Invasion of the Body Scanners: Airport Security May Not Work, But
It Does Cause Cancer
by James Ridgeway
Unsilent
Generation
On the eve
of some of the busiest travel days of the year, airport scanners
are causing hysteria and with good reason. Never mind the puerile
TSA screeners giggling at your naked body. It turns out that the
things may pose serious health concerns. In a letter to John Pistole,
administrator of TSA, New Jersey Congressman Rush Holt, a scientist
and the Chairman of the House Select Intelligence Oversight Panel,
raised the possibility that the machines might be carcinogenic.
In March,
the Congressional Biomedical Caucus (of which I am a co-chair) hosted
a presentation on this technology by TSA, as well as a briefing
by Dr. David Brenner of Columbia University on the potential health
effects of back scatter x-ray devices. As Dr. Brenner
noted in his presentation and in subsequent media interviews, the
devices currently in use and proposed for wider deployment this
year currently deliver to the scalp 20 times the average dose
that is typically quoted by TSA and throughout the industry.
Dr. Brenner
has pointed out that the majority of the radiation from X-ray backscatter
machines strikes the top of the head, which is where 85 percent
of the 800,000 cases of basal cell carcinoma diagnosed in the United
States each year develop. According to Dr. Brenner, excessive x-ray
exposure can act as a cancer rate multiplier, which is why our government
should investigate thoroughly the potential health risks associated
with this technology.V
Various experts
have questioned whether older people and children ought to be subjected
to scanners, and whether people susceptible to or having melanoma
and cataracts should undergo the scan.
Holt also questioned
the efficacy of the body scanners, which would come as no surprise
to critics whove been lambasting them for years. Last January,
when the governments appetite for body scanners got a big
boost from the underwear bomber, there was skepticism about their
ability to detect the types of explosives favored by would-be airline
bombers. As I wrote at the time:
Known by their
opponents as digital strip search machines, the full-body
scanners use one of two technologies millimeter wave sensors
or backscatter x-rays to see through clothing, producing
ghostly images of naked passengers. Yet critics say that these,
too, are highly fallible, and are incapable of revealing explosives
hidden in body cavities an age-old method for smuggling contraband.
If thats the case, a terrorist could hide the entire bomb
works within his or her body, and breeze through the virtual strip
search undetected. Yesterday, the London Independent reported
on authoritative claims that officials at the [UK] Department
for Transport and the Home Office have already tested the scanners
and were not persuaded that they would work comprehensively against
terrorist threats to aviation. A British defense-research
firm reportedly found the machines unreliable in detecting low-density
materials like plastics, chemicals, and liquids precisely
what the underwear bomber had stuffed in his briefs.
Just to be
sure I am not going off the deep end on this subject, I emailed
Steve Elson, the intrepid former Navy Seal who worked on the federal
governments Red Team, which was deployed in the years before
9/11 to test airport security by infiltrating through check points.
This they did with ease; but noone ever paid any attention to their
reports. Since 9/11 Elson has worked on and off with television
crews, continuing to penetrate airport security carrying with him
all manner of guns and IEDs, and for the most part avoiding detection.
In a CBC program last year at this time, the Canadians reviewed
the air security situation and found it to be wanting. The reporters
also got hold of a redacted report from the Canadian transport people
which raised questions about the effectiveness of full body scanners,
especially when they are used in combination with metal detectors:
A person passing through one machine after another would have to
place their arms in different positions and the Canadians found
the body scanners would fail to detect objects like rings or bracelets
on extended arms because the mechanism could not reach high enough
to take them in.
A few days
ago, the Washington Post carried a list of people exempt
from body scanning, including cops and military in uniform. I asked
Elson about this, and he replied:
When I was
traveling through Chicago last January on my way to Toronto to do
an interview, I had some time between planes. Got a sandwich. No
place to sit down so I literally walked into the back of a checkpoint
that was enclosed by glass so everyone could see what was going
on, sat down on a bench and ate my sandwich, and watched. Noone
touched the pilots. Ergo, all I needed was a pilots uniform,
bought or stolen, and a photoshop badge. Put explosives on my body,
no metal, walk through, pick up my stuff and off to the plane. Likewise,
I could do something similar on the ramp. Best time is in cold weather
and snow storms. Do it as night approaches. People dont care
about security, just getting the job done and getting out of the
weather. Steal a bag tag, make an unauthorized entry (no problem),
walk up to a plane and throw it in with 50 lbs explosive.
Elson has always
contended that the body scanner couldnt detect explosives
in body cavities. In his email he added this: The machine
can see through a thin layer of clothing and probably detect explosives
strapped to the body. But he pointed out that Leslie Stahl
on 60 Minutes worried about exposing private parts,
but noted she could see a womans bra. If she could see
the bra, that means she could not see through the bra. A bra bomb
or explosives molded to the breast wouldnt be seen,
he continues. And a woman, because of her anatomical construction,
could easily
bring a several pound IED fully assembled with
timer, detonator, power sources right through the checkpoint. If
scanned or patted down it would make no difference. Once on the
plane she has the option to leave it in the plane
and get off.
Ellison warns that a well planned Al Qaeda operation, if they
did it right, could knock down 50 planes in 30 minutes. Think about
what that would do to US air operations.
In my opinion,
the best answer to airport security is the mass deployment of dogs.
Give me a friendly German Shepherd, and Ill gladly submit
to being sniffed, rather than patted, wanded, or scanned. But unlike
the scanner companies, dogs have no powerful lobbyists, like former
Homeland Security chief Michael Chertoff, to advocate on their behalf.
Reprinted
with permission from Unsilent
Generation.
November
26, 2010
Copyright
© 2010 James
Ridgeway
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