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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (589078)7/9/2004 1:32:06 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
June Scare Over Plane Tied to Error and Equipment Failure

By MATTHEW L. WALD

Published: July 8, 2004

WASHINGTON, July 8 — Security officials last month mistook a police plane carrying the governor of Kentucky for a terrorist threat, and ordered an evacuation of the United States Capitol, because of a combination of commonplace equipment failure on the plane, incompatible computers on the ground, and a series of human errors that various participants missed chances to notice, experts testified today at a House hearing.



The plane carrying Gov. Ernie Fletcher to former President Ronald Reagan's funeral landed safely at Reagan National Airport, but the Capitol police, concluding from information on a government hotline that an unidentified aircraft bearing down on them, hustled hundreds of people out of the Capitol and surrounding office buildings.

The result was "people running through the streets, having security people yelling at them, `take off your shoes, run run run, the plane will hit in two minutes," said Ellen O. Tauscher, Democrat of California, a member of the House Aviation subcommittee, speaking at the hearing today. She and other members complained that the integration of information from the Federal Aviation Administration, which manages the nation's civilian air traffic system, and the Department of Defense, begun after the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, would have to be improved.

"We have got to get this right," she said.


But the committee chairman, John Mica of Florida, and several other members concentrated on a different point — that National Airport remains closed to most traffic besides scheduled airliners, at the insistence of security officials, even though the sequence of events involving the Kentucky State Police plane indicate that the ban on most private planes may not preclude an attack on Washington using such a plane.

The plane, a twin-engine turboprop of a type that usually has space for 8 people, was approaching Reagan National Airport with a broken transponder, a piece of electronic equipment that listens for queries from the civilian radar system on the ground and responds with the plane's identity and altitude. From the timing of the response, the radar system can deduce the plane's longitude and latitude.

According to Linda Schuessler, an F.A.A. official who testified at the hearing, the pilot was in radio contact with the air traffic controllers, which shares radar data with the Transportation Security Administration. But she said the fact that the plane was a legitimate flight with a broken transponder was not communicated, either by the computers of the two agencies, or the humans involved in tracking flights.

When the transponder failed, soon after takeoff from an airport near Cincinnati, an air traffic controller manually entered data into the F.A.A. radar display, indicating its identity and indicating that its transponder was broken, according to F.A.A. officials. But communications with military and security officials broke down at several points along the way, they said.

In a post-Sept. 11 innovation, data from F.A.A. radars is fed to a security center in suburban Virginia called the National Capitol Region Coordination Center, where it is observed by people from the Transportation Security Administration. But the information that was manually typed in by the controller was not available at the coordination center.

Someone at the coordination center called the F.A.A. to say that there was an "unidentified target," meaning a blip on a radar screen that indicated a flying object, with no identification attached, said Greg Martin, a spokesman for the agency. The F.A.A. person assigned to talk to the center looked at the screen and saw "that everyone is present and accounted for," said Mr. Martin, a spokesman for the agency, because each radar blip had a data tag attached. The F.A.A. person did not notice a line in the data tag indicating a broken transponder, Mr. Martin said.

"When you do have a human error, the system defaulted to the highest level of security," Mr. Martin said.

nytimes.com



To: tejek who wrote (589078)7/9/2004 8:42:52 AM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Pulitzer Prize winner Carl Bernstein calls President Bush "the most radical president of my lifetime and perhaps in the century."

___________________________

<<...Bernstein said Bush "is radical in every degree," from a favoritism of the wealthy to a pre-emptive foreign policy to a lack of concern for civil rights.

"He certainly seems more ideological than any of our presidents," Bernstein said...>>

_____________________________

Ex-Watergate writer laments 'idiot culture'

Former Washington Post reporter Carl Bernstein told about 200 people in Tampa that today's media is more gossip and trash than news.

By BRADY DENNIS
Times Staff Writer
Published March 19, 2004
sptimes.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

TAMPA - Legendary reporter Carl Bernstein riffed Thursday night about President Bush, the Martha Stewart trial, the war in Iraq and his affection for Florida.

But mostly he talked about an epidemic that troubles him deeply these days. He calls it "the triumph of idiot culture."

Speaking to a crowd of about 200 at the Wyndham Westshore, he placed most of the blame on modern media outlets.

Bernstein, the former Washington Post journalist who, along with fellow reporter Bob Woodward, unearthed the Watergate scandal that led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon, said much of today's news has deteriorated into gossip, sensationalism and manufactured controversy.

That type of news panders to the public and insults their intelligence, ignoring the context of real life, he said. Good journalism, Bernstein said, "should challenge people, not just mindlessly amuse them."

He said the modern press lacks true leadership, citing such examples as AOL Time Warner and mogul Rupert Murdoch as media owners that have increasingly abandoned the principles of meaningful reporting.

"Their interest in truth is secondary to their interest in huge profits," Bernstein said.

Still, he said people can change that trend by exploring the Internet and piecing together from reputable sources their own news about important world matters.

He offered another solution to avoiding the trash that fills the airwaves: "Change the damn channel. Simple."

Bernstein also turned his attention Thursday to the coming election, calling President Bush "the most radical president of my lifetime and perhaps in the century."

Bernstein said Bush "is radical in every degree," from a favoritism of the wealthy to a pre-emptive foreign policy to a lack of concern for civil rights.

"He certainly seems more ideological than any of our presidents," Bernstein said.

Even so, Bernstein said he hopes a genuine debate can take place this year about the future of the country, rather than the petty quarrels and meaningless accusations that so often dominate campaign coverage.

"Let's move beyond the absurd name-calling and sound bite journalism," he said. "It is our job ... to force a real debate."

Try as he might, Bernstein could not escape the ghosts of Watergate, even for one night. A man stood during the post-speech question-and-answer session and asked if Deep Throat, the anonymous source used by Woodward and Bernstein, was a real person.

Bernstein smiled and broke into an impression of Nixon, grumbling to an assistant and wondering himself about Deep Throat's identity.

"It is one person," Bernstein said, finally. "We did not make it up."

And when Deep Throat dies, he said, "We will reveal him."