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Here's why jihadis just love to fly
The Times (U.K.) ^ | 08/11/06 | Michael Clarke

Posted on 08/10/2006 3:04:27 PM PDT by Pokey78

Aircraft are a symbol of modernity and look vulnerable — the ideal target in a holy war

FOR ALL THE time jihadi groups spend fantasising about ways to commit mass murder, there is a pretty conventional terrorist mind-set behind most of the plots that materialise.

The security services anticipate all manner of possible terror attacks on Britain — chemical, biological, radiological, and cyber attacks, and cunning assaults on key infrastructure. There is a great deal of loose chat among would-be jihadis about such exotic homicidal possibilities. Kamel Bourgass, the Wood Green “ricin plotter”, intended to smear deadly poison on strap handles in the Tube and on door knobs in London’s Jewish neighbourhoods. But he failed to make any effective ricin. If wishes were horses, jihadis would ride a very long way.

It is still aircraft and explosives that loom large in the jihadi imagination. There is nothing quite so photogenic as a stricken aircraft, or quite so obscenely violent as a mid-air explosion. Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses begins with this very image. Jihadis are drawn to the images of Dawson’s Field in Jordan during September 1970 when four hijacked airliners were blown up by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The memory of Lockerbie still sticks in the mind. Khalid Sheikh Mohammad, the chief operational planner of al-Qaeda until his arrest in 2002, lavished attention on a plan in 1995 to blow up maybe ten US airliners over the Pacific. Al-Qaeda terrorists tried to bring down an El Al airliner taking off from Mombasa in 2002 with two Stinger missiles, and to this day it’s a wonder that they missed.

Commercial aircraft represent globalism and high technology — they shrink the world and threaten cultural conservatism. The Boeing 747 was the last of the “great machines” that characterised the 20th century: it opened up air travel to the mass market. And it was so very American; big, brash and useful. But aircraft also appear vulnerable. In truth, civil aircraft are a lot more robust than people think, but the aviation industry is selling safety almost as much as it is selling transport and passengers need constant reassurance that aircraft are operating well within their technical limits.

So destroying or hijacking aircraft has always had great symbolic value for terrorists. Since the first commercial aircraft was hijacked in 1948 — a Cathay Pacific seaplane out of Macau — there have been almost 40 significant airline hijacks. Most ended with little or no loss of life, hence the presumption among crew and passengers that it was as well to go along with a hijack if you were unfortunate enough to get caught in one. There were manuals on how to relate to hijackers, or to avoid being singled out by them; it was a routine that hijackers and airlines both came to know.

All that changed with the 9/11 atrocities. If a plane is hijacked by jihadis intent on crashing it, then simple arithmetic would come into play: there are six of them and 200 of you. Like the passengers on United 93, there is nothing to lose by resistance. Hijacking in the traditional sense is out of fashion. But destroying aircraft is not. Richard Reid, the would-be shoe bomber, was caught making a comically inept, though dangerous, attempt to blow a hole in the side of an aircraft just three months after 9/11. American Intelligence reported a plot to board aircraft in Eastern Europe where security is lax, take them over and crash them into Heathrow during their final approach. It is not clear that this plot got beyond the talking stage, though British jihadi chatter has recently speculated on the prospects of getting “thirty brothers” on board a single aircraft, to control it long enough to destroy it.

The plot revealed yesterday may have been intended to run along similar lines: to get a number of terrorists each with small amounts of explosives on board multiple aircraft bound for the US. Explosives could then be pooled in-flight and detonated to make a catastrophic hole in the aircraft’s skin or blast a way on to a locked flight deck. Such a manoeuvre is not as easy as it sounds and again the simple arithmetic would apply once the terrorists began to act suspiciously. But the symbolic prize for the jihadis of destroying yet more aircraft after 9/11, of indiscriminate British and American deaths, hitting the air bridge across the Atlantic and of panicking the aviation industry into major disruption must remain tempting.

Facing the terrorist who thinks like this, British airports, more than most others in the world, are caught between the drive for significant extra security and the impetus to keep the world’s busiest transit hub moving. El Al, the Israeli airline, deals with passengers who accept much tougher security than we would be willing to tolerate, and the airline takes calculated risks with armed sky marshals on flights in anticipation of a mid-air struggle. But El Al’s levels of security are not practical for the rest of us except in the short term. In the immediate future there will doubtless be great disruption at our airports and possibly the installation of expensive monitoring equipment.

