[Archive Home][Date Prev][Date Next][Index]
"A few tips on how the experts spot a terrorist"
Tuesday, May 28, 2002
A few tips on how the experts spot a terrorist -- Israeli security
specialists say US system looks for the weapons while Israeli system
looks for the terrorist
The Christian Science Monitor
JERUSALEM, For years, a T-shirt has been on sale in downtown Jerusalem
that reads: "Don't worry America, Israel is behind you."
It is a slogan whose time has come - at least for the Israeli
government, which is translating American post-Sept. 11 security
concerns into closer ties with the US, and for Israeli businessmen, who
see an opportunity to market their army and secret-service experience.
Israel's Shin Bet security service last week instructed a delegation
from the New York Police Department on how to deal with suicide
bombings. On Monday, eight senior law enforcement officials from Georgia
arrived for a week of lectures, seminars, and scrutiny of an Israeli
paramilitary border police unit. The bomb unit of the Los Angeles Police
Department was here earlier this month. And Israeli police
superintendent Shlomo Aharonishky met two weeks ago in Washington with
Chief of Police Charles Ramsey and FBI agents to discuss how to handle
suicide bombers.
"There is no question the ties have gotten closer," says Gil Kleiman, an
Israeli police spokes-man. "No other law enforcement agency has the
experience we have in dealing with terrorism within the constraints of a
Western system of law and court systems."
By year's end, Israel will host a convention of police commissioners
from across the US, Mr. Kleiman says.
While Israel's security forces are widely reputed to be among the best
in the world, not everyone in Israel agrees that the country offers a
model of how to reconcile security measures with democracy.
"Palestinian civilians need to prepare for their graves when they
approach Israeli checkpoints," says Hashem Mahameed, a member of the
Knesset for the left-wing Hadash Party. "I don't think the practices in
the West Bank and Gaza are something Americans could take pride in."
But Israeli security specialists say that the occupation of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip, which began in 1967, as well as securing Israeli
facilities in the Middle East, Europe, and Africa, have accorded decades
of experience which can benefit the US.
For example, they say, Israel has been grappling with how to stop
suicide bombers since 1987, when the Iranian-inspired Hizbullah group
began bombing Israeli targets in Lebanon.
"We met with people from the World Trade Center who told us that they
thought of everything except for an airplane crash," says Shlomo Dror, a
security specialist who works with American clients. "I told them that
we began thinking in 1983 about the possibility a plane could be
hijacked and crashed into the Shalom Tower [in Tel Aviv]."
Mr. Dror was spokesman for the Israeli defense ministry and before that
the spokesman for an Israeli government agency responsible for
Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip. He joined the Shin Bet 23
years ago, after his army service, and has been in charge of security
for embassies and El Al airline on three continents.
He was watching television in his office in the Defense Ministry in Tel
Aviv on Sept. 11. "When I saw the second plane crashing I knew it was a
terrorist attack. It made me realize that the United States is really in
need of advice from Israeli professional people."
"Israel has been some kind of laboratory to check how the suicide
bombers work, and all the conclusions from our experience can be brought
to bear in the United States," he says.
Together with American partners with experience in the marines or CIA,
Dror and two Israeli colleagues in January formed New World Security, a
New York-based company to offer advice ranging from securing buildings
to training travelers on how to protect themselves from kidnapping or
abuse.
No figures are available for how many Israelis have gone into security
consulting for American clients since Sept. 11, but Zeev Schiff, defense
correspondent for the daily newspaper Haaretz, says they are carving out
niches in computer security and airport security. "These people have a
lot of experience and know the tricks of the other side," he says.
Dror says his company's clients include Wall Street firms and a
municipality, but declines to be more specific.
Israeli specialists have a low regard for American security searches.
They say they tend to cause unnecessary discomfort for travelers, while
being prone to missing potential assailants. "The United States does not
have a security system, it has a system for bothering people," Dror
says.
"The difference between the Israeli and American systems is that we are
looking for the terrorist, while the Americans look for the weapons," he
adds.
At the heart of the Israeli system is the questioning of the passenger,
which Dror says is done not only to get answers, but also to gauge the
passenger's behavior. "The reason we open the suitcase is to have
another few minutes with the passenger, to ask some more questions," he
says. The questioning also serves as a way to quickly decide who to send
to the plane without probing more thoroughly, he adds. Dror advocates
Israeli-style security clearances for all workers at the companies for
whom he consults. They entail checking a person's history by
interviewing acquaintances and family "We check the man himself, not
documents."
But Dror adds that Israeli methods, even if fully adopted, will not stop
all attacks. "There is no 100 percent in security. If you want 100
percent security on flights, every passenger has to take all his clothes
off, have his suitcase checked, and be handcuffed and tied to his seat.
For sure this can never be. The idea is to enable people to continue
their lives while making an attack less possible."
Do you have an opinion about this story?
Share it with other readers in our CAA Discussion Forums
http://www.californiaaviation.org/cgi-bin/dcforum/dcboard.cgi?conf=DCConfID8
*****************************************
Fair Use Notice
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of political, human rights, economic, democracy and social justice issues, etc. We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
If you have any queries regarding this issue, please Email us at stepheni@cwnet.com