The information has been gleaned from sources as diverse as
al-Qaida mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed and low-level terror
network members in Saudi Arabia and has led U.S. officials to
quickly adapt security procedures several times in recent
months, the officials said.
For instance, U.S. officials have been discreetly working
with their counterparts in Canada and Mexico on improved
security measures after intelligence indicated al-Qaida might
use in an attack an international airliner that simply passes
over U.S. soil, the officials said.
"The information clearly shows they care about getting ahold
of airplanes with large fuel supplies in areas with lots of
people, and to do it in a way that comes in below our radar
screen," said one senior U.S. official with access to
intelligence, speaking only on condition of anonymity.
Bush administration officials said an improving apparatus
that directs credible threat information quickly from FBI (news
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web sites) and CIA (news
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web sites) agents in the field to intelligence analysts, and
then to homeland security and transportation officials for
action, has resulted in quick adaptations of the security net.
One example came late this summer when the State and Homeland
Security departments abruptly ended two long-standing programs
that had allowed foreign travelers to stay in U.S. airports
without visas during interim stops while awaiting flights to
other countries.
The change was made with little fanfare in August based on
intelligence from Mohammed and other prisoners that al-Qaida was
looking to exploit the program to gain access to fully fueled
international jetliners, officials said.
"Recent specific intelligence indicates that terrorist groups
have been planning to exploit these transit programs to gain
access to the U.S. or U.S. airspace without going through the
consular screening process," said a Homeland Security advisory
to law enforcement and airlines at the time.
The change was made quickly in consultation with U.S. air
carriers even though it inconvenienced large numbers of
international business travelers, most from U.S.-friendly
countries, who had become used to being allowed to stop
temporarily in the United States and remain in the Customs area
of airports without having to obtain a U.S. visa.
Officials said they were studying ways to re-institute the
two programs in a more limited manner to return some flexibility
to international travelers who simply have a stopover on U.S.
soil in places like Miami, New York City and Los Angeles.
Government and private security experts said al-Qaida's
continued fascination with aviation as a method for attack may
seem surprising at first blush since it has had one spectacular
success during an era of loose security and now faces a more
formidable safety net that includes steel cockpit doors, air
marshals, pilots with guns, enormous preflight screening and a
suspicious traveling public that is quick to react to perceived
threats.
"You would think there are a lot of softer targets out there
that wouldn't take as much work," said Douglas Laird, a former
Northwest Airlines security chief who now advises clients on
aviation security. "What baffles me is I just don't know what
they (al-Qaida) would do to make it happen now."
But Laird said an aviation attack continues to have appeal to
the terrorist mind. "The airlines are always going to be a good
avenue because it strikes the fear of God in the public to have
an airliner sabotaged. It generates lots of coverage," he said.
U.S. officials said debriefings of terrorists show al-Qaida
continues to value an attack via aviation because its leaders
believe such an attack would have both dramatic effects on
America's economic superiority and because it would strike at an
important symbol of Western freedom.
They said the information that led to Sunday's decision to
raise the U.S. terror alert to its second-highest level included
some information related to airlines, particularly international
flights that might enter U.S. air space, although they declined
to be more specific.
Homeland Security officials quickly reacted by stepping up
security sweeps at airports, adding more air marshals to flights
and increasing the number of military flyovers over major cities
like Los Angeles, Washington and New York for the holidays.
Despite such marked improvements in security, some in
Congress still see holes that could be exploited.
Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., a member of the House Homeland
Security Committee, on Monday called for the Bush administration
to step up screening of cargo that is transported on commercial
jets, calling it "the most obvious remaining hole in our
aviation security system."
"As a routine matter, commercial cargo is not physically
screened by anyone, even when it is carried on passenger
planes," he said.