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Airport Security: A Decade of Madness

Posted: 02/01/12 09:04 GMT

As I sit here in Heathrow Terminal 4 having just finished eating some sub-par airport food with tiny cutlery, I can't help wondering if we've done more in the last decade to create a perception of being under constant terrorist threat than to come to terms with how much of a threat we truly face.

Airport travel has changed more in the 10 years than in the half century that went before it. Passengers have become inured to being poked, prodded, scanned and stripped (physically and with the nude-a-tron) as a matter of course. Getting past airport security without setting off klaxons or a minor security alert has been elevated to something akin to playing an unbeaten season or pitching a perfect game. If it's not your ill-chosen footwear it's that chicken salad sandwich you forgot was in your carry-on bag that almost necessitated the deployment of a CDC hazmat team.

Not only has this made air travel rather unpleasant, it has also created a pervading sense of paranoia when glancing around at other passengers. Why is that teenager being so slow to take off his metal studded belt? Is that pregnant women going to attack the security guard with her nail file? Passengers have become so downtrodden that most will surrender their shoes, belts and watches whether they're asked to or not. I now make it a point of doing only what is asked, as I don't find shuffling through the metal detector in my socks, holding up my sagging trousers particularly edifying.

This airport paranoia is no more evident than in the stupid little knives and forks that are gradually becoming commonplace in most international airport restaurants. As a would-be terrorist having made it through security, naturally my first thought would be to make for the nearest Frankie and Benny's and go for the razor sharp fork to go on a fork-rampage. Not quite as sexy sounding as a samurai sword, but oh so much more readily available.

Real target-hardening measures such as crash bollards, improved CCTV coverage and better trained security personnel do have an impact in both deterring terrorism and catching would-be attackers in the act. Explosives trace-detection portal machines (think electronic sniffer dog) are probably more likely to catch a terrorist than a full-body backscatter scan as they specifically look for traces of explosive material - rather than displaying a blurry naked image of each passenger. As was very clearly pointed out in Charles C. Mann's recent Vanity Fair article it is not only surprisingly simple to defeat post-9/11 airport security but also unlikely that terrorists will employ the same methods again in future attacks (c.f. shoe-bombs). We're not just bolting the stable door, we've bricked it up and added an electric fence.

There are far more frightening targets that we aren't protecting that could have a similar symbolic effect to airport attacks - e.g. large sporting events, power plants and water treatment facilities - and yet billions of dollars have been ploughed into airport security measures that are still not 100% effective. Because security measures never are. Thwarting terrorism is a 24/7 enterprise and while security measures have to work all the time, a terrorist only needs to get lucky once to perpetrate a successful attack. This is a fact we have to learn to accept and move on.

We long ago bypassed the land of diminishing returns when it comes to airport security and by giving such credence to shady cells of poorly trained militants we are achieving exactly what they want - a constant atmosphere of terror. If you want a concrete example of where this road could lead then look no further than Israel. Yes, Israel does face a very real threat from terrorism, but when you go to a Tel Aviv beach and see young soldiers sunbathing with their M16s lying beside them, I think a point has been reached where the threat of an imminent attack is being premised over people being able to live their lives.

The rub is that if any country showed the leadership and strength of character necessary to downgrade airport security and an attack were to happen, the blame would fall solely on their shoulders. We've now entered some bizarre twilight zone where the only solution is to pile on more security rather than look at whether the measures we already have in place are truly effective or could be streamlined to enhance passenger privacy and dare I say it, satisfaction. Of course there is a trade off between safety and passenger happiness, but the same could be said for buying a Prius over a Ferrari. The safest solution would be for nobody to fly anywhere and if we continue on course that may end up happening when we get to the point of mandatory cavity searches for every summer vacation.

The time and money poured into the increasingly invasive security measures seen at airports should be spent where it really matters - on criminal investigation and police overtime. Terrorists dumb enough to try attacking an airport post-9/11 are most likely going to get caught and dealt with easily - it's the ones who target the places we aren't protecting that keep me up at night.

 

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As I sit here in Heathrow Terminal 4 having just finished eating some sub-par airport food with tiny cutlery, I can't help wondering if we've done more in the last decade to create a perception of bei...
As I sit here in Heathrow Terminal 4 having just finished eating some sub-par airport food with tiny cutlery, I can't help wondering if we've done more in the last decade to create a perception of bei...
 
