Fra Curt Lewis:
Can commercial airlines do enough to protect passengers from
missile attacks?
Every airline passenger is familiar with the security routine: take your
shoes off, laptop goes in the plastic bin, remove all metal items from your
pockets and place any liquids in a separate plastic bag and walk through that
metal detector.
But the familiar precautions aimed at protecting airliners from possible
bombs or weapons do nothing to ward off an incoming missile that can blow the
jetliner out of the sky. The Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 shot down last week has
focused attention on protecting planes from potential missile strikes, which, it
turns out, have taken down more than one dozen airliners in aviation
history.
One answer could be "Sky Shield," a new Israeli-manufactured system that
officials say successfully protected a test El Al Airlines Boeing 737 in
live-fire missile tests.
"The 'Sky Shield' system, based on advance laser technology that deflects
missiles fired at aircrafts deviating them from their trajectory, has been
chosen by the Israeli Ministry of Transportation to protect Israeli airlines
planes," said a statement from the Israeli Ministry of Defense after the tests
earlier this year.
"The series of tests included a wide variety of threats that the 'Sky
Shield' system would have to tackle in order to protect passenger
aircrafts."
The U.S. Air Force currently uses technology called the Large Aircraft
Infrared Countermeasures Systems to protect jumbo-jet freighters and airborne
tankers. Air Force One, a modified Boeing 747, presumably is equipped with
similar missile deterrence. But putting similar devices on your next flight has
so far been a longshot.
"This is not the magic wand that will solve this problem," cautions Jim
Walsh, the director of the Security Studies Program at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. But he says protecting airliners is an idea "worth
exploring."
Walsh says it is difficult to defend civilian airliners against highly
sophisticated military rocket launchers, like the Buk M-1 that is believed to
have brought Flight 17 down. He says the technology could be used to protect
airliners against shoulder-fired heat-seeking missiles, which may become a more
common threat.
In 2002, Islamic terrorists in Mombasa, Kenya, were suspected of trying to
use shoulder-fired missiles to shoot down an Israeli airliner as it took off
from the international airport, but missed its target.
Recent reports have claimed that militants have raided stockpiles of
shoulder-fired missiles and MANPADS in Syria and Iraq.
But Walsh does not think the aviation industry will pony up for the
protection because most American airlines do not fly over war
zones.
"They cost $1 million apiece," he says. "We're talking $4 billion and,
frankly, American jet airliners -- commercial, Delta, USAir, United -- are not
landing in places where this is going to be a challenge. So I think it is highly
unlikely that you'll see commercial airliners want to take on that cost. Look at
what happened, which I think raises real questions, those airlines flying over
this zone, which only days before had seen an attack on a military transport at
20,000 feet, they were still using this airspace, why?... because it saved them
$1,500 in fuel costs."
Northrop Grumman has developed its own missile deterrence system, known as
the "Guardian," which has been installed on a variety of MD-11
aircraft.
The company says that "the Guardian System provides 360° protection against
a wide range of missile threats. When Guardian detects a MANPADS launch, it
tracks the incoming missile, then uses a laser beam to jam the missile's
guidance system, causing it to miss the target aircraft. The entire process
occurs in approximately two to five seconds and requires no action on the part
of the aircraft crew."
The Commercial Airline Defense Missile Act was introduced in Congress in
2003, to direct public funding to cover the costs of missile deterrence systems
for U.S. airliners.
The bill calls for installing an "electronic system that would
automatically -- (A) identify when the aircraft is threatened by an incoming
missile or other ordnance; (B) detect the source of the threat; and (C) disrupt
the guidance system of the incoming missile or other ordnance, which is intended
to result in the incoming missile or other ordnance being diverted off course
and missing the aircraft."
So far it has been determined that there has not been enough of a need to
mandate such missile protection.
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