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Senators Defy Bush Administration, Introduce Bill Allowing Guns in Cockpit 

Despite Bush Administration’s refusal, the U.S. Senate introduces a resolution allowing pilots to be armed in the cockpit.

WASHINGTON, May 24 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Defying earlier assertions by Undersecretary for Transportation John Magaw that he would not allow pilots to carry guns, the U.S. Senate - standing side-by-side with U.S. airline pilots - introduced legislation Thursday, May 23, that would allow them to be armed while on board a flight. 

"The logic of having an arm of some appropriate kind ... in the hands of a pilot or copilot in command absolutely makes sense," said Senator Frank Murkowski. 

"We're going to change the law," he promised. 

On Tuesday, May 21, Magaw said he would not authorize pilots to carry guns as requested by airline pilots following the hijackings of September 11, which killed some 3,000 people. 

"As we continue to deal with the realities of living in America after the tragic events of last September 11, we must take every precaution to ensure the safety of our citizens," responded Senator Strom Thurmond. 

"This legislation will establish additional lines of defense for the aircraft cabin and cockpit against terrorism."  

Under a program designed after a rash of hijackings in the 1960s and 1970s and administered by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)and the airlines, pilots were allowed to be armed. That rule lapsed last summer. 

Today, the FAA no longer has the authority to administer such a program, Congress having handed that authority to the Transportation Security Administration in November. 

But pilots, such as Captain Gary Boettcher of American Airlines who represents the five major pilot unions in the United States, are adamant that firearms for pilots are essential as a last line of defense against potential hijackers. 

"We are not willing to stand idly by and compromise the safety and security of our crew members, passengers or aircraft at the expense of hollow excuses or pressures exerted behind the scenes by airline management," Boettcher told reporters. 

Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta and Magaw's objections "are less than responsible and leave our aviation security system defenseless," he said.

Similar legislation already introduced in the House of Representatives, was due to be voted out of committee in mid-June. 

Congress passed legislation last November, the Aviation and Transportation Security Act, permitting pilots to carry handguns at the discretion of the U.S. administration and the airlines. But the plan to arm pilots was never enacted. 

The agency has not yet decided on “nonlethal” weapons, including stun guns, which “stun” the muscles. United Airlines is training its pilots to use Tasers, electric stun guns that disrupt control of the muscles, CNN reported. 

To date, the administration of President George W. Bush has preferred to boost airline security through improving safety checks and having armed air marshals on board commercial flights. 

Arguing that the safety of their passengers was at stake, pilots had said that only lethal force could counter a deadly threat. 

"I believe it is essential that the pilots remain in control of the cockpit at all times," Marc Flagg - a business pilot whose parents died aboard American Airlines Flight 77, which plowed into the Pentagon on September 11 - told lawmakers earlier this month.

 

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