Study Warns of Lapses by Port Operators
By TED BRIDIS Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON
news://newsclip.ap.org/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
0310dv_bodlander_qna Lapses by private port operators, shipping lines or
truck drivers could allow terrorists to smuggle weapons of mass destruction
into the United States, according to a government review of security at
American seaports.

The $75 million, three-year study by the Homeland Security Department
included inspections at a New Jersey cargo terminal involved in the dispute
over a Dubai company's now-abandoned bid to take over significant operations
at six major U.S. ports.

The previously undisclosed results from the study found that cargo
containers can be opened secretly during shipment to add or remove items
without alerting U.S. authorities, according to government documents marked
"sensitive security information" and obtained by The Associated Press.

The study found serious lapses by private companies at foreign and American
ports, aboard ships, and on trucks and trains "that would enable
unmanifested materials or weapons of mass destruction to be introduced into
the supply chain."

The study, expected to be completed this fall, used satellites and
experimental monitors to trace roughly 20,000 cargo containers out of the
millions arriving each year from Europe, Asia and the Middle East. Most
containers are sealed with mechanical bolts that can be cut and replaced or
have doors that can be removed by dismantling hinges.

The risks from smuggled weapons are especially worrisome because U.S.
authorities largely decide which cargo containers to inspect based on
shipping records of what is thought to be inside.

Among the study's findings:

_Safety problems were not limited to overseas ports. A warehouse in Maine
was graded less secure than any in Pakistan, Turkey or Brazil. "There is a
perception that U.S. facilities benefit from superior security protection
measures," the study said. "This mind set may contribute to a misplaced
sense of confidence in American business practices."

_No records were kept of "cursory" inspections in Guatemala for containers
filled with Starbucks Corp. coffee beans shipped to the West Coast. "Coffee
beans were accessible to anyone entering the facility," the study said. It
found significant mistakes on manifests and other paperwork. In a statement
to the AP, Starbucks said it was reviewing its security procedures.

_Truck drivers in Brazil were permitted to take cargo containers home
overnight and park along public streets. Trains in the U.S. stopped in rail
yards that did not have fences and were in high-crime areas. A shipping
industry adage reflects unease over such practices: "A container at rest is
a container at risk."

_Practices at Turkey's Port of Izmir were "totally inadequate by U.S.
standards." But, the study noted, "It has been done that way for decades in
Turkey."

_Containers could be opened aboard some ships during weekslong voyages to
America. "Due to the time involved in transit (and) the fact that most
vessel crew members are foreigners with limited credentialing and vetting,
the containers are vulnerable to intrusion during the ocean voyage," the
study said.

_Some governments will not help tighten security because they view terrorism
as an American problem. The U.S. said "certain countries," which were not
identified, would not cooperate in its security study _ "a tangible example
of the lack of urgency with which these issues are regarded."

_Security was good at two terminals in Seattle and nearby Tacoma, Wash. The
operator in Seattle, SSA Marine, uses cameras and software to track visitors
and workers. "We consider ourselves playing an important role in security,"
said the company's vice president, Bob Waters.

In theory, some nuclear materials inside cargo containers can be detected
with special monitors. But such devices have frustrated port officials in
New Jersey because bananas, kitty litter and fire detectors _ which all emit
natural radiation _ set off the same alarms more than 100 times every day.

The study applauded efforts to install radiation monitors overseas. "While
there is clearly value in nuclear detection at a U.S. port, that is
precisely the concern _ it is already on U.S. soil," it said.

Finding biological and chemical weapons inside cargo containers is less
likely. The study said tests were "labor intensive, time-consuming and
costly to use" and produced too many false alarms. "No silver bullet has
emerged to render terrorists incapable of introducing WMD into containers,"
it said.

Sen. Patty Murray, who advocated the study, said: "There are huge holes in
our security system that need to be filled." The Washington Democrat said
the study "shows us there are major vulnerabilities over who handles cargo,
where it's been and whether cargo is on a manifest."

Part of the study tested new tamper-evident locks on containers and tracking
devices.

"It's important to figure out what works and what doesn't," said Elaine
Dezenski, Homeland Security's acting assistant secretary for policy
development. She said the study "gave us a much better view of
vulnerabilities." The U.S. is looking for weaknesses across the shipping
system to learn where terrorists might strike, she said.

The study, called "Operation Safe Commerce," undercuts arguments that port
security in America is an exclusive province of the Coast Guard and U.S.
Customs and Border Protection and is not managed by companies operating
shipping terminals.

The theme was an important element in the Bush administration's forceful
defense of the deal it originally approved to allow Dubai-owned DP World to
handle significant operations at ports in New Jersey, Baltimore, New
Orleans, Miami and Philadelphia.

Bush and senior officials sought to assure lawmakers that safety at ports
would not decline.

"I can understand people's consternation because the first thing they heard
was that a foreign company would be in charge of our port security when in
fact, the Coast Guard and Customs are in charge of our port security," Bush
said Feb. 28. "Our duty is to protect America, and we will protect America."

DP World promised on Thursday to transfer fully to an American company its
U.S. port operations it acquired when it bought London-based Peninsular &
Oriental Steam Navigation Co.

It was unclear how such a sale might occur, but the divestiture was expected
to involve major operations at the six U.S. ports and affect lesser dockside
activities at 16 other ports in this country.

Sen. Robert Menendez, D-N.J., a leading critic of the Dubai deal, said
anyone suggesting that port operators and shipping companies were not
involved with security was "living in La-La land."

"You can obviously have stuff in containers that doesn't make it onto
manifests, either by design or from the actions of bad actors," Menendez
said in an AP interview Friday. "A terminal operator is so involved in the
overall security equation of ports."

Parts of the U.S. study examined the safety of containers sent to the same
cargo terminal in New Jersey that DP World would have managed jointly and
operated with its Denmark-based rival, Maersk Sealand.

Hundreds of pages of study documents obtained by the AP do not list specific
security lapses at the New Jersey terminal. The final two cargo containers
being tracked under the study were expected to arrive there this week from
the Middle East.

But the study broadly described problems in warehouses and other storage
areas that raised doubts about the safety of containers brought to New
Jersey's port. It cited problems with protective fences and gates,
surveillance cameras and emergency plans.

The lengthy study has been beset by problems. Japan refused to allow
officials to attach tracking devices to containers destined for the United
States. Other tracking devices sometimes failed. Many shipping companies
refused to disclose information for competitive reasons.

Some containers in the study were aboard a ship the Coast Guard held 11
miles off New Jersey's coast for security reasons in August 2004. An
anonymous e-mail had claimed a container filled with tons of lemons was
deliberately contaminated with a biological agent. The lemons were fumigated
and burned, but no trace of poison was ever found; the containers also were
destroyed.

Parts of the study could not be finished at all. U.S. officials went to
Pakistan to inspect how workers in Karachi handle cargo containers. But they
canceled plans for a return inspection because of an outbreak of terrorist
attacks there. 

 

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