to standard screening, ideally  without even having to take off their shoes or belts or dispose of any  liquids. Those passengers whose intent is indeterminate may face  questioning or screening using millimeter wave-based solutions, whilst  those who we have genuine concerns about could undergo passenger X-ray  or even be denied boarding.
 
I despair when I read of the latest security measures implemented to  supposedly safeguard aviation. Just because Abdulmutallab allegedly  carried out his attack 20 minutes before landing (which I would say was  incredibly poor planning and not the mark of a sophisticated terrorist),  passengers on flights to the U.S. are no longer allowed to stand during  the last hour of their flight; nor can they cover themselves with  blankets or have access to their hand baggage in this period of the  flight. Not only do these measures demonstrate that the authorities recognize that the current security system is incapable of detecting the  21st century terrorist on the ground, prior to departure, but they also  provide the terrorist with yet another victory. What they want is to  disrupt our daily lives and they are succeeding.
 
Now is the time for us to seize the opportunity and set about  replacing our antiquated approach to aviation security. We must look to  the future and start to consider the unthinkable – chemical or  biological weapons attacks, internally-carried devices, and devices  infiltrated onto aircraft by airport workers. To do this we must finally  accept that profiling is the only solution that works.”
 
Philip Baum is the author of this piece and editor of Aviation Security International .  He is also the managing director of Green Light Limited, an aviation  security training and consultancy company based in London. The opinions  expressed by him are fully supported by this blogger. The clock is  ticking folks. It's time the US government got its head out of its ass.  Or maybe you folks on Capitol Hill didn't get the recent message 'We the  People' sent? Leadership by those who yell loudest will no longer cut  it in America. We deserve and demand level headed, common sense  approaches to the problems we face on this issue of terrorism. Put  another way. We are just about out of tolerance for tolerance sake.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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