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Ships and ports are terrorism's new frontier
As airports boost security, seaports remain vulnerable
Albert Sim / AFP/ Getty Images File
By
John W. Schoen
Senior Producer MSNBC
Updated: 3:13 p.m. ET June 15, 2004
It is one of the most heavily-guarded
checkpoints on the border between
Israel and the Gaza strip. Security is so
tight at Karni that goods are transferred from trucks parked
back-to-back to prevent smuggling.
But despite those precautions, a truck
carrying two suicide bombers left the border crossing into Israel at
about 2 o’clock in the afternoon of March 14 headed for the deepwater
port of Ashdod, about 40 kilometers south of Tel Aviv. By
3:30 pm, the truck had arrived at
the port, one of Israel’s busiest. About an hour later, the
terrorists detonated their explosive devices, killing ten and wounding
18. A local police chief speculated that the real target may have been
nearby chemical storage tanks, but that the bombs went off
prematurely.
A subsequent investigation solved the
mystery of how the terrorists eluded security forces: they had hidden
themselves in a secret compartment of a steel shipping container.
Welcome to the new front in the war on
terrorism. Despite the billions of dollars spent since the Sept. 11
terror attacks to secure commercial aviation, security experts say
that effort has created a new vulnerability: the thousands of ports
around the world, many of which have only recently turned their
attention to thwarting terrorism.
“Terrorists not only understand the
vulnerability of seaports and shipping but have readjusted their
target folder for the greater difficulty in attacking aviation,” said
Kim Petersen, executive director of the trade group, Maritime Security
Council. “And the presumption is that maritime is going to be a more
significant target in the future."
The
Ashdod attack emphasized the concern
security experts have about cargo containers being used as terrorist
Trojan Horses. And, they say, that's just one of threats faced by the
361 U.S. ports -– vital arteries to the U.S. economy.
Trade on-ramps
As cross border tariffs have fallen and manufacturing has
moved offshore, the U.S. economy has become increasingly reliant on
maritime shipping, and global seaports have become the on-ramps and
off-ramps to the global trade highway. Some 90 percent of the U.S.
imports by weight enter the country via ship. Last year, some 2.4
billion tons of goods – valued at over $1 trillion passed through U.S.
ports.
Consumers got a taste of what a port
shutdown could mean in 2002, when a 10-day lockout of dockworkers at
the Port of Los Angeles
generated a massive backup of maritime cargo and an estimated $1
billion a day in economic loss. The backlog took months to clear.
All of which has made seaports an
increasingly appealing target to terrorists,
Stephen Flynn, a fellow at the Council on
Foreign Relations and retired Coast Guard commander, told a Senate
hearing last year.
“A modest investment by a terrorist
could yield billions of dollars in losses to the
U.S. economy by shutting down – even
temporarily -- the system that moves 'just in time' shipments of parts
and goods,” he said.
200 million
containers
One of the thorniest security problems involves determining
just what’s inside each of the 40-foot steel containers that arrive
every day on cargo ships carrying as many as 4,000 containers each.
Air travelers at security checkpoints
have become accustomed to delays as passengers spend a few moments
unpacking laptops, removing shoes and retying them. But a comparable
physical inspection of the millions of tons of cargo that enter U.S.
ports every day is simply not practical: security experts say it takes
five agents roughly three hours to fully inspect the contents of just
one of those containers.
The result is that only 2 percent of
containerized cargo entering the country. is physically inspected. And
while advanced technology scanners have helped speed those
inspections, just tracking the 200 million containers that move among
the world’s top seaports each year is a major undertaking. Flynn cited
one major shipper with over 300,000 containers in its inventory.
“It doesn’t know where 40 percent of
them are at any given time,” he said. “It takes one of their customers
saying, "Hey I’ve got one of your boxes if you want it back."
Those boxes are a potentially potent
weapon for terrorists – whether for use smuggling weapons, explosive
materials or terrorists themselves, or as a huge chemical, biological
or "dirty" bomb spreading radioactive waste. At present, though, many
ports are ill-prepared to deal with that threat.
The accidental explosion of a
container on the dock of the
Port of Los Angeles on April 28
underscored the problem. Gasoline fumes from a pickup truck inside the
container were apparently ignited by a spark from a battery, blowing
the locked steel doors open and spilling the contents, which included
900 bottles of LPG butane gas, according to Michael Mitre, Coast Port
Security director at the International Longshore and Warehouse Union.
“There was virtually no response,”
Mitre told a House panel on maritime security last week. “There was no
evacuation. There was no shutdown of work … It could have been
something that was a biological or chemical release; it could be a
radioactive release. No one knew. But at the time, the terminal
was absolutely not prepared.”
