Obama blames ‘systemic failures’ in US security

Interrupting a vacation in Hawaii for the second straight  day to reassure Americans that he will keep the United States  safe, Obama listed several points at which red flags should  have been raised to prevent a young Islamic militant from  smuggling explosives onto a plane to the United States.

“The reviews I have ordered will surely tell us more, but  already what is apparent was that there was a mix of human and  systemic failures that contributed to this potential  catastrophic breach of security,” Obama said.

Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, a 23-year old Nigerian student,  is suspected of trying to ignite the explosives on Northwest  Flight 253 from Amsterdam as it approached Detroit on Dec. 25.

“When our government has information on a known extremist  and that information is not shared and acted upon as it should  have been … a systemic failure has occurred and I consider  that totally unacceptable,” Obama said at a Marine Corps base  near his holiday home.

The failed attack has put Obama on the defensive over  domestic security, forcing communication missteps by his  administration and drawing attention away from his top domestic  policy priority of healthcare reform.

By going before the television cameras twice in two days,  he sought to counter any impression that his vacation took  precedence over a major national security issue.

“We need to learn from this episode and act quickly to fix  the flaws in our system because our security is at stake and  lives are at stake,” Obama said.

Technology may be part of the solution.

Abdulmutallab  smuggled the explosives in his underpants  through checkpoints in Lagos and Amsterdam and hyper-sensitive  body scanners might have prevented this from happening. But the  machines are expensive and also intrusive, exposing an image of  the naked body on a security viewing screen.

The shares of Air Canada and WestJet Airlines Ltd, Canada’s  two biggest airlines, fell after they warned U.S.-bound  travelers to expect more flight delays and cancellations as  security is beefed up.