Make no mistake
about it, after last Tuesday traveling in America will never be the
same.
For the past decade, as concern about terrorism increased, then
ebbed, along with its presence in the headlines, security at the
nation's airports has increased in some measure.
But it has never reached the levels recommended by security
experts and commissions set up in the wake of the 1988 bombing of
PanAm Flight 103 and the loss of TWA Flight 800 in 1996.
Indeed, even with all of the screenings, baggage searches,
identification checks, and metal detectors, some experts contend
security at the nation's airports is often as loose as a sieve.
Government inspectors routinely foil the system, carrying on knives
and guns and snooping around in secure areas.
Part of the problem is Americans themselves. They have proved to
be an impatient lot - particularly as congestion has increased
delays at the nation's airports. They value freedom, convenience,
and low-cost flights - and increased security muscles in on all
three of those priorities.
But a democracy must balance freedom and security, as
Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta said Tuesday.
That balance has just been tipped. "There will be higher levels
of surveillance, more-stringent searches," he said. "Travelers may
experience some inconveniences.... But we must do whatever it takes,
with safety as our highest priority."
That comes as a relief to at least one United Airlines pilot, who
preferred that her name not be used. She and her colleagues
routinely talk about the laxness of security at American airports,
particularly compared with those in Europe and Israel.
"There are a lot of loopholes," she says. The main concerns,
echoed by security experts, are the independent contractors who
cater the planes and screen passengers at security checkpoints.
In a report issued last year, Congress's General Accounting
Office (GAO) cited longstanding problems impairing the effectiveness
of security screeners - a "key line of defense." Top among them, are
inadequate training, high rates of turnover - as much as 400 percent
a year - and low pay.
"We pay screeners lower salaries in many cases than the fast-food
workers at the airports," says the GAO's John Anderson. "The system
really gets down to the capability of the screeners, and that's
something that people really need to rethink now."
According the Federal Aviation Administration, in 1978 screeners
failed to detect 13 percent of illicit objects during compliance
tests. Ten years later, they failed to detect 20 percent. In 1997,
the FAA stopped releasing such figures, contending that they are
"sensitive security information."
But a year ago in April and May, undercover GAO investigators
carrying false credentials and declaring themselves armed
law-enforcement officers were "100 percent successful" in
penetrating secure areas without being challenged.
"There's clearly a security problem at America's airlines," says
Aaron Gellman of Northwestern University's Transportation Center in
Evanston, Ill.
Attorney General John Ashcroft said that on at least two of the
planes hijacked Tuesday, the perpetrators were armed with knives and
box cutters. It's unknown whether they slipped past screeners or
were placed on the planes beforehand by allies employed at the
airport.
Because of the close coordination of the hijackings, insiders on
the ground likely played key roles, says terrorism expert Peter St.
John at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg.
While the country is still absorbing the shock of the attacks,
many experts say one enduring change may be the public's attitude
toward the inconveniences imposed by increased security.
"Part of the problem is that the public hasn't been willing to
suffer the loss of freedom that would be necessary to really tighten
security," says Richard Gritta, an aviation expert at the University
of Portland in Oregon. "But the diabolical magnitude and the
perfection with which this was executed might change that."
Other experts hope the tragedy will force Congress and the FAA to
invest the money needed to keep a sustained focus on increased
security. The greatest risk, they say, is that security will drop as
a priority, as it has after past tragedies.
• Mark Clayton in Boston contributed to this report.