The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. security steps aimed at foreign airports after crash

- By Alicia A. Caldwell

WASHINGTON — The Homeland Security Department announced Friday a series of new security efforts aimed at internatio­nal airports in the wake of the crash of a Russian jetliner over Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula.

White House spokesman Josh Earnest said the new protocols apply to fewer than 10 overseas airports in “the region in which the Sinai Peninsula is located.” He said the affected airports already have cooperativ­e relationsh­ips with the United States.

The new security procedures will include expanded security screening of items put on commercial jets, airport assessment­s and offers of security assistance for certain airports.

Russian carrier Metrojet’s Airbus A321-200 crashed shortly after takeoff Oct. 31 from the Sharm el-Sheikh airport in Egypt, killing all 224 people on board. There are no direct flights from that airport to the United States.

Though the investigat­ion is ongoing, President Barack Obama has said the U.S. is taking “very seriously” the possibilit­y that a bomb caused the crash.

“These measures are not being taken in response to a specific threat to the homeland but it is the prudent exercise of an abundance of caution given the informatio­n that U.S. officials have learned about this airline disaster in the Sinai Peninsula,” Earnest said Friday.

The former head of the Transporta­tion Security Administra­tion, John Pistole, said there is no formal security role for the U.S. government at foreign airports that don’t have direct flights to the United States. For the 275 airports that do serve as the last point of departure before landings in American cities, the government takes a risk-based approach to security that includes evaluating the origins of so-called feeder flights.

Michael Balboni, a security expert and former deputy secretary for public safety for New York state, said there are significan­t difference­s between the scrutiny of workers at overseas airports and those in the United States. One of those gaps, Pistole said, is the lack of a terrorist watch list in many countries that leaves many local airport authoritie­s and foreign government­s to rely on criminal background checks to root out potential security threats.

In the wake of the downing of the Russian flight, Balboni said, many of those gaps are likely to gain renewed attention.

President Obama is taking ‘very seriously’ the possibilit­y that a bomb caused the crash.

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