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Virtual Security Fence Going Up At Four Major Airports

System In Development Before Kennedy Terror Plot Uncovered

Fifty-seven miles of virtual fence designed to deter terrorists is being installed at four major New York-area airports and is expected to be in operation early next year. Modeled after systems in place at Israel's Ben-Gurion and Baghdad's airports, the 'fence' consists of a series of state-of-the-art heat, movement and video sensors to detect terrorist threats.

"If you can't breach the perimeter of the airport, you can't reach the fuel farms," an official, who asked to remain anonymous, told Newsday.

Systems are being installed at John F. Kennedy Airport, LaGuardia International Airport, Newark Liberty International Airport and Teterboro Airport and are expected to be in operation by early next year.

The systems are supposed to alert law enforcement to plots similar to the one this weekend that planned to blow up a fuel line inside JFK.

James Jay Carafano, a Homeland Security expert, said the system was a "valuable addition to a layered security approach."

"When there's a burglary in the neighborhood, you lock the doors and windows," he said. "Perimeter security in an airport is like locking your door. You do that, but then you also get a cop to go out and arrest the terrorist."

The system, designed by Raytheon, is made up of sensors, such as radar, video motion detectors, thermal imagers and closed-circuit television, which, when placed in strategic locations, would send round-the-clock information to a command post at each individual airport as well as a central Port Authority Police station.

It is also able to send instant video to first responders to stop an intruder in real time, said Marc La Vorgna of the Port Authority.

The $138-million system is the first of its kind to be installed in the US, said La Vorgna and was actually in development prior to the JFK plot being discovered.

Not everyone is so gung-ho about virtual fencing. Rafi Ron, former head of security at Tel Aviv's Ben-Gurion International Airport, contends this technology will work effectively when coupled with an "ample and well-trained police force."

"The question is not only detecting an intrusion but being able to respond to it in due time," said Ron. "I think that most U.S. airports are relatively quick to invest in the technology, but fail to provide the human resources to respond to the detection when it occurs."

Even former Federal Aviation Administration aviation security consultant, Billie Vincent, said the system could be "worthless without a response force that can get there before the adversary gets to one of your critical facilities, or to an airplane at the end of a runway."

"Without deploying sufficient response teams," he said, "all you've done is raise your level of anxiety if you can see the adversary, but you can't get to him in time."

"The technology will not replace the existing human security," La Vorgna said, insisting New York airports are "aggressively patrolled."

"... The technology will allow the Port Authority Police Department to identify potential problems and respond more quickly."

FMI: www.raytheon.com, www.teb.com, www.newarkairport.com, www.kennedyairport.com

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