WASHINGTON,
March 19 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The Pentagon said
Monday, March 18, that it is preparing to scale back combat air
patrols over U.S. cities in a reflection of improved security at
airports and aboard airliners.
They
will now rely on intermittent patrols with a plan to keep fighter
jets on "strip alert," ready to fly within 15 minutes,
officials said.
"We're
talking about a different mix, and it will probably be somewhat less
than you have had in the past," said Victoria Clarke, the
Pentagon spokeswoman.
The
military put U.S. fighter aircraft on combat patrols over New York,
Washington and other U.S. cities after terrorists flew hijacked
jetliners into the World Trade Center in New York and the Pentagon
on September 11.
But
military commanders have complained that the patrols have strained
the force and cut into training time.
Clarke
said airport and airliner security have improved, and people were
much attuned to the threat.
Improved
security measures include more federal marshals on commercial
flights, stronger cockpit doors on jetliners, more stringent
security at airports and an instant alert system between the Federal
Aviation Administration and the North American Aerospace Defense
Command, which orders military aircraft into the sky, reports CNN.
U.S.
President George W. Bush has been briefed on the Pentagon's plan to
change the mix of its combat air patrols and strip alerts to
"more accurately reflect the current environment."
"You'll
have some combination of CAPs [combat air patrols], strip alerts and
the combination will change as circumstances demand," she said.
The
exact date to implement the revised plan has not been revealed for
security reasons, reports CNN, as 24-hour combat patrols will
continue over Washington.