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Sen. Barbara Boxer, center, speaks at a Capitol Hill rally Thursday, Sept. 5, by flight attendants calling for better self-defense training
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WASHINGTON,
September 6 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The U.S. Senate voted
Thursday, September 5, to arm U.S. commercial airline pilots and allow
them to use lethal force to protect threatened aircraft, despite the
U.S. administration's objections to such legislation.
Approved
by an overwhelming 87-6 vote, the measure states that all specifically
trained pilots would be able to carry guns in the cockpit within 24
months of enactment.
"This
is an important thing to do for homeland security: to make sure we are
doing everything to avoid another 9/11," Senator Barbara Boxer
said just minutes before the vote, Agence France-Presse (AFP)
reported.
After
the September
11
attacks, pilots had fiercely argued that only lethal force could
counter the deadly threat of hijackings.
The
measure, attached as an amendment to the larger homeland security bill
currently being debated in the Senate, also states that the cockpit
door would not be opened during a flight except in cases of mechanical
or physiological emergency.
Congress
passed legislation last year permitting pilots to carry handguns at
the discretion of the airlines and President George W. Bush's
administration. But the plan to arm pilots was never enacted.
To
date, U.S. President George W. Bush’s administration has preferred
to boost airline security by improving airport safety checks and
having armed air marshals on board a number of commercial flights.
"The
Bush administration ... has not been a strong supporter of guns in the
cockpit at this point," said Senator Bob Smith, who crafted the
amendment along with Boxer and other senators.
Criticizing
the quality of airport security since the September 2001 attacks,
Boxer defended the need to arm pilots.
"Security
checkpoints are not doing what they should," she said. "We
need to have this provision. This is an overwhelming vote, and I think
it reflects the people."
The
vote was hailed by the Allied Pilots Association (APA), which
represents some 14,500 American Airlines pilots.
"Members
of Congress have come to understand what the American people have
known for months – only lethal force can stop lethal intent,"
said Al Aitken, a representative of the APA's Committee for Armed
Defense of the Cockpit.
In
a landmark 310-113 vote in July, the U.S. House of Representatives
similarly agreed to allow U.S. pilots to carry lethal weapons while
flying commercial aircraft and called for immediate implementation
upon enactment of the bill.
The
measure dictates that within 120 days of enactment, no fewer than 500
qualified pilots would be deputized, becoming federal flight deck
officers. Within 24 months, any qualified pilot would have to be
deputized "to carry a firearm to defend the flight deck of a
commercial passenger or cargo aircraft."
That
officer "may also use force [including lethal force] against an
individual in the defense of a commercial aircraft," according to
the measure.
There
are between 33,000 and 35,000 commercial flights a day in the United
States.

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