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Airline Exec: Drop
Some Security
Fri May 31,10:55 AM ET
By YURI KAGEYAMA, AP Business Writer
TOKYO (AP) - American Airlines chief
executive Donald Carty said Friday
another terrorist attack against
commercial airlines was unlikely and
urged some security measures added at
airports be dropped.
"It will be a hollow victory indeed
if the system we end up with is so
onerous and so difficult that air
travel, while obviously more secure,
becomes more trouble for the average
person than it is worth," Carty
said in a speech to the American Chamber
of Commerce in Tokyo. Carty, who
was in Japan to meet with business
officials, said the airlines industry
and the U.S. government responded
quickly to beef up airport security
after the Sept. 11 attacks. In
hindsight, as with many hastily made
decisions, some need changing, he
said. He said screening passengers
at the gate after doing so at the
security checkpoint merely added to
costs and customer hassles.
"With the amount of security that
we have in the aviation system today,
the likelihood of a terrorist choosing
aviation as the venue for future attack
is very low," Carty said.
"When you compare security across
various potential venues, the airline
industry is enormously well
secured."
Carty said he was not opposed to pilots'
having handguns in the cockpits, but
said priority should be given to other
security measures such as screening
passengers.
Earlier this week, the U.S. government
decided against allowing firearms in
cockpits, saying pilots should
concentrate on flying their planes and
let marshals defend against possible
terrorists.
American Airlines, the world's biggest
airline, has been trying to come up with
a new business strategy to combat the
sharp decline in the airline industry
after the Sept. 11 attacks. American's
parent company, AMR Corp., lost $575
million in the first three months of the
year.
Carty expressed support for the upcoming
merger between Japan Airlines and Japan
Air System. The carriers are setting up
a holding company in October.
The partnership between American
Airlines and Japan Airlines, which dates
back to 1995, was reaffirmed in a
meeting with JAL President Isao Kaneko
Thursday, Carty said. The alliance will
grow as the Tokyo international airport
develops as a hub for travel not only to
Japan and China but also to Southeast
Asia, he said.
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