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U.S. Security Bill Targets Ports, Avoids Rail
NewsMax.com Wires
Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2006

WASHINGTON -- The U.S. Congress approved a major ports security bill early Saturday, providing new steps to prevent terrorists from slipping a nuclear, chemical or biological device into one of the 11 million shipping containers entering the United States every year.

Passage of the bill was the last act of the House as lawmakers left for a five-week election campaign during which candidates will be trying to prove to voters their commitment to keeping America safe in the war on terrorism. The Senate passed it by a voice vote, sending it to U.S. President George W. Bush for his signature.

Containers, now largely uninspected, "have the potential to be the Trojan Horse of the 21st century," said Senator Susan Collins, a Republican from Maine and chairwoman of the U.S. Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee. She said the legislation would be a "major leap ahead" in strengthening national security.

Democrats favoured the bill, but said it failed to address rail and mass transit, other areas considered highly vulnerable to terrorist attacks.

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"The terrorist attacks on rail and transit systems in Spain, London and Mumbai should be enough evidence to convince the Republican-led Congress that U.S. rails are dangerously vulnerable," said Senator Joe Lieberman, a Democrat from Connecticut.

The bill approves $400-million (U.S.) a year over five years for risk-based grants for training and exercises at ports. It requires the nation's 22 largest ports, which handle 98 per cent of all cargo entering the country, to install radiation detectors by the end of next year.

Pilot programs would be established at three foreign ports to test technology for non-intrusive cargo inspections. Currently only one foreign port, Hong Kong, scans all U.S.-bound cargo for nuclear materials.

Background checks and credentials will be required for workers at the nation's 361 ports, and the Homeland Security Department would set up protocols for resuming operations after an attack or incident.

It is feared that a terrorist attack, such as a nuclear device set off by remote control, could cripple the entire economy as well as cause massive casualties.

Preferential cargo processing is offered to importers who meet certain security requirements.

The bill would authorize $3.4-billion over five years for ports security. The House vote was 409-2, with only Massachusetts Democrat Edward Markey and Arizona Republican Jeff Flake opposing.

The bill was slow in reaching the House and Senate floors because lawmakers from both sides sought to attach their own favourite pieces of legislation to the ports measure because of the certainty it would reach the president's desk.

In the end, the only major add-on was legislation to restrict Internet gambling. Also attached was a measure, pushed by Senator David Vitter, a Republican from Louisiana, to help communities lacking telecommunications infrastructure install sirens and other emergency alert systems.

With an eye to the election, Congress has concentrated on security-related issues in the past two weeks, considering measures on military tribunals, spending for defence and homeland security and a bill to build a 1,100-kilometre fence along the Mexican border.

Democrats, in a letter to House Homeland Security Committee chairman Peter King, who headed House-Senate negotiations on the bill, complained they were denied the right to offer amendments to restore rail security language contained in the original Senate bill.

Congress made port security a priority after a fight in February over a buyout that put a Dubai company in control of some operations at six American ports. The outcry led the Dubai company, Dubai Ports World, to promise it would sell the U.S. operations to an American company. The sale is pending.

© 2006 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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