Airlines, however, will continue to be attractive targets for terrorists and the vulnerability and glamour of any machine travelling at 600mph at 30,000ft, will not diminish, whatever measures are taken at airports. The most effective way to deal with terrorism is still intelligence-led policing, and if yesterday’s operation is as significant as the security services indicate, they will have struck a good old-fashioned blow against a bad new fashionable terror technique.

Michael Clarke is Professor of Defence Studies at King’s College London


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: airplanes; globaljihad; londonairlineplot; radicalmuslims

1 posted on 08/10/2006 3:04:28 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78

One thing is painfully obvious...

There is an entire segment of the world's population for whom flying was never intended: Muslims.


2 posted on 08/10/2006 3:08:07 PM PDT by Thinkin' Gal (As it was in the days of NO...)
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To: Pokey78

"But El Al’s levels of security are not practical for the rest of us except in the short term. In the immediate future there will doubtless be great disruption at our airports and possibly the installation of expensive monitoring equipment. "

On the contrary, since flying has become a crap shoot at best, I think I would prefer to go El Al if I ever need to fly again, or another airline that adopts El Al security measures.


3 posted on 08/10/2006 3:19:27 PM PDT by Blue_Ridge_Mtn_Geek
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To: Thinkin' Gal
One thing is painfully obvious...

There is an entire segment of the world's population for whom flying was never intended: Muslims.

Well said.

4 posted on 08/10/2006 3:22:41 PM PDT by the invisib1e hand (let's all toast islam.)
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To: Blue_Ridge_Mtn_Geek

"... I would prefer to go El Al if I ever need to fly..."

Amen to that! BTW, can anyone explain to me why profiling our enemies is "wrong?"


5 posted on 08/10/2006 3:24:36 PM PDT by ROLF of the HILL COUNTRY ( ISLAMA DELENDA NECCES EST!)
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To: Pokey78

Mohammad never flew on a plane. Why aren't these idiots walking or riding a camel only?


6 posted on 08/10/2006 3:34:09 PM PDT by tkathy (Einstein: Condemnation without investigation is the height of ignorance.)
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To: tkathy
Mohammad never flew on a plane.

He flew a horse, isn't that what August 22 is all about

7 posted on 08/10/2006 3:40:14 PM PDT by leadhead (It’s a duty and a responsibility to defeat them. But it's also a pleasure)
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To: Pokey78
Commercial aircraft represent globalism and high technology — they shrink the world and threaten cultural conservatism.

An angle that hadn't occurred to me, but which certainly makes sense as one reason why aviation is a particular target of Islamic Fundamentalists....

8 posted on 08/10/2006 3:44:01 PM PDT by steve-b ("Creation Science" is to the religous right what "Global Warming" is to the socialist left.)
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To: steve-b
Commercial aircraft represent globalism and high technology

It represents the most bang for the buck. I think they would use nukes if they could their hands on them. They were planning on murdering 100K+ people on 9-11.

9 posted on 08/10/2006 4:18:21 PM PDT by EVO X
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To: Pokey78
I'd go a bit further although it may sound half-baked. I think they are in awe of airplanes too. I was stationed in a variety of those countries from the late eighties through early 2000's.

Although they have bought western technology they have had to import westerners to help them use it. Although they send their people to our schools whatever they learn doesn't seem to sink in. I recall an aircraft fire over there resulting from someone starting a cooking fire in the fuselage.

A fellow NCO when we talked about learning difficulties had by Saudi students, mentioned to me it is because they learn exclusively by rote. Cognitive reasoning skills are not taught in Saudi schools and from what I've been told Kuwaiti ones as well.

I guess I'm meandering but I often think about it this way: What if a group of benevolent aliens landed on earth and said "hey you have XYZ resource on your planet. We will pay you handsomely for it. They land and here we are confronted by a technically superior people. They don't want to kill us: They just want our XYZ. After awhile we see, looking back at our history that in thousands of years we haven't really accomplished anything in comparison to the aliens. That would breed contempt; especially if the aliens are just...kind to us. Add to that what if a group of surly dictators ran the human race and wanted the blame for how things are pointed anywhere but back at them.

I think that is a recipe for terrorism. I think the terrorist would target what they took for the symbol of the aliens: That which they had arrived in.

