Opinion
World View: The Threat of T-Shirts
Just when I thought the world of security couldn't get any more surreal, I was surfing the web and came across a couple of really zany new security requirements.
By Paul Raines
June 06, 2008 — Just when I thought the world of security couldn't get any more surreal, I was surfing the web and came across a couple of really zany new security requirements. The first is that the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) will now be requiring visitors to the United States from countries not requiring visas to register online with the US government at least 72 hours before their departure. The rule will apply to citizens of the 27 visa-waiver countries which includes most of western Europe, Japan, Australia and New Zealand.
What makes this program silly is that the justification for the program's creation is that 2 terrorists in the past 7 years, Richard Reid, the so-called "shoe bomber" was a U.K. citizen and Zacarias Moussaoui who was convicted of involvement in the 9/11 attacks was a French national. Both men entered the US without a visa. According to the convoluted logic of the U.S. Homeland Security Department, that inconvenient coincidence means that the multitudes of innocent citizens from those countries who will be visiting the United States in the future must be guilty by association. So much for being a close ally of the United States.
This is yet another example of a so-called "improvement" in security procedures actually hurting the larger interests of the United States. What will happen in practice is that a large number of Europeans, who are quite keen on data privacy, will simply decide not to visit the United States. The result will be a further decrease of tourism travel to the United States. As cited in a previous column, there has already been a 17 percent drop in tourism to the United States since 2001. In a survey of frequent international travellers, a full 39 percent of the respondents cited the United States as the "worst" for immigration and entry procedures. Half of the respondents said immigration and Customs officials were rude and that they actually feared them more than the threat of terrorism. This latest farcical rule is DHS' version of improving customer relations.
In addition, to the drop in tourism to the United States, the Homeland Security ruling will probably prompt the European Union to reciprocate by imposing the same type registration requirements on Americans visiting Europe. How do you suppose Joe Sixpack from middle America is going to feel about sending their sensitive personal information over to the European Union for a background check? What will these keystone kops in Homeland Security dream up next to complicate the lives of Americans?
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