TSA: Some at US-bound flights must turn on phones

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Passengers at some overseas airports that offer U.S.-bound flights will be required to
power on their electronic devices in order to board their flights, the Transportation Security
Administration said Sunday.
The TSA said it is requiring some overseas airports to have passengers turn on devices such as cellphones
before boarding. It says devices that won’t power up won’t be allowed on planes, and those travelers may
have to undergo additional screening.
“As the traveling public knows, all electronic devices are screened by security officers,” the TSA said
in the release announcing the new steps.
American intelligence officials have been concerned about new al-Qaida efforts to produce a bomb that
would go undetected through airport security. There is no indication that such a bomb has been created
or that there’s a specific threat to the U.S.
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson recently ordered the TSA to call for extra security measures at
some international airports with direct flights to the United States. TSA does not conduct screening
abroad, but has the ability to set screening criteria and processes for flights flying to the U.S. from
abroad, according to a Department of Homeland Security official, who was not allowed to discuss the
changes publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
During an interview aired Sunday on NBC’S “Meet The Press,” Johnson declined to speculate on whether new
security procedures called for overseas will be required at domestic airports in the future
“We continue to evaluate things,” he said. “The screening we have right domestically from one domestic
airport to another is pretty robust as the American traveling public knows. In this instance we felt
that it was important to crank it up some at the last point of departure airports and we’ll continually
evaluate the situation.”
TSA will not disclose which airports will be conducting the additional screening, although it will be at
some airports with direct flights to the U.S. Industry data show that more than 250 foreign airports
offer nonstop service to the U.S.
Aviation remains an attractive target to global terrorists, who are consistently looking for ways to
circumvent aviation security measures, the DHS official said. Some details on specific enhancements and
locations are sensitive because U.S. officials do not want to give information “to those who would do us
harm,” the official said.
American intelligence officials said earlier this week that they have picked up indications that bomb
makers from Yemen-based al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula have traveled to Syria to link up with the
al-Qaida affiliate there.
Al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula long has been fixated on bringing down airplanes with hidden
explosives. It was behind failed and thwarted plots involving suicide bombers with explosives designed
to be hidden inside underwear and explosives secreted inside printer cartridges shipped on cargo planes.

Over the past year, Americans and others from the West have traveled to Syria to join the fight against
the Syrian government. The fear is that fighters with a U.S. or other Western passport, who therefore
are subject to less stringent security screening, could carry such a bomb onto an American plane.

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