PDA

View Full Version : Pilot furious with TSA/DEN over silence


Morumbi97
01-05-2010, 18:40
President Obama and Napolitano are clearly in over their heads...

CNN Opinion (http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/01/05/danyluk.pilot.complaint/index.html)

Editor's note: Steve Danyluk is an international first officer for a major U.S. airline and president of The Independence Fund, a nonprofit that supports troops wounded in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

(CNN) -- Following the attempt to bomb a passenger jet on Christmas Day, President Obama said that "once the suspect attempted to take down Flight 253, it's clear Homeland Security and Aviation Security took all appropriate actions."

I am a commercial airline pilot who was deep over the Atlantic flying from St. Kitts and Nevis for nearly six hours on Christmas Day following the attempted bombing on Flight 253.

I only learned about the incident after landing when I looked at the CNN Web site on my iPhone. I'm justifiably furious that I was not notified while airborne.

Our government clearly dropped the ball. President Obama has ordered a review into the intelligence failures leading up to the attempted Christmas Day bombing by Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, but an equally important review needs to be made into how events were handled once AbdulMutallab attempted to carry out his plan.

Specifically, why weren't the actions the Transportation Safety Administration outlines in our aviation manuals initiated, and what took place inside the federal Domestic Events Network in the immediate aftermath of the terror attempt?

Following the 9/11 review, the DEN was given the task of instituting new procedures for controllers on how to communicate information about suspicious aircraft throughout the system.

The Washington-based DEN Operations Center is supposed to allow federal agencies with jurisdiction over the security of U.S. airspace to communicate information in real time. So why, after eight years and billions of dollars, was the information concerning the incident available to me only on my iPhone?

Like many commercial pilots, I flew in the military. There, each squadron maintains something called a pre-mishap plan. Basically, it's a three-ring binder with a series of actions the watch officer is supposed to take when a mishap happens.

It's a very useful tool -- but only if the officer who is assigned to carry out the plan is familiar with the binder's contents. Good commanding officers run simulated mishap drills within their squadrons to ensure their junior officers effectively execute the plan.

I'm left with the sickening sense that after 9/11, the government spent horrific amounts of money to create the "mother of all" pre-mishap plans, but never effectively tested it. Why? Because unlike the military, where commanding officers rise up through the ranks based on professional competency, our government operates on a different model.

How else does one explain the failed governmental response to natural disasters like Katrina, or man-made disasters like the Christmas Day bombing attempt?

The silver lining is that AbdulMutallab's failed attempt gave us that test of the response system. It can only be attributed to luck that unlike 9/11, this was not a coordinated attack involving multiple aircraft.

Now that the gaping holes in our response have been exposed, let's do a thorough review of what took place on Flight 253 and ensure we have professionals in decision-making positions who will execute the plan if this happens again.

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Steve Danyluk.

Sten
01-05-2010, 18:53
Is an opinion piece early bird material?

Ambush Master
01-05-2010, 22:38
Is an opinion piece early bird material?

YES!!

Why do you question this?

Sten
01-05-2010, 22:56
I was under the impression this was breaking news. I was confused sorry.

Pete
01-06-2010, 05:47
Comedy Of Errors: Cameras Didn't Work At Newark

http://wcbstv.com/local/newark.airport.continental.2.1407062.html

".....That's because CBS 2 has learned that when an unidentified man breached a secure area at Newark on Sunday night, delaying thousands of passengers for hours, the TSA cameras weren't working.

That's right – they weren't even recording, sources said, and needed a reboot, which the agency apparently didn't ask for. That set off a chain reaction of even more missteps that caused needless chaos and inconvenience for several thousand hapless passengers......."

Yeah, they need a union - a union to protect them from being fired.

Ret10Echo
01-06-2010, 06:36
This whole thing is a farce. TSA, DHS and whatever other acronym you want to throw into the pot. No central oversight, everyone scrambling to NOT be the next one under the bus or have the MSM speak poorly of them (because at that point you become a political liability and must be banished).

Don't speak the truth, just mindlessly follow the bad ideas formulated by has-beens and teenagers on the Hill.

Congress will simply create a "Video Monitoring and Security Directorate" with a political appointee and 50-some senior policy analysts and program directors. All of whom will be utterly clueless and accomplish nothing more than drafting an annual congressional report and answering questions posed by equally clueless congressional staffers. They will however have a massive budget and create an impenetrable layer of bureaucracy.

The intial concept for DHS was organized around 5 Directorates based upon functional requirements and mission. What you have now are 22 distinct organizations who refuse to acknowledge they are in the same fight. Saying it is the Keystone Cops is an insult to the Keystone Cops. At least they and the Stooges were all heading in the same direction.

The buffoonery will continue until further notice.

--Rant off__

Morumbi97
01-06-2010, 11:58
So far, the response from the Obama Administration has been alarmingly weak. We put 12 or so countries on a list for extra security measures; the terrorists just fly out of other countries. The "pat-down", limited to non-sensitive areas is at best a major inconvenience. Pres. Obama is using the phrase "I will not tolerate..." a lot in the past couple of days, but what does that mean? Is he going to hold Napolitano accountable?

