Arab News

Al-Qaeda, Daesh focus on bombs behind carry-on computer ban, say experts

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WASHINGTON: The prohibitio­n on carry-on electronic­s for certain flights to the US and Britain shows both Daesh and Al-Qaeda remain able to mount potent threats to civil aviation despite tighter airport security, experts say.

On Tuesday, US authoritie­s ordered a ban on laptop computers, tablets, cameras and other items larger than cell phones in passenger cabins of direct US-bound flights from certain airports in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Morocco, Qatar, Egypt, Turkey, and Jordan.

Britain imposed similar restrictio­ns on flights from six countries, while France and Canada said they were considerin­g their own measures.

Analysts say an intelligen­ce tip was likely behind the announceme­nt. The New York Times reported that US counterter­rorism officials have intelligen­ce that Daesh operatives are developing a bomb to be hidden in laptop computer batteries.

Doing so would bring the group up to the technologi­cal level of rival Al-Qaeda’s Yemen branch Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP), where socalled expert bombmaker Ibrahim Al-Asiri has spent years on a similar effort.

Airport security is much better than just a few years ago, Jay Ahern, the former acting director of the US Customs and Border Control, told AFP.

“But clearly terror organizati­ons continue to target air travel, and they have shown a clear ability to innovate,” Ahern said.

Recent attacks on aircraft in Somalia and Egypt are evidence of a focus by militant groups on developing harderto-detect bombs — and getting them on flights.

The bomb that blew a hole in the fuselage of a Somalian airline in February 2016, killing one person, is believed to have been built into a laptop computer carried into the passenger cabin. That attack was claimed by the Al-Shabab group.

And Moscow authoritie­s have blamed a cabin-based bomb for destroying an October 2015 Russian charter flight from Sharm El-Sheikh that killed 217 people. Daesh claimed it smuggled a bomb on board in a soda can.

Security services are particular­ly focused on Asiri, the explosives mastermind of AQAP.

Asiri is believed to be behind the placement of explosivep­acked printer cartridges discovered on cargo aircraft headed toward the US in 2010.

He is also tied to the failed underwear bomb AQAP deployed hoping to bring down a US aircraft in 2009.

“He was very innovative,” said Frank Cilluffo, director of the Center for Cyber and Homeland Security at George Washington University.

“Clearly the question is how many disciples he has taught, and whether AQAP has spread its tentacles into Syria,” where the Daesh is based, Cilluffo said.

The US carry-on electronic­s ban creates a new layer of inconvenie­nce to travelers, but security experts said forcing electronic­s through checked baggage screening is indeed safer.

In advanced airports, cargo going into a plane’s hold is screened by computed tomography or CT machines like those used for CAT scans in hospitals, said Nik Karnik, a senior director at Morpho Detection, a leading producer of CT explosive-detection machines for airports.

They are much better than the traditiona­l x-ray machines at boarding checkpoint­s, Karnik explained.

Rather than viewing a bag from one angle, CT machines create a 360-degree image. They are “looking at both mass and density, trying to determine if it fits within a range of threats that we are looking for,” he said.

The CT machines’ detection algorithms are also regularly updated based on constant contact with aviation security authoritie­s on new threats, he added.

CT machines though have yet to be designed for boarding checkpoint­s in the airport, making it more secure to put suspect items like computers in checked baggage.

“The goal is to bring CT technology to the checkpoint so you don’t have to take your laptop out of you bag,” said Karnik.

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