The Arizona Republic

Security to tighten for flights into U.S.

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In an escalation of airline security worldwide, travelers flying to the United States will face additional scrutiny for laptops and other electronic­s larger than cell phones, the Department of Homeland Security announces.

The tougher standards apply to 180 airlines flying to the U.S. from 280 airports in 105 countries. The new rules will affect about 325,000 passengers daily.

Bart Jansen @ganjansen

In a massive escalation WASHINGTON of airline security worldwide, hundreds of thousands of travelers flying to the USA from overseas will face additional scrutiny for laptops and other electronic­s larger than cellphones, the Department of Homeland Security said Wednesday.

The tougher standards apply to 180 domestic and foreign airlines that fly direct to the USA from 280 airports in 105 countries. The new rules will affect about 2,000 daily flights carrying 325,000 passengers.

Intelligen­ce about terrorists developing ways to hide bombs and infiltrate airport staffing prompted the tougher measures, according to two senior DHS officials who spoke on condition of anonymity during a conference call Wednesday.

In the case of recent airline bombings in Egypt and Somalia, investigat­ors suspect airport workers smuggled explosives aboard planes.

“Make no mistake: Our enemies are constantly working to find new methods for disguising explosives, recruiting insiders and hijacking aircraft,” John Kelly, secretary of Homeland Security, said in a speech Wednesday at the Center for a New American Security, a non-profit group that develops security and defense policies.

“It is time that we raise the global baseline of aviation security,” Kelly said. “We cannot play internatio­nal whack-amole with each new threat.”

The DHS expects 99% of airlines to be able to meet the new requiremen­ts and time frames, the officials said. They did not give specifics on either the requiremen­ts or the time frame.

If airlines don’t or can’t comply, the United States could ban electronic­s larger than cellphones entirely from planes — in carry-on bags and checked luggage, the officials said. The Federal Aviation Administra­tion could block flights by pulling an airline’s certificat­e, the officials said.

The measures will be seen and unseen, Kelly said, and will focus on enhanced screening for electronic­s, more thorough passenger vetting and

325,000 overseas travelers a day must undergo more rigorous screening If airlines don’t comply, electronic­s larger than cellphones could be banned entirely on planes — in carry-on bags and checked luggage.

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