http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40318044/ns/travel-news/from/toolbarNew U.S. security rules not common elsewhere
In many countries, airline screening emphasizes preflight intelligence
NBC News and msnbc.com
...Security is almost universally considered most effective at Ben-Gurion International Airport in Tel Aviv. No plane operating from there has been successfully attacked since 1972, when 24 people were killed in a hijacking by a terrorist group calling itself the Japanese Red Army. The state airline El Al is unapologetic about its use of passenger profiling — making judgments about a passenger's likelihood of posing a threat based on his or her background, behavior and associations. Passengers can be questioned on arrival at the airport entrance and again at the terminal entrance. And all passengers are questioned individually once they're inside the terminal by security agents looking for abnormal behavior or any other reason to be suspicious.
Profiling is widely considered unacceptable in the United States, but to El Al, subjecting every passenger to a scan or a body search is just as unacceptable, said Isaac Yeffet, former security director of the airline. "We don't need to spend one dollar to buy body scanners," said Yeffet, adding that Muslim passengers would never accept the explicit imagery generated by the scanners. "This is not the security that we want," Yeffet said. "... Why do we have to drive them nuts with this kind of body scanner?" Unless profile questions flag someone as suspicious, the most intimate interaction a passenger will have at an Israeli airport is a final walk through a standard metal detector.
Many European and Asian airports have yet to embrace the highly sophisticated scanners now being deployed at U.S. airports or force most passengers to be hand-searched, preferring to pre-screen passengers through computer records and check them with standard X-ray machines, metal detectors or metal-detecting wands. While some passengers are scanned or face a pat-down at European airports — notably at Heathrow in London and Schiphol in Amsterdam — neither option is widespread in other countries. The European Commission requires that each airport use metal detectors, but beyond that, it leaves protocols up to each nation, which means inspection systems vary. Few of them use full-body scanners, which authorities have not widely adopted because "the privacy and health of passengers must be protected" and "scanning alone cannot stop terrorism," the European Parliament's Transport Committee said in a statement.
European security officials pointed to a test of the body scanners earlier this year at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris, which concluded that scanners "are not a mature technology for now." Martin Broughton, chairman of British Airways, said recently that European authorities should resist pressure from Washington to adopt U.S.-style measures, saying they should not have to "kowtow to the Americans every time they want something done."...