In Brief

TSA Security Director Reacts to Foiled Plot

Airport security

By Scott Berinato

September 01, 2006CSO

On Aug. 10, British authorities announced they had foiled a terrorist plot to blow up passenger

airplanes en route to the United States from Britain. George Naccara, the Transportation Security

Administration's director of security at Logan International Airport in Boston, talks to CSO's Scott

Berinato about how the thwarted plot affects the future of airport security. The full audio version is

available at www.csoonline.com/podcasts.

CSO: You are a proponent of behavioral profiling. How does the alleged

terrorist plot support your case for that security technique?

George Naccara: The intelligence says the terrorists are working in teams, probably

of three or four. Each has something that I don't believe would raise suspicion at the checkpoint but,

when combined on the plane with some igniting device, can cause an explosion. These people are

under stress because each of them is deceiving the government, they've got to get through for the team

to succeed and they're fearful of capture. So they're definitely going to be giving off those involuntary

behavioral characteristics.

It seems like no matter what defense we throw up, the risk just shifts to something new with flying.

How do you break that cycle?

That is what's happening, and we see that. We're still in a more reactive posture than a preemptive

one, but as the intelligence sharing on a global level increases and improves, then perhaps we will

become more preemptive and certainly more effective. Of course we've got to be agile, flexible and

adaptable. That's something we're learning. I think the events (in August) showed we're making

progress there. I was encouraged. Also, every time we harden up some part of our airport, that creates

a little disincentive [for terrorists] to try. Because [they] want to have an 80 or 90 percent opportunity

for success.

The events in August prompted talk of moving passenger screening from contractors back to the

TSA. Good idea?

It's a good idea in some form. My idea would be to have an airline ticket checker supplemented by

our behavioral-profiling-trained people. That way we wouldn't be consumed with fulfilling some of the

requirements that are the responsibility of the airlines. And we'd also have a chance to look at the

people in line as they approached a checkpoint and do our behavior analysis at that time. In our

[preliminary] tests with behavioral profiling we produced some unanticipated benefits with spotting

fraudulent identification and documents.

How do we fix this seemingly intractable problem of carry-on item prohibitions?

I can see some great logic in having no carry-ons at all. Someone needs to sit down with some

enterprising carrier and say, Come up with a scheme where people come on board with maybe just

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