Government Report on U.S. Aviation Warns of Security Holes
By ERIC LICHTBLAU
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/03/14/politics/14terror.html?ei=5065&en=c1a697b9
fd0e7d81&ex=1111467600&partner=MYWAY&pagewanted=all&position=

Published: March 14, 2005

WASHINGTON, March 13 - Despite a huge investment in security, the American
aviation system remains vulnerable to attack by Al Qaeda and other jihadist
terrorist groups, with noncommercial planes and helicopters offering
terrorists particularly tempting targets, a confidential government report
concludes.

Intelligence indicates that Al Qaeda may have discussed plans to hijack
chartered planes, helicopters and other general aviation aircraft for
attacks because they are less well-guarded than commercial airliners,
according to a previously undisclosed 24-page special assessment on aviation
security by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of
Homeland Security two weeks ago.

But commercial airliners are also "likely to remain a target and a platform
for terrorists," the report says, and members of Al Qaeda appear determined
to study and test new American security measures to "uncover weaknesses."

The assessment comes as the Bush administration, with a new intelligence
structure and many new counterterrorism leaders in place, is taking stock of
terrorists' capabilities and of the country's ability to defend itself.

While Homeland Security and the F.B.I. routinely put out advisories on
aviation issues, the special joint assessment is an effort to give a broader
picture of the state of knowledge of all issues affecting aviation security,
officials said.

The analysis appears to rely on intelligence gathered from sources overseas
and elsewhere about Al Qaeda and other jihadist and Islamic-based terrorist
groups.

A separate report issued last month by Homeland Security concluded that
developing a clear framework for prioritizing possible targets - a task many
Democrats say has lagged - is critical because "it is impossible to protect
all of the infrastructure sectors equally across the entire United States."

The aviation sector has received the majority of domestic security
investments since the Sept. 11 attacks, with more than $12 billion spent on
upgrades like devices to detect explosives, armored cockpit doors,
federalized air screeners and additional air marshals.

Indeed, some members of Congress and security experts now consider airplanes
to be so well fortified that they say it is time to shift resources to other
vulnerable sectors, like ports and power plants.

In the area of rail safety, for instance, Democrats are pushing a $1.1
billion plan to plug what they see as glaring vulnerabilities. "This is a
disaster waiting to happen," Senator Joseph R. Biden Jr., Democrat of
Delaware, said last week at a Senate hearing marking the one-year
anniversary of the deadly train bombings in Madrid.

Still, the new aviation assessment, examining dozens of airline incidents
both before and after the Sept. 11 attacks, makes clear that
counterterrorism officials still consider the aviation industry to be
perhaps the prime target for another major attack because of the spectacular
nature of such strikes.

The assessment, which showed that the F.B.I. handled more than 500 criminal
investigations involving aircraft in 2003, will likely serve as a guide for
considering further security restrictions in general aviation and other
areas considered particularly vulnerable, the officials said.

The report, dated Feb. 25, was distributed internally to federal and state
counterterrorism and aviation officials, and a copy was obtained by The
Times. It warns that security upgrades since the Sept. 11 attacks have
"reduced, but not eliminated" the prospect of similar attacks.

"Spectacular terrorist attacks can generate an outpouring of support for the
perpetrators from sympathizers and terrorism sponsors with similar agendas,"
the report said. "The public fear resulting from a terrorist hijacking or
aircraft bombing also serves as a powerful motivator for groups seeking to
further their causes."

The report detailed particular vulnerabilities in what it called "the
largely unregulated" area of general aviation, which includes corporate
jets, private planes and other unscheduled aircraft.

"As security measures improve at large commercial airports, terrorists may
choose to rent or steal general aviation aircraft housed at small airports
with little or no security," the report said.

The report also said that Al Qaeda "has apparently considered the use of
helicopters as an alternative to recruiting operatives for fixed-wing
aircraft operations." The maneuverability and "nonthreatening appearance" of
helicopters, even when flying at low altitudes above urban areas, make them
attractive targets for terrorists to conduct suicide attacks on landmarks or
to spray toxins below, the report said.

The assessment does not identify who might be in a position to carry out
such domestic attacks.

While law enforcement officials have spoken repeatedly about their concerns
over so-called sleeper cells operating within the United States, a separate
F.B.I. report first disclosed last week by ABC News indicated that evidence
pointing to the existence of such cells was inconclusive.

The question of how well the government is protecting airline travelers
surfaced again last month after the disclosure in a Sept. 11 commission
investigation that in the months leading up to the attack, federal officials
received 52 warnings about Al Qaeda and Osama bin Laden, some warning
specifically about hijackings and suicide operations.

Federal officials now say they have taken a number of steps to tighten
security for helicopters, chartered flights and the like in response to
perceived threats, as they did last August in temporarily ordering federal
security guards and tougher screening for helicopter tours in the New York
City area.

Rear Adm. David M. Stone, an assistant secretary at the Department of
Homeland Security who oversees the Transportation Security Administration,
said that "the report validates T.S.A.'s sense of urgency in our daily
efforts to secure aviation, and that same sense of urgency can be found in
our work securing every other mode of transportation."

The report also sought to codify the various responsibilities for aviation
security in the increasingly complex labyrinth of federal agencies, and it
examined 33 terrorist plots against airplanes inside and out of the United
States over the years.

Of the more than 500 criminal cases involving aircraft handled by the F.B.I.
in 2003, two were hijackings in the United States involving flights from
Cuba that landed in Florida. More than 300 episodes involved undeclared
weapons or other problems at screening and security checkpoints, while 175
cases were triggered by on-board interference or threats against crew
members, often involving alcohol.

In one case, a passenger sprayed perfume at a flight attendant "in a hostile
manner," the report said. 



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