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November 19, 2010
It's The Personnel, Stupid!
Much has been written in the last few days about government-sanctioned molestation, taking place under the guise of security at our airports today. While many have pointed to Israeli security as the model for effective but non-traumatic security screening (see below), few have focused on the real reason for Israel's success. It's the personnel, stupid!
Israel's airport security personnel/agents are well-trained. Most, if not all have served in the military and prior to becoming airport security agents, underwent comprehensive and rigorous training (i.e., not just a 2-day course on "groin-groping" or patting-down little old ladies).
What this means is that Israeli airport security personnel all have some kind of security background/experience and are properly-trained and prepared, even expected, to exercise discretion and common sense in carrying out their duties.
Effective security measures require more than just physical pat-downs or blindly following procedure like automatons (unfortunately what we Americans have in our airports today).
Can we do what the Israelis do? YES, WE CAN and a good place to start would be hiring (and properly compensating) our military vets to serve as airport security personnel, since these folks know what security means!
New York Post | November 19, 2010
Forget The 'Porn Machines'
How Israelis secure airports
By Michael J. Totten
Air travelers in the United States are now given two options at the security gate - be groin-groped by gloved Transportation Security Administration agents, or photographed "naked" in the back-scatter X-ray device that Jeffrey Goldberg at The Atlantic calls "the porn machine."
You can thank failed "underwear bomber" Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab for this one. While armies tragically tend to fight the last war, the TSA looks for the item the most recent terrorist used.
After 9/11, everything sharp - even tweezers - was banned. Ever since Richard Reid tried and failed to light his loafers on fire, security agents have forced us to take off our shoes. British authorities rounded up terrorists who planned to bring liquid explosives on board, and we've all been prohibited from carrying shampoo through the gate ever since.
Terrorists have yet to use the same weapon twice, and the TSA isn't even looking for whatever they'll try to use next. I can think of all sorts of things a person could use to wreak havoc on a plane that aren't banned. Security officials should pay less attention to objects, and more attention to people.
The Israelis do. They are, out of dreadful necessity, the world's foremost experts in counterterrorism. And they couldn't care less about what your grandmother brings on a plane. Instead, officials at Ben Gurion International Airport interview everyone in line before they're even allowed to check in.
And Israeli officials profile. They don't profile racially, but they profile. Israeli Arabs breeze through rather quickly, but thanks to the dozens of dubious-looking stamps in my passport - almost half are from Lebanon and Iraq - I get pulled off to the side for more questioning every time. And I'm a white, nominally Christian American.
If they pull you aside, you had better tell them the truth. They'll ask you so many wildly unpredictable questions so quickly, you couldn't possibly invent a fake story and keep it all straight. Don't even try. They're highly trained and experienced, and they catch everyone who tries to pull something over on them.
Because I fit one of their profiles, it takes me 15 or 20 minutes longer to get through the first wave of security than it does for most people. The agents make up for it, though, by escorting me to the front of the line at the metal detector. They don't put anyone into a "porn machine." There's no point. Terrorists can't penetrate that deeply into the airport.
The Israeli experience isn't pleasant, exactly, and there's a lot not to like about it. It can be exasperating for those of us who are interrogated more thoroughly.
The system has its advantages, though, aside from the fact that no one looks or reaches into anyone's pants. Israelis don't use security theater to make passengers feel like they're safe. They use real security measures to ensure that travelers actually are safe. Even when suicide bombers exploded themselves almost daily in Israeli cities, not a single one managed to get through that airport.
Michael J. Totten is an independent foreign correspondent. His next book is "The Road to Fatima Gate: The Beirut Spring, the Rise of Hezbollah and the Iranian War Against Israel."
Original article here.
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