Ed Rollins, CNN Senior Political Analyst, and former Re wrote the following opinion piece "Case for firing Janet Napolitano" (http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/01/06/rollins.case.for.firing.napolitano/index.html)

Editor's note: Ed Rollins, a senior political contributor for CNN, is senior presidential fellow at the Kalikow Center for the Study of the American Presidency at Hofstra University. He was White House political director for President Reagan and chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee.

New York (CNN) -- On the second page of the executive summary of the 9/11 commission report is a line we should all remember: "[T]he 9/11 attacks were a shock but they should not have been a surprise. Islamist extremists had given plenty of warning that they meant to kill Americans indiscriminately and in large numbers."

Christmas Day could easily have gone into history as another day nearly as infamous as Pearl Harbor day or 9/11. The United States was attacked, allegedly by Umar Farouk AbdulMutallab, who got past whatever security precautions might have stopped him from boarding Northwest Flight 253 for Detroit, Michigan.

If the attack had been successful, 279 passengers and 11 crew members would probably be dead, and we wouldn't be discussing Democrats hiding behind closed doors to wrap up a health care bill.
Thankfully no one was killed, and the threat was stopped by the incompetence of the would-be bomber, not the competence of our security apparatus.
Homeland Secretary Janet Napolitano said immediately after the incident that "the system worked," intending to refer to what happened after the failed bombing. But people took it as a defense of the overall system, and she had to spend time clarifying her comment afterward.

Clearly the system didn't work. Her boss, the president, made that plain in his comments Tuesday: "The bottom line is this: The U.S. government had sufficient information to have uncovered this plot and potentially disrupt the Christmas Day attack, but our intelligence community failed to connect those dots which would have placed the suspect on the no-fly list," Obama said.
And now we find out our most important ally, Britain, also had sufficient intelligence and had warned us in advance about AbdulMutallab.
Pre-9/11, our guard was down. Airport security was a joke, and our national intelligence apparatus was a bunch of fiefdoms that didn't want to cooperate and wouldn't share information with each other.
In the aftermath of that great American tragedy, 9/11, the system was supposed to be fixed.

The Department of Homeland Security was created and all intelligence was put under one entity, headed by the director of national intelligence. But the failures outlined Tuesday are the same failures that caused 9/11.
Why have we as Americans spent billions of dollars, inconvenienced our lives, and lost many of our own freedoms? And in spite of the fortunate outcome in Detroit, is this next decade going to be one in which Americans lose more freedoms? Or is it going to be one in which we say, "Stop! I am not going to be intimidated."

I know we live in a dangerous time, but are we letting the other side win by letting our way of life be taken away from us by being overly cautious and maybe even overprotected? How come every time a system breaks down, we citizens are made to endure more?

Even before the president and his homeland security secretary issue their new travel guidelines, I know more of my personal freedoms are going to be eroded.

As someone who has traveled extensively, I now look at going to an airport with the same dread I felt as a kid going to the dentist. I know it is going to be a painful experience.

If I thought for one moment the TSA teams (50,000 plus strong) at the airport, who treat me as a potential terrorist, could actually catch a real terrorist, I might be a more willing victim of their harassment. I now have to be searched, my computer and Kindle stacked separately, shoes off (thanks to Richard Reid, another incompetent bomber), belt, wallet, watch and whatever else taken out, and have my ticket and ID checked every 10 feet even though I am in their secure space. Now my underwear is to be viewed as a secret weapon.
How does a man on a watch list, whose very own father turns him in as a potential terrorist, plunk down $3,000 in cash and get on a plane anywhere?
We as taxpayers are now spending billions on airport security and other intelligence to keep us safe. My challenge is: Get what you need, but get it right! No more excuses.

When I worked in the White House, I was told it was the big leagues. Zero defects was the rule. It was like the National Football League and you had to perform at the very top level or you were gone.
We have just finished the regular season of the National Football League and there are some lessons to be learned from that sport. Perform and you survive. Don't perform and you are fired.

Eight years after 9/11, the system failed. Mr. President, follow the example of your neighbor, the unpopular Redskins owner Dan Snyder, and hold someone accountable. Snyder fired his general manager and his football coach for a failed season.

You need to fire someone for the security failures. This is the second big-time security failure this year -- the White House gate crashers and now the Detroit bomber. The two agencies that have failed security big-time are the Secret Service and TSA.

The person in charge of both agencies is Janet Napolitano. Fire her and convince us that standing in long lines at airports is worth the price.
Getting mad is not enough, Mr. President. We're mad too. But you can do something about it!

The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Ed Rollins.

greenberetTFS
01-06-2010, 12:09
Comedy Of Errors: Cameras Didn't Work At Newark

http://wcbstv.com/local/newark.airport.continental.2.1407062.html

".....That's because CBS 2 has learned that when an unidentified man breached a secure area at Newark on Sunday night, delaying thousands of passengers for hours, the TSA cameras weren't working.

That's right – they weren't even recording, sources said, and needed a reboot, which the agency apparently didn't ask for. That set off a chain reaction of even more missteps that caused needless chaos and inconvenience for several thousand hapless passengers......."

Yeah, they need a union - a union to protect them from being fired.

Pete,

Clousterfuck situation to me........:rolleyes: What a farce .....:eek:

Big Teddy :munchin