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Air terrorism close call spurs urgent U.S. security reviews
Government agencies, airport screeners and airlines are taking much closer looks -- again -- at who's allowed to board planes in the United States or aircraft heading here. This latest terrorism alert follows federal charges against a Nigerian passenger accused of trying to blow up a Northwest Airlines plane approaching Detroit's airport on Christmas morning. President Obama says the 23-year-old African man was on a mission for Al Qaeda, the radical Islamic group that attacked America on Sept. 11, 2001. This time, plenty of clues about accused bomb-carrier Umar Abdulmutallab were missed. Britain refused to renew his student visa last May and put him on a watch list. In August, the U.S. National Security Agency overheard Al Qaeda leaders in Yemen (a Mideast nation) discussing a plot involving a Nigerian man. In November, the suspect's dad warned a CIA agent at the U.S. Embassy in Nigeria that his son was being radicalized and had disappeared in Yemen. Then the would-be bomber paid cash for a ticket to Detroit and boarded his ocean-crossing flight with just a carry-on bag -- acts that should trigger close scrutiny, security experts say.
Obama acknowledged "a systemic failure has occurred" and ordered reviews of the federal terrorist watch list system, air travel screening and information-sharing among security agencies. Starting this week, U.S.-bound fliers from Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Yemen and other "countries of interest" are undergoing full body scans or pat-downs, explosive detection screening and a close search of carry-on luggage.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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