Copyright 2002 Chicago Sun-Times, Inc. Chicago
Sun-Times
June 6, 2002 Thursday
SECTION: EDITORIAL; Pg. 39
LENGTH: 790 words
HEADLINE: Guns
give pilots a shot at stopping hijackers
BYLINE:
George Will
HIGHLIGHT: Fear of
liability shouldn't mean shortcuts on safety
BODY: The next perpetrators of terrorism in America
probably are already here, perhaps planning more hijackings. Post-Sept. 11
airport security measures may have made hijackings slightly more difficult, but
the fact that these are America's most visible anti-terrorist measures vastly
increases the terrorists' payoff in proving the measures incapable of keeping
terrorists off airplanes.
Recently this column
presented, without endorsement, the views of three commercial airline pilots who
oppose guns in cockpits. Today's column presents, and endorses, the views of
three other commercial airline pilots--two trained as fighter pilots, one
civilian-trained--who refute the other pilots' principal contentions, which
were:
Proper policy regarding suicidal hijackers is to
land as quickly as possible, which can be as quick as 10 minutes. So priority
should be given to making cockpits impenetrable. Armed pilots might be tempted
to imprudent bravery--particularly "renegade" pilots with fighter-pilot
mentalities, who would leave the cockpit to battle terrorists in the main cabin.
And arming pilots serves the pilots unions' objective of requiring a third pilot
in each cockpit.
The three pilots who favor allowing
pilots to choose whether to carry guns respond:
Passengers already entrust their lives to pilots' judgments. Landing a
hijacked plane is indeed the first priority, but pilots need to be alive to do
that. A cockpit impenetrably sealed from terrorists is an impossibility, in part
because planes cannot be landed as quickly as the other three pilots say. An
ignoble fear--of lawyers; of liability--explains why the airlines oppose arming
pilots. But legislation could immunize airlines from liability resulting from
harms suffered by passengers as a result of pilots resisting terrorists.
Landing a plane from 30,000 feet requires at least
20 minutes, never just 10. A training flight, simulating a fire emergency on a
flight just 4,000 feet up and 15 miles from Philadelphia's airport, takes about
12 minutes to land when done perfectly. Trans-Atlantic flights can be three
hours from a suitable airport. Such airports are not abundant west of Iowa.
Which means on most flights, terrorists would have time to penetrate the
cockpit.
Bulletproof doors are not the answer; the
Sept. 11 terrorists had no bullets. Well-trained terrorists can blow even a
much-reinforced cockpit door off its hinges using a thin thread of malleable
explosive that can pass through passenger screening procedures when carried on a
person. Here is what else can be undetected by security screeners busy
confiscating grandmothers' knitting needles:
The knife
with the 6-inch serrated blade that a passenger found, in a post-Sept. 11
flight, under her seat. Two semiautomatic pistols that passed unnoticed through
metal detectors and were discovered when the owner's bags were selected for a
search at the gate. A mostly plastic gun that looks like a cell phone. An
entirely plastic and razor-sharp knife.
The idea that
arming pilots is a means of justifying a third pilot is derisory: re-engineering
cockpits for that would be impossibly complex. Equally implausible is the idea
that an electric stun gun is a satisfactory aid when locked in a plane, 7 miles
up, with a team of trained terrorists.
A pilot's gun
would never leave the cockpit because the pilot never would. And shooting a
terrorist standing in the cockpit door frame would not require a Marine sniper's
skill. The powerful pressurization controls, as well as the location and
redundancy of aircraft electronic, hydraulic and other systems, vastly reduces
the probability that even multiple wayward gun shots--even of bullets that are
not frangible--would cripple an aircraft.
About fear of
"fighter pilot mentality": The military assiduously schools and screens pilot
candidates to eliminate unstable or undisciplined candidates. Airlines, too,
administer severe selection procedures for pilots, who are constantly
scrutinized. Captains have two physical examinations a year (first officers,
one) with psychological components. Everything said in the cockpit is
recorded.
Besides, many passengers fly
armed--county sheriffs, FBI and Secret Service agents. Why, then, must the
people on whom all passengers' lives depend--pilots--be unarmed? Especially
considering that the prudent law enforcement doctrine is that lethal force is
warranted when menaced by more than one trained and armed opponent.
To thicken the layers of deterrence and security, in the
air as well as on the ground, Congress should promptly enact legislation to
empower pilots to choose to carry guns. Time flies. So do hijackers. And the
next ones probably are already among us.