Fireworks Ignite After Latest Airline Terrorism Incident

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It was a surprise to see the biggest news on Christmas was that a Nigerian terrorist managed to get on a plane coming to Detroit from Amsterdam with some sort of explosive strapped to his leg.

AND – the alleged terrorist was on the NO-FLY LIST. Just think about this for a moment. A recent paper from the Naval Postgraduate School on Homeland Security estimated that the costs of the no-fly list, since 2002, range from approximately $300 million (a conservative estimate) to $966 million! And after spending over $300 million, the terrorist is able to get right on the plane, WITH EXPLOSIVES STRAPPED ON, and fly to the U.S.

Besides being a risk expert, I was mom who didn’t let her boys have toy guns. So imagine my shock at THINKING (to myself) that maybe we should let certain
Cleared passengers fly PACKING.

The passengers on the flight under discussion are the ones who subdued the perp, and I have a feeling that US airlines passengers would all be happy to take over their own security while flying the un-friendly skies.

Despite spending billions on patting down the grannies and business travelers along with 9 year old girls – someone can still board a plane and fly right into the U.S. with
explosives strapped on.

A simple risk formula applied to this entire passenger screening program shows that the entire TSA passenger screening program is too expensive for the results they are getting. The biggest cost waster is the idea that every single air traveler is treated exactly the same way. This is the elephant in TSA’s conference room. Every traveler is NOT the same. The most simplistic metrics show that:

1) Terrorists are more likely to be men.

2) Women over 60 are not likely to blow anything up.

3) Small children and federal employees are unlikely to be
Smuggling in explosive devices.

As the noted expert, Stephen Flynn, pointed in his book, America the Vulnerable, this policy creates huge cost, creates inefficiency and does not stop the dedicated terrorist.

Instead of being run as a gigantic stimulus program for the underemployed, TSA should sharpen it’s focus and began to start a true profiling program. A profiling program doesn’t have to target certain groups or type of individuals, but it should work towards automatically EXCLUDING the large groups of people who are unlikely to be a threat; let them opt for “cleared” status by completing a background check, and if these many individuals were automatically cleared, it would leave the TSA screeners more time to MORE RIGOROUS checks on potentially dangerous individuals, and ENSURE THAT PEOPLE ON THE NO-FLY LIST — DO NOT FLY!

Sounds obvious doesn’t it, but instead, the U.S. budget is being squandered on thousands of unnecessary screens, while the potential targets are not getting the indepth, and in-airport screenings they need to have.

These inane policies are not just indefensible – they are dangerous – and the latest incident just proves the point.

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About admin

Caroline R. Hamilton is an expert in security risk analysis and security risk assessment and is partnered with Risk Watch International, a Florida-based company specializing in security risk assessment software. She was a Charter member of the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Risk Management Model Builders Workshop, and the NSA's Network Rating Model workshop. She has recently created a special program to decrease workplace violence in hospitals and has worked with more than fifty hospitals to reduce violence against healthcare workers in conjunction with the world’s largest hospitals. In 2010, she applied this model to a major hospital center in the UAE and expects to apply it in more than fifteen countries in 2011 because the increase in violence is not limited to the USA but extends to the middle east, to Asia and Europe. Hamilton has created a flexible model of risk that includes more than twelve algorithms that can accurately predict and automatically recommend mitigative controls based on a set of five variables – including threat profiles. This model has been applied to easy to use software tools and is now available for financial institutions like banks and credit unions, the defense industrial base facilities, manufacturing plants, hospitals, nuclear power plants, electrical generating plants, cities, ships, and hospitals and healthcare organizations. She is a member of the ASIS Physical Security Council, the ASIS Information Security Technology Council, the Security Risk Assessment Association (SARMA), Infragard and IAHSS, (International Association of Hospital Safety and Security).
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3 Responses to Fireworks Ignite After Latest Airline Terrorism Incident

  1. Pingback: Fireworks Ignite After Latest Airline Terrorism Incident « All … – JAENUDIN TAUFIK PERSONAL BLOG

  2. admin says:

    Yes — I would like to link blogs…

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