 
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04:00 PM on 01/09/2012
Nice article. The fact is there are so many differing levels of security depending on the airport and country anyway! There comes a point when the terrorists have won simply by changing the way you live your life.

http://www.myspace.com/david_willder_uk125232557
02:37 PM on 01/08/2012
An excellent and refreshingly sane article about a vastly inflated threat. The fact is: very few people are actually interested in blowing up planes. If terrorists - a catch-all term with no real definition - genuinely wanted to execute more bomb attacks, they'd have no shortage of targets. Shopping centres, crowded streets, airports in pre-security areas. And yet we all but never see attacks on those places, and the very occasional incidents of terrorism such as the shootings in Norway this year have been committed not by nebulous evil organisations, but by lone madmen.

9/11 was ten years ago, and it was an act of terrorism, and it has been more successful than anyone could have thought possible. All they had to do was hijack four planes, and they've terrified, traumatised, and at the very least inconvenienced vast numbers of people. They have, in all probability, achieved more than they ever set out to. And our governments have seized the opportunity to increase their control over a population gullible enough to believe they're being protected from a nebulous, invisible enemy. Terrorism is a tiny threat which has been inflated to huge proportions by a combination of collective overreaction by the people and calculated exaggeration by governments who see it as an excellent way to keep their people docile and persuade them to submit to ever more intrusive surveillance and regulation. The excessive airport security is there not to protect aeroplanes, but to maintain the fiction that it is necessary.
12:37 AM on 01/05/2012
It is cautionary to note that the current levels of airport security did not prevent an aircraft at Turnhouse [Edinburgh Airport] being damaged by a flying bus shelter from outside the airport!
lastpost
see biography
01:20 PM on 01/04/2012
"Madness"
We can treat the constantly evolving symptoms of a disease for ever. Or, we can seek to eradicate the illness itself. Choose wisely.

"holding up my sagging trousers"
surely suggests to some, that a readymade market exists for scanner-inert belts and/or braces.

"The rub is that if"
we had leaders who had the remotest notion in regard to what it is we are trying to accomplish here. The necessary solutions would become self evident. Our difficulties relate to a perceived need to find solutions that address erroneous understandings. On both sides.
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Bob Metcalfe
Caught at 1st. slip trying to cut
01:25 AM on 01/04/2012
Most sense I've read on this for a while. Surprised men in black suits aren't knocking at yr door tho.
10:47 PM on 01/03/2012
Great article! It really is time for our Government leaders to rethink the notion that somehow the removal of shoes and searching of incapacitated seniors and children with stuffed animals is keeping us safe. Fact is we all stand in a line with some form of carry-on luggage waiting to go thru "the probe" when ,in fact, any one or many of those pieces of carry-on could have explosives in them. Do we really think the terrorist waits to be screened before he acts. Do we not relize, as what stated, that there are so many modes of transportation and venues that are not subject to this type "clearence" . FAct is if we secure the cockpit door a plane will never again be made into a deadly missle. Yes, a terrorist could blow it up ,however, they could do the same thing anywhere else. It is time to get real in our thinking and let's return to a less stressful life and let the professionals protect us. Take all this money we waste on TSA activities and give more funding to the Intelligence side of prevention. INTELL wins wars.
Until we do the Terrorists continue to win every day, after all one of their goals is to have us live in fear and disrupt our daily lives.

H.Mick
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
09:25 PM on 01/03/2012
How to secure our airlines, part # 1 of ......

# 1... Seat belts required, and monitored by the on-board security system and personal. If you want to get up and leave your seat, you have to ask permission, otherwise your seat belt is LOCKED and you cannot get up.

# 2 ... Pilots have an override switch that can be used in the event of a problem; the switch immediately programs the aircraft to land at the nearest safe airport, while alerting the ground monitors that it is coming in for a landing.

# 3 ... All commercial aircraft have self-destruct mechanisms built in; each takes both the aircraft pilots and the ground monitors for any sort of action, but can be used to divert or destruct an aircraft that is about to 'land' on a WTC type building, by accident or not.