Mitre said the explosion also
highlights a major deficiency in container inspection. “Export cargo
is not treated the same way as import cargo,” he said. “We have cargo
coming in through the gates that is not having to show what the
contents are." As a result, terrorists inside the
U.S. would have a much easier time loading
a container on an outbound shipment, he said.
A piracy police
blotter
Even as governments and private security officials set up efforts to
protect their country's shores, pirates and terrorists operate
virtually unchallenged in some of the world’s busiest shipping lanes.
Take the case of the tanker
Cherry,
recently attacked in the
Malacca Strait, bound for the port of Belawanon the island of Sumatra
in western Indonesia, a regional export hub for producers of rubber,
tobacco, palm oil, spices, and tea. The captain and crew had little
warning when the shooting started; when it was over, heavily-armed
pirates had taken over the vessel and her cargo of 1,000 tons of palm
oil. The attackers held 13 crew members hostage for five weeks, but
after the ship’s owners refused to pay a ransom, the pirates killed
four of the crew before fleeing.
Piracy reports like these read like a
page from another century, but the incident happened just a few months
ago -– one of a growing number of almost daily attacks on ocean-going
vessels that have been rising steadily since the late 1990s.
It’s impossible to estimate
the financial impact of these attacks – most estimates put the losses
to piracy in the billions of dollars a year. Last year there were 445
pirate attacks worldwide, up from 370 in 2002,
according to the International Maritime Bureau,
one of several agencies that track attacks. Last year, at least 21
mariners were confirmed killed and 71 crew and passengers were listed
as missing in the attacks.
Many maritime incidents are
petty crimes, like stealing dock lines or robbing crew members of
cash. But increasingly, attacks are staged by organized groups using
high-speed boats and automatic weapons, often killing or marooning the
crew, stealing cargo worth millions and selling it in
loosely-patrolled ports of call. Popular targets are ships laden with
cargo of oil or other valuable commodities that are easy to sell and
difficult to trace.
And some security experts think the
problem is under reported. “If your ship has been attacked and word
gets out, that’s not good for business,” said Howard Cohen, spokesman
for the U.S. National
Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. The agency maintains a database of
Anti-Shipping Activity Messages
that was set up in 1981 following the hijacking and of the Achille
Lauro and the murder of a hostage.
While most of the reported attacks
appear to be aimed at stealing cargo, security experts say maritime
shipping offers terrorists an important conduit for moving personnel
and supplies around the globe.
The seizure by Greek
authorities last year of the Baltic Sky,
loaded with 750 tons of industrial-grade ammonium nitrate-based
explosives and 140,000 detonators, renewed concerns of terrorists
using ships as bombs to blow up port cities. Like many ships, she was
flying a so-called flag of convenience used by many shipping companies
to shield their owners from the taxes and regulations that apply to
ships registered in developed nations. Especially troubling to some
security experts was the flag she was flying from the
Comoros Islands, a tiny Indian Ocean
country that bills itself as
the first Islamic flag of convenience.
Other suspected safe harbors for
piracy or pockets of terrorism can be found closer to home. One
security expert cited the inland Paraguayan
port of Ciudad del Este -- which the
Foreign Military Studies Office
described in 2002 report as "a den of low-technology criminality" and
"a haven for international money laundering, with much of the money
coming from the Middle East."
Oil attacks
With oil prices reaching 21-year highs -– in part due to
fears that terrorists could interrupt supplies -- perhaps one of the
most attractive targets is the fleet of thousands of oil tankers that
ship a major portion of the 80 million barrels of oil consumed daily
worldwide.
Those concerns came into sharper focus
with the October 2002 bombing of the French oil tanker
Limburg which was hit by a waterborne
attack similar to the 2000 suicide bombing of the USS Cole. The
Limburg attackers blew a hole 10 yards wide in the tanker, killing one
Bulgarian crew member and spilling 90,000 barrels of oil into the Gulf
of Aden. Fourteen suspects, believed linked to Al Qaeda, recently went
on trial in Yemen for the attack.
Beyond the threat to individual
tankers, oil industry experts fear that terrorists might target
several high volume “choke points” where much of the world's oil flows
by tanker.
By far the most important of these is
the Strait of Hormuz,
connecting the Persian Gulf with the Gulf of Oman and the Arabian Sea.
Oil tankers sailing through this narrow channel carry 15 million
barrels of oil a day – roughly 20 percent of the world’s supply,
according to a
Dept. of Energy
report.
The concern, security experts say, is
that terrorists need not be heavily armed to seriously restrict the
flow of oil in one of these choke points.
“The way to shut down a port is to
sink yourself in one of the channels,” said Frank Lanza, CEO of L3
Communications, which is developing maritime security technologies.
“You could certainly tie up a port for months before you could get the
ship out of there.”
©
2004 MSNBC Interactive
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