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October 2004, Week 4

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From:
Denys Beauchemin <[log in to unmask]>
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Date:
Tue, 26 Oct 2004 09:36:50 -0500
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THAT ANNOYING "95 PERCENT UNINSPECTED CARGO" LINE

By Michelle Malkin   ·   October 25, 2004 05:53 AM
<http://michellemalkin.com/archives/000715.htm> 

According to Drudge, John Kerry repeats an oft-used line in an interview
<http://www.drudgereport.com/flash1.htm> with Katie Couric today to show
he's tough on homeland security:

Well, I do know that America will be safe. Under my leadership. Because
we're gonna not allow 95 percent of American containers to come in
uninspected."

Kerry and his minions use the line over
<http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=38509> and over
<http://releases.usnewswire.com/GetRelease.asp?id=38332>  and over
<http://www.ktvu.com/politics/3820534/detail.html> again.

But as the AP
<http://www.registerguard.com/news/2004/10/14/a11.factcheck.1014.html>
and others have noted, Kerry's claim ignores that the manifests of all
U.S.-bound cargo are screened before they reach U.S. ports and all
high-risk cargo is identified. U.S. officials then physically inspect
the high-risk cargo - which accounts for about 5 percent of the overall
total. And as Jay Ambrose pointed out:

On any given issue of safety within our borders, it is possible to argue
that more should be spent, that more should be done, but as Bush said in
the debate, the administration has "tripled the amount of money we are
spending on homeland security to $30 billion a year." As he did not say,
you could spend the country into bankruptcy with seemingly desirable
projects without coming even close to dealing with a fraction of the
means by which terrorists could wreak catastrophe.


Update: Just received the following from the Bureau of Customs and
Border Protection:

• The 95-percent figure is misleading and falsely implies that we do
nothing to inspect cargo containers arriving at our seaports. We use
intelligence to review information on 100 % of cargo entering our ports,
and all cargo that presents a risk to our country is inspected using
large x-ray and radiation detection equipment. 

• Following 9/11, the Administration developed and implemented a smarter
strategy to identify, target, and inspect cargo containers before they
reach U.S. ports. While it is possible to secure a nation by closing its
borders and inspecting everything and everybody that enters, doing so
would render us obsolete. 

• None of the security measures implemented as a result of this strategy
existed before 9/11. 

• Our strategy is to rule out potential threats before they arrive at
our borders and ports. In fact, the security measures now in place allow
us to rule out 94 % of the cargo as potential threats prior to its
arrival into the United States. Six percent (6 %) of total cargo
containers were identified this year as potential threats and were
physically inspected immediately upon arrival. (The percentage will
change annually because the inspections are based upon identified risk
following intensive screening.) Dramatically increasing physical
inspections after arrival is a waste of resources that will not
appreciably increase our national security. In fact, the type of
increase in physical inspections implied by this allegation would cost
billions of dollars in resources and cripple not only the U.S. economy,
but the global economy as well. 

Key Facts Which Did Not Exist Before 9-11: 

• The 95-percent figure is misleading and falsely implies that we do
nothing to inspect cargo containers arriving at our seaports. We use
intelligence to review information on 100 % of all cargo information
entering U.S. ports, and all cargo that presents a risk to our country
is inspected using large x-ray and radiation detection equipment. 

•Following 9/11, under the leadership of President Bush we developed and
implemented a smart cargo container security strategy to identify,
target, and inspect cargo containers before they reach U.S. ports. Under
this strategy: 
1. 100 % of all containers identified as posing a terrorist risk are
inspected using x-ray scans and radiation detection equipment. (i.e.
anything identified as having the potential for concealment of terrorist
weapons or terrorists.) 
2. The Administration requires that advance information be given to our
border agency, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP), about all
containers well before they arrive. In fact, the information is required
24 hours before they are loaded on to vessels at foreign seaports
(24-Hour Rule). 
3. Containers posing a potential terrorist threat are identified and
targeted before they arrive at U.S. seaports by the National Targeting
Center (NTC). The NTC was established as the centralized coordination
point for all of CBP’s anti-terrorism efforts. Prior to 9/11, no
national-level targeting of people or goods crossing our borders
existed. 

• NTC uses intelligence and terrorist indicators to review advance
information for all cargo, passengers, and imported food shipments
before arrival into the U.S. 

• NTC coordinates with other federal agencies such as U.S. Coast Guard,
Federal Air Marshals, FBI, Transportation Security Administration, and
the Departments of Energy and Agriculture, as well as the intelligence
community. 
4. The Administration works with our foreign partners to allow U.S.
officers working at major international seaports, currently 26, to
identify and inspect containers prior to being loaded onto ships
destined for the U.S. Container Security Initiative (CSI) 
5. The Administration created a public-private and international
partnership with over 7,000 businesses, including most of the largest
U.S. importers -- the Customs-Trade Partnership Against Terrorism
(C-TPAT). Under this program, legitimate companies that do regular
business with the U.S. have increased their own security to prevent
terrorists from infiltrating their shipments. (We check not only the
company shipping the goods, but also the companies that provided them
with any services.) 
§ Approximately 40 % of all cargo headed for the U.S. is transported by
C-TPAT partners and is therefore better secured. 

• Additional technology has been added, including Radiation Portal
Monitors, Isotope Identifiers, and Personal Radiation Monitors. For the
first time CBP is also using chemical and explosive detector dogs to
inspect cargo. 

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is the unified border agency
within the Department of Homeland Security charged with the management,
control, and protection of our Nation's borders at and between the
official ports of entry. CBP is charged with keeping terrorists and
terrorist weapons out of the country while enforcing hundreds of U.S.
laws

 

 

 

Denys

 

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