U.S. Tightens Airport, Rail Security
The United States is adding air marshals to overseas flights because of concerns about potential terrorism threats originating in Britain and Europe, the homeland security chief said Sunday.
The Bush administration said it was satisfied with its current terrorism alert level following an attack at a Scottish airport and two foiled car bombs in London.
"I think given what we know now, we're comfortable that we're at the right posture," Michael Chertoff said during a round of television talk show appearances.
U.S. airports and mass transit systems are tightening security ahead of the Fourth of July holiday and more air marshals will travel on overseas flights.
"We will be doing operations at various rail locations and other mass transit locations in cooperation with local authorities. Again, not because of a specific piece of credible threat information, but because we are going into a holiday season. There will be a larger number of people traveling," Chertoff said.
Airports are at the second of five security threat levels — orange — indicating a high risk of terrorist attacks. The current national threat level is yellow, or the third highest, indicating an elevated threat.
Chertoff said he does not plan to change those levels. "At this moment we don't have a specific credible threat against the United States," he said.
Britain has raised its security alert level to the highest possible level, indicating terror attacks may be imminent.
Chertoff said he has spoken out for some time about U.S. worries involving potential terrorist threats originating in Britain and Europe.
"I think one of the issues we're increasingly concerned about is the movement of Europeans, including people with European citizenship, into areas of South Asia to get trained and get experience and then the prospect of these people coming back to carry out operations in Europe or in the United States using Europe as a departure point," Chertoff said.
"It's one of the reasons we've been very focused on increasing our security for people incoming from Europe. And that's something we're going to be looking at for the rest of the summer," he said.
The U.S. increased the number of air marshals on flights between the United States and Europe last August and stepped up the pace over the past few months, Chertoff said. Last August, British police foiled an alleged plot by Muslim extremists to use liquid explosives to blow up as many as 10 flights between the United States and Britain.
"We haven't singled out Glasgow until a couple of days ago as a particular location for focus, but there has been a strategy of mixing up the deployment of these air marshals, sometimes more in one destination, sometimes more in another destination," he said.
"Going forward, we will be doing some enhanced air marshal work and similar types of activities with respect to U.K. travel."
Britain's new prime minister, Gordon Brown, said his country was dealing with terrorists associated with al Qaeda. Chertoff said, "If they are comfortable in confirming that, then that's fine. I have no reason to disagree."
After the Glasgow airport attack, police stepped up curbside patrols with canine units at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport in Georgia. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which operates Newark Liberty in New Jersey and John F. Kennedy and LaGuardia airports in New York, took "a number of measures as we always do to respond to security situations immediately," spokesman Steve Coleman said.
At Los Angeles International Airport, additional police, including canine units, were on duty Saturday, said spokesman Marshall Lowe. Operations at Miami International Airport went on heightened alert through at least July 4, and in Philadelphia officials were increasing patrols around the perimeter of the airport.
At Washington's Reagan National and Dulles International airports, spokesman Ron Yingling said some measures are behind the scenes. "I don't think there's anything different in what passengers have to physically do to get through security that's different from yesterday."
FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said the bureau stood ready to help British authorities.
A burning Jeep Cherokee rammed into Glasgow's airport terminal on Saturday. The day before, police in London found two cars packed with explosives.
One of the men in the airport attack was in critical condition at a hospital with severe burns, while the other was in police custody. Kenny MacAskill, the nation's justice secretary, said the two men were not born and raised in Scotland.
"Any suggestion to be made that they are homegrown terrorists is not true," MacAskill said.
Chertoff mentioned Iraq as a place where would-be terrorists can hone their skills in preparation for possible attacks around the world.
"What I do think we see in Iraq is a laboratory for techniques where people experiment with sophisticated forms of explosive devices, and we do get concerned that that will ultimately lead to importing those kinds of techniques to the West."
Chertoff appeared on NBC's "Meet the Press," ABC's "This Week," "Fox News Sunday" and "Late Edition" on CNN.