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Strategies & Market Trends : The Amateur Traders Corner -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dale Baker who wrote (18326)1/12/2002 10:00:37 AM
From: Tom Hua  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 19633
 
Good morning Dale, scary thoughts.

interactive.wsj.com

Regards,

Tom

JANUARY 14, 2002

What's in the Box?

It's high time Americans had more security for freight
containers

By Thomas G. Donlan

Remember how it felt on the morning of September 11? One plane hit one
World Trade Center tower; possibly an accident. A second plane struck the
second tower; the odds of that happening by accident were well beyond belief.
Then a third plane hit the Pentagon and a fourth crashed in Pennsylvania.

How many more hijacked planes were up there?

Fear. That's what we remember feeling on September 11. That fear was the
hijackers' biggest victory.

How will we react when the next shoe drops, when terrorists make some other
frightful attack on the American economy, as Osama bin Laden has urged them
to do in videos broadcast round the world?

Consider Commander Stephen Flynn's nightmare: One morning, an assortment
of shipping containers blow up at strategic locations in the nation's rail and
highway networks. Or the containers release poison gas, or some other horribly
dangerous substance.

Look at an aerial photo of the industrial area just south of the city of Newark,
New Jersey, Flynn suggests. There is an airport, a major highway, an important
rail line, and just beyond the New Jersey Turnpike and the railroad there is a
seaport where ships unload tens of thousands of containers every year.

Or you might look at a map of Chicago, or Long Beach, California, or New
Orleans, or Houston, or Baltimore, or Philadelphia, or Boston, or Fort
Lauderdale, Florida, or any of dozens of other ports of entry, where shipping
containers enter the United States.

Then whole trains of containers on flat cars ride the rails through U.S. cities,
past key industries such as oil refineries, over and under highways, through
tunnels and across bridges, some of which are potential bottlenecks in the
national freight-transportation system.

Poor man's missile

It would be a simple matter -- simpler at least than hijacking four airliners
simultaneously -- to equip a container with a satellite navigation system and a
communications device to let a controller know the container's precise location.
The communications device -- a cell phone, for example -- could also trigger
something dangerous in the container's cargo.

The common freight container could be as accurate as a ballistic missile, carry
anything a missile could carry and more, and it would be anonymous to boot. It's
simple for survivors to track a missile back to its launching point and hold some
enemy responsible, but containers are a different matter. Who knows where
that box came from, or who loaded it? Defending against exploding containers
could be more difficult than building a missile-defense system.

Flynn, a commander in the United States Coast Guard and a researcher at the
Council on Foreign Relations, would like to remind us -- if we ever knew -- that
many of the containers riding the rails and highways all over the country were
loaded overseas, and that 98% of them were not inspected at the port of entry.
The Coast Guard and the Customs Service, worried though they are by the
chance that something frightful might arrive on these shores in a container, only
manage immediate inspections of 2% of the one million containers landing here
each month.

It would be almost impossible to do much better at most ports of entry. There
aren't the inspectors; there isn't the room; there isn't the time. It takes five
inspectors three hours to conduct a thorough security inspection of one 40-foot
container, Flynn reports in the current issue of Foreign Affairs magazine.
Customs inspections, if they occur at all, take place when the recipient opens
the box in the normal course of business, at the recipient's place of business, up
to 30 days after the container enters the country.

"Our aviation security system is like Fort Knox compared to our maritime
security," says Flynn.

On September 11, when nobody knew how many more hijackers might be in
flight, nine other airliners out of 5,102 in the air were not communicating
correctly or had deviations from their flight plans. It took several hours to get
them all landed and four days to gain reasonable certainty that no more
hijackings of the same type would happen right away.

Flynn guesses it would take months to gain such control of the freight
containers moving in the U.S. on a typical day. If it could be done at all.

The first question is whether the Coast Guard, the Customs Service, the
Department of Transportation, the Federal Railroad Administration, the Surface
Transportation Board, the Federal Highway Administration, and dozens of other
agencies and hundreds of state agencies -- to say nothing of the private shipping
railroad and trucking companies -- could pull together to halt container
shipments and inspect every box, or even just the boxes originating overseas.

The second question is whether the country could afford that kind of security
effort. We can be sure the result would be economic pandemonium.

Stopping trade in its tracks

Imagine the lost production if parts reach factories weeks late. Imagine the
delays and the damage and the losses if goods shipments to wholesale
distribution centers and warehouses suddenly stopped. "Just-in-time" inventory
systems are saving manufacturers billions of dollars every year, on the
now-questionable theory that everything can always get where it has to go
without interruption. Factories are not ready to reassume the costs of holding
large inventories.

As the managerial breakdown in the Union Pacific railroad demonstrated a few
years ago, it's not that hard to jam up the freight system accidentally, and the
economic losses can be substantial. If malefactors jam it up on purpose they
might be able to create enormous economic losses. Flynn concludes that the
biggest threat in his nightmare may not be the immediate destruction from
exploding containers; the biggest threat may be the loss of economic output
resulting from dealing with the threat of exploding containers by shutting down
the container freight system.

Should Flynn be talking about this? Should Barron's be talking about it? If an
attack using containers happens next week or next year, will it be his fault and
our fault for giving the bad guys the clue to our vulnerability?

"It's only the good guys who don't know," answers Flynn. He notes that shipping
companies controlled by Osama bin Laden have owned 20 freighters that the
Coast Guard knows about, and he adds that smugglers, drug-runners and pirates
already prey on the lack of security in the ocean freight system.

Flynn also has a good reason for talking about it: Solutions are possible.

"We must not allow mystery boxes to enter our country," Flynn declares,
explaining that the border or the port of entry is not the place to solve every
mystery. That would be like trying to catch minnows at the base of Niagara
Falls. Sensible fisherman go upstream, to the shallows and calmer pools.

Flynn says most shipments are honest and innocuous, but shippers must verify
contents. Also, since containers are now too structurally weak to resist
unauthorized entry, shipping companies must provide more secure containers,
complete with tamper-proof locks. And, since most cargo that moves by sea
moves through one of a few megaports such as Hong Kong, Singapore and
Rotterdam, Flynn says those ports must also become centers of security
enforcement.

Chain of approval

Flynn urges that any cargo would have to be loaded into approved containers on
an approved factory loading dock, or subjected to a thorough search in a
megaport, or be refused entrance to the United States.

Many technical details need to be worked out, and no person, agency, trade
association, port authority or international conference currently has the power to
order the changes that will be needed. Nor is there a ready source of funds to
cover the costs, other than higher freight rates.

But Flynn's nightmare attack of container missiles would be far more costly
than any increase in freight rates aimed at covering better security. A Congress
and administration willing to protect the nation from nuclear missiles would be
wise to accept the costs of container security immediately, rather than in a
panic after an attack.

The American people woke up on September 11 to find that life was riskier
than they had imagined, and that security would be more costly than they
hoped. But they believed the leaders who told them that the attack was
unexpected, unimaginable, and would never happen again. They should not have
to wake up on some future morning to find that risk was in fact greater than
ever, and that the government they trusted had taken no action to contain it.

Thomas G. Donlan receives e-mail at tg.donlan@barrons.com.