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Delta Force commandos protect reopened US airspace

Josey1Josey1 Member Posts: 9,598 ✭✭
edited September 2001 in General Discussion
Delta Force commandos protect reopened US airspaceWASHINGTON, Sept 13 (AFP) - The United States drafted in elite Delta Force commandos to help protect planes as it fully reopened its airspace Thursday under a stringent new anti-terrorism regime.Flights, banned since hijackers drove fuel-laden passenger planes into the World Trade Center and Pentagon on Tuesday, resumed at 11:00 am (1500 GMT), said Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta."From this day forward, we are operating with tightened security," he told a news conference.Government agents from the Department of Justice and Department of Treasury were deployed to reinforce security at airports across the country, Mineta told a news conference.But "for on board, we do need trained personnel on how to deal with the use of weapons in an aluminum cylinder that is flying through the air," he added.It would take weeks, however, to train personnel for the task, the transport chief said."We are asking for expeditious treatment and action by the Department of Defense to give us some Delta Force folks," Mineta said."They are already trained on high-risk situations and it would not take that much more training to put the Delta Forces on the airplane," he added. "We are hoping to augment federal air marshals with Delta Forces."The Delta Force, equivalent to Britain's SAS, is an highly-secretive US team of anti-terrorist commandos with special training in close-quarter combat and hostage rescues.But the colossal task of switching back on the US civil air transport system, which carries 1.6 million people on a normal day with 36,000 to 40,000 departures, would take time, he said."I must caution everyone that a system as diverse and complex as ours cannot be brought back up instantly," Mineta said.Airlines -- many of which have aircraft parked in the wrong airports following the emergency national grounding -- said the task would take days and they were resuming diverted flights first. "We will reopen airports and resume flights on a case-by-case basis, only after they implement our more stringent levels of security," the US transport chief said.The new rules, many kept under wraps for security reasons, include:-- A total ban on passengers carrying aboard any cutting implements such as scissors or knives of any material or size. The terrorists used knives, not guns, in their attacks. Previously, only knives with blades longer than four inches (10 centimeters) were barred.-- A thorough search and security check of all airplanes and airports before passengers are allowed to enter and board aircraft. - A discontinuation of baggage check-ins at any place besides the airport ticket counters.- A discontinuation of off-airport check-in. - A reservation of boarding areas for passengers only. Only ticketed passengers will be allowed to proceed past airport screeners to catch their flights. US airspace was closed at 1325 GMT Tuesday for the first time in US history.The action was taken as hijackers took over four aircraft with a total 266 people aboard and used them in suicide missions against the United States, destroying the World Trade Center and punching a hole in the Pentagon.Thousands of people are feared to have perished.Mineta had planned to resume flights 23 hours earlier.But the plan was scrapped following intelligence from the FBI and other agencies and after a National Security Council meeting chaired by President George W. Bush.The American Airlines group, the world's biggest airline, said it would resume limited scheduled American Airlines, American Eagle and TWA flights no sooner than 2000 GMT.United Airlines confirmed in a statement that two diverted international flights had completed their trips in the morning but scheduled operations would not begin before 2300 GMT.Delta Airlines said it would run "very limited" operations after 1600 GMT, with the priority on completing diverted flights, including some inbound flights that halted in Canada.Airlines were implementing special rules allowing people to get new tickets, reschedule flights or change to new destinations. American Airlines also offered passengers the option of refunds. http://asia.dailynews.yahoo.com/headlines/world/afp/article.html?s=asia/headlines/010914/world/afp/Delta_Force_commandos_protect_reopened_US_airspace.html
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