Tests Show D.C. Still Vulnerable to Terrorist Attack From Air
NewsMax.com Wires
Thursday, Jan. 15, 2004
WASHINGTON U.S. and Canadian military aircraft have
scrambled nearly 1,700 times to intercept or divert suspicious
aircraft since Sept. 11, but routine drills illustrate how
terrorists could penetrate the airspace around the nation's
capital.
"We do these tests to push the system, find holes, and when we
find holes we correct them," said Canadian Army Maj. Douglas
Martin of the North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD).
"Every time we do a test, or an evaluation or exercise, we're
getting better at defending the national capital region."
Officials said the exercises conducted in early and
mid-December were the latest to show that the best prevention
against another terrorist attack in the skies was thorough pre-emptive
intelligence and screening, not a last-minute intercept or
shootdown of a hijacked commercial airliner.
Those officials talked to The Associated Press about the
classified results of the drills only on condition of anonymity.
They said U.S. military officials had concluded it would be very
difficult to intercept a hijacked plane within a certain radius of
major cities such as Washington unless fighter jets were already
airborne.
Possible airline hijackings were a major concern around the New
Year's holiday, when nervous U.S. officials caused a number of
international flights to or from Washington and Los Angeles to be
canceled or severely delayed. F-16 fighter jets reportedly escorted
some flights as they approached U.S. airports.
In some of the tests in December, officials withheld fighter
jets to check other last-resort defenses around the
capital such as ground-to-air missiles and artillery, Secret
Service protection and Federal Aviation Administration
communications, the officials said.
The officials declined to provide more specific details about
the drills except to say that under some circumstances Homeland
Security planes posing as mock terrorists were able to penetrate
protected airspace.
The officials declined to define the zone in which scrambling
military jets become ineffective although they noted the government
typically creates a buffer of just over 30 miles when setting up
temporary protected airspace around special events or presidential
locations.
Homeland Security officials said there have been numerous tests
of the air defense system nationwide since the Sept. 11 terrorist
attacks, and areas for improvement have been identified and
addressed.
"Since Sept. 11, Homeland Security and the Department of
Defense have vastly improved the coordination response capacity of
the nation's air defenses, and we are continually exercising and
training to ensure we have the right assets in place to address any
threats," Homeland spokesman Brian Roehrkasse said.
"Our goal is to target the risk long before any passenger goes
through security and board an aircraft," he said, citing a litany
of preventative measures from air marshals and armed pilots to
improved passenger screening and reinforced cockpit doors.
New Solutions
Homeland Security officials are examining ways to refine the
color-coded system that provides Americans with terror alerts, but
officials already have begun targeting intelligence alerts and
specific security measures to specific areas and industries in
instances where the entire nation doesn't need to go to a higher
alert.
Officials said in some cases, specific companies and
installations were now getting customized terror alerts based on
intelligence about their vulnerabilities, all in recognition that
prevention beforehand will be more successful than a last-minute
effort to stop an attack.
Officials said there were two tests in the Washington area, one
in early December known as a "tabletop exercise" because it was
simulated, and another Dec. 13-16 when live aircraft were used in
mock terrorist plots.
Officials said that the conditions often were made extreme to test
the outer limits of air defense capabilities, and that some
penetrations or failures were intentional.
For instance, fighter jets failed to intercept enemy aircraft,
and other times they did so to see how other air defenses would
respond, officials said.
Overall, the nation's air safety net is getting improved marks
with each test. And officials point to the fact that nearly 1,700
times since Sept. 11, fighter jets have successfully been scrambled
to intercept or escort suspicious planes.
One such intercept of a wayward plane occurred over the White
House late last year. At least 12 aircraft were escorted or
intercepted after unintentionally invading the protected airspace
over the Winter Olympics in Utah in 2002.
Officials agreed to discuss the results of air defense drills in
broad terms to highlight that, with intelligence pointing toward
al-Qaida's continued determination to conduct more terror attacks
through the air, the best prevention was through pre-emptive
screening and detailed intelligence.
The officials stressed the December air tests played no role in
the decision Dec. 21 to raise the nation's terror alert to the
second-highest color, orange, for the holidays because of threats
to airliners. The test had been planned long before the alert was
raised.
Foreigners' Laxity
That decision was based on detailed intelligence that suggested
al-Qaida was interested in exploiting more lax security overseas
and hijacking a foreign airliner that was passing through American
skies.
That intelligence, which in some cases included possible air
routes, came from a variety of sources, including electronic
intercepts of conversations between suspected terrorists,
interrogations of al-Qaida prisoners and intercepted communications
over the Internet, officials said.
The FBI, CIA and Homeland Security Department used the
intelligence to scour airplane manifests on the most likely air
routes to look for any passengers whose names closely resembled
those in terrorist watch lists.
In one case, an Air France flight to Washington was canceled
because a half dozen passenger names were close enough to those of
a suspected terrorists on watch lists, especially with
transliterations between Arabic and English. At least one passenger
turned out to be a youth, and none were deemed terrorists.
© 2003 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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