Okay I said it was halfbaked idea. Anyway being there and seeing their civilization firsthand left me with that impression.
10 posted on 08/10/2006 7:17:35 PM PDT by samm1148
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The most effective way to deal with terrorism is still intelligence-led policing…

Second best - defensive. First best is offensive war against our enemy.

11 posted on 08/10/2006 8:02:48 PM PDT by D-fendr
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To: samm1148
I think the terrorist would target what they took for the symbol of the aliens

It’s a form of penis envy. That big, shiny, phallus in the sky is proof positive of Islam’s impotence and backwardness. What to do if your culture and ass backward cult could never build a plane? Blow it up or fly it into a building. 9/11 was the world’s biggest temper tantrum.

12 posted on 08/10/2006 8:50:25 PM PDT by Minn
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To: leadhead

Mohammed flew a horse all right ... Muslims believe he ascended into heaven on a white horse. What really happened was that he blew himself and his horse sky high and then augered into the ground for an eternal dirtnap, "P" be upon him.


13 posted on 08/10/2006 9:54:51 PM PDT by piasa (Attitude Adjustments Offered Here Free of Charge)
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To: Blue_Ridge_Mtn_Geek
since flying has become a crap shoot at best

I don't find validity in this statement, but maybe I am misunderstanding you. What are you trying to say here?

14 posted on 08/11/2006 2:23:37 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (War is Peace__Freedom is Slavery__Ignorance is Strength)
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To: Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit

".. since flying has become a crap shoot at best ..."

'I don't find validity in this statement, but maybe I am misunderstanding you. What are you trying to say here?'

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Yes, at face value, the statement is untrue. What I'm trying to say is that the publicized intent of jihadists to destroy commercial aircraft and their occupants makes commercial flying an act of entering a war zone with a target painted on your forehead. Given the volume of commercial flights and the limited opportunities for the jihadists to execute their intent, a more apt analogy might be Russian Roulette, with hundreds or thousands of chambers but only one or two (or 10) loaded chambers. Thus, it may still be more dangerous to get to the airport than to fly once you've gotten there, but this factor makes a big step towards making both legs of the trip equally dangerous.

Since I am risk averse, in the rare event that I have to fly, I prefer the El Al approach to the Keystone Cops approach I see at all the other airlines (so far).

It would also be nice if the "authorities" were to encourage all passengers to come equipped for a fight with potential hijackers using weapons that could not threaten the aircraft itself. Better informed minds than mine could suggest what such weapons might be. No doubt the possibilities are endless. Sky marshals are nice. A flying public with a relatively large percent of unofficial members ready and willing to bring down hijacking attempts would be better. We may have to die, in the end, like the occupants of United 93, but we don't have to go quietly to our fates.


15 posted on 08/12/2006 12:56:18 PM PDT by Blue_Ridge_Mtn_Geek
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To: Blue_Ridge_Mtn_Geek
Since I am risk averse, in the rare event that I have to fly, I prefer the El Al approach to the Keystone Cops approach I see at all the other airlines (so far).

I fly at least twice a month and usually more often. Mostly within Europe, but also around the world. I have also been to Israel.

The Keystone cops approach is absolutely the name of the game. In Europe, the best security is in Scandanavia hands down. Germans are the most consistent in terms of rules (big surprise). The Italians are the worst and it is the scariest place to be. The British do well given the chaos of their overcrowded airports. India is suprisingly consistent. The US has massive security, but often seemed more concerned about fruits and vegetables and old ladies underwear than checking out the bearded men age 18-40.

IMHOThe most important thing for airport security is to profile and stop wasting time. There should be signs up that say, "IF YOU ARE AN 18-40 YEAR-OLD MAN WITH A BEARD AND/OR DARD COMPLEXION GET TO THE AIRPORT EARLY AND EXPECT TO BE THROUGHLY CHECKED: DON'T GET PISSED OFF, THIS IS THE WORLD IN WHICH WE LIVE - GET USED TO IT!"

I don't advocate not checking women, and at some point they will use them, but at the moment this is not the primary threat.

16 posted on 08/13/2006 12:44:28 AM PDT by Einigkeit_Recht_Freiheit (War is Peace__Freedom is Slavery__Ignorance is Strength)
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To: Black Birch

I think, in their ideal world, they would kill all Americans ... all Israelis.


17 posted on 08/13/2006 12:47:38 AM PDT by BunnySlippers
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