Militants probe aviation security weak points

So strong is the sector’s lure as a target for militants  that the security industry must innovate ceaselessly to stay one  step ahead, and even then total protection for air travellers is  no more achievable than it is in any other branch of transport.

“It’s a contest,” said Henry Wilkinson of Janusian Security  in London, noting militants make a point of researching to  identify and exploit weaknesses in aviation security.

“It’s highly like that when security improvements devised as  a result of this latest incident have been put in place,  terrorists will come up with a way to get round them.”

In the Christmas Day incident, a Nigerian man believed to be  linked to al Qaeda militants was in custody on Saturday after he  tried to ignite an explosive device on a U.S. passenger plane as  it approached Detroit, US officials said.

The suspect, who suffered extensive burns, was overpowered  by passengers and crew on the flight from Amsterdam. The  passengers, two of whom suffered minor injuries, disembarked  safely from the Delta Air Lines plane.

Dangerous materials

Security experts say that while the industry’s defences have  improved in recent years, there is no widely deployed technology  to routinely guard against a bomber with explosives hidden in a  body cavity or strapped to his body.

Dutch counter-terrorism agency NCTb said in a statement the  man went through security at Schiphol airport but added it could  not rule out the potential for dangerous items to be brought on  board, “especially objects that with the current security  technology such as metal detectors are difficult to detect”.

Security experts said it was important to establish how the  man took the device aboard and how much was known about him by  counter-terrorism officials tasked with monitoring potentially  dangerous individuals.

“This case is an example of how groups and/or individuals  wanting to make a point continue to probe the aviation industry  for weaknesses,” said Chris Yates of Jane’s Aviation.

Yates and other experts noted that if passengers do not set  off an alarm during pre-board electronic screening there is less  chance they will be “patted down” by security staff — a simple  but reasonably effective search if performed correctly.

“We need to establish exactly what happened. But this  incident does appear to be very worrying: No one should be able  to get dangerous materials onto a plane,” he said.

Militants have a powerful rationale for putting aviation  high on their list of favourite targets and deploying the  maximum ingenuity to ensure success.

Simply by choosing to bomb a commercial airliner, an  attacker is guaranteed wide publicity. If the target is also on  an international route the effect is multiplied, with the news  and its attendant terror effect speading across the globe.

Liquid explosives plot

And if the plane’s destination is the United States, the  attack, if successful, is sure to harm Americans, a top goal for  anti-Western militants such as those of Osama bin Laden’s al  Qaeda and its loose network of like-minded allied groups.

Security analyst Paul Beaver said Friday’s incident showed  airliners remained an iconic target with a particularly Western  character because of the Western origins of commercial aviation.
“Very few ships have been attacked in comparison. With ships,  it’s more difficult to get the same publicity effect,” he said.

Justin Crump, Head of Terrorism and Country Risk at Stirling  Assynt security consultancy, said the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in  which planes were commandeered by suicide attackers was the most  spectacular example of militants’ obsession with aviation.

“Aviation is Western, a symbol of global commerce, a symbol  of global communications, and a successful attack is very  disruptive, making life harder for everyone through the  necessary additional security,” he said.

A notable example of militant innovation was a plot by three  Britons jailed for life in September for planning to blow up  transatlantic airliners bound for North America in mid-flight  suicide attacks using bombs made from liquid explosives in 2006.

The bombers intended to simultaneously destroy at least  seven planes carrying over 200 passengers each between London’s  Heathrow airport and the United States and Canada in August 2006  using explosives hidden in soft drink bottles.

The suspected al Qaeda plot, just days from being put into  operation according to British detectives, had huge worldwide  effects, leading to tight restrictions on the amount of liquids  passengers could take on board aircraft.