# 4 ... Cabin pods, this is something that was invented in the 1960's and displayed in I believe 'Popular Mechanics'. The entire passenger compartment is a detachable pod that in the event of an emergency can be released and parachuted to safety.

# 5 ... Advanced tickets, which allow time for background checks of each person boarding. We have part of this now, but it needs to be fully implemented. No BC, no ticky.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
12:41 AM on 01/08/2012
Will the irony fairies or the TSA get to you first?
02:19 PM on 01/08/2012
Did you actually read the article? Or the other article that was linked to in this one? Or any of the facts and statistics about aircraft hijacks?
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ivanhoemb
Oderint dum metuant
06:44 PM on 01/03/2012
A sensible and well written article. My job requires me to travel frequently. I never fly if I can drive to my destination in 6 hours or less. Even 8 or 9 hour drives are preferabe to the hassle of airport security. If we want to exude the aura of victory over terrorism, we need to completely re-think airport security and restore some comfort and dignity to passengers.
05:53 PM on 01/03/2012
It is past time to reasses TSA. The new body scanners are going to work out. A dog can sniff out plastic explosives from many feet away. I retired from 30 + years flying commercial and military and I saw a lot of nonsense at airport security as they went from no security to what we have now.

The TSA personnel are poorly trained and often have limited experience flying or maybe none at all. There should be frequent flyer IDs issued and used to speed up check ins. Background checks are not as expensive as they once were.
12:44 AM on 01/05/2012
Yes I agree that sniffer dogs are brilliant operatives they only have a very limited on duty time before needing rest and a long one at that. The best defence is random searching which is practiced as some airports. With random searches you can be picked up for examination even though you and your bags have passed all precautionery procedures. Sniffer dogs could also be deployed an a random basis to good effect. Everybody loves a sniffer dog, ususally an engaging spaniel, as they go about their business.
05:03 PM on 01/03/2012
It is not just aiirport security. The USA basically went crazy in the wake of 9/11, and it has turned out NOT to be temporary insanity. We Americans had dropped a LOT of bombs on a LOT of people, some of it quite justified, as in WW II, and some of it NOT, like the multitude of bombs we dropped on Vietnam during the war in which I served as an Army officer. But 9/11 marked the first time WE had been "bombed." Sadly, we reacted NOT by going full force after the people who had planned 9/11 but by invading Iraq, trashing parts of our Constitution, engaging in the kind of torture for which we had previously criticized other nations, and getting EXTREMELY mean, vicious, and sullen. But NOT being willing to pay higher taxes to fund the wars or sending many of our OWN loved ones to fight in Iraq--just send the same troops back for repeat tours in the combat zone while WE stay home. After 10 years-plus, maybe the temporary insanity will start to decrease. Yes, 9/11 had to change the USA, but we went WAY overboard.
04:46 PM on 01/03/2012
It's all about money. Ask Michael Chertoff.
04:43 PM on 01/03/2012
The last run it I had with a TSA guy was comical. He took my shaving gell because it was in a container over 3 ounces, though there was clearly less in the container. He was young and new and at least 5'6" and 250 lbs. I told him we was doing his job and he felt odd doing it, but the other three TSA guys smiled and put it back in the bag. I felt like telling him that we all do or did our part to protect the country, you take shaving gell and I was in the infantry for 6 years, but I couldn't, he felt bad enough.
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nattxn
04:41 PM on 01/03/2012
Well written about the farce that TSA is.
Topdown1
That's what she said!
04:34 PM on 01/03/2012
make for the nearest Frankie and Benny's and go for the razor sharp fork to go on a fork-rampage.......................Also you never know when someone might make a bomb out of toothpast, sunscreen and shampoo. Airport Securiety; Making the world a safer place. LOL
04:34 PM on 01/03/2012
The fear of a terrorist attack on a commercial airliner is with us and will not vanish. Airline travel is now nausea personified without the TSA peering into every nook and cranny but as long as we are reminded of the dangers possible from our enemies nothing will change. Our lives are subject to more scrutiny than ever; we do not know half of what government has in the way of spying devices etc. The world has changed and each generation accepts intrusion into life without batting an eyelid; only the older generations who have memories of the way it was shudder at what it has become.