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US ends 'Quiet Skies,' airline passenger screening program

The Transportation Security Administration is discontinuing the "Quiet Skies", aviation security watchlist program, which designated certain passengers as higher-risks for enhanced screening.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Nuem stated that the program cost $200 million per year and was "used to target political enemies and benefit political allies." She said that the TSA will continue to perform vetting tasks related to commercial aviation security. The TSA screens over 900 million passengers annually.

Republicans are concerned that Tulsi Gabrield, a former legislator, was briefly listed on the Quiet Skies List by the TSA. Trump appointed Gabbard as the director of National Intelligence.

Bennie Thompson, the top Democrat in the panel, denied that the program was a political one and criticized the decision to end it, saying, "this shameful effort to dismantle a National Security Agency which protects us against terror attacks will make us less secure."

He said that Gabbard was "automatic and well-deserved" to be listed. The process was the same for both the Republican and Democratic administrations, including the Trump administration.

Mark Green, the Chair of the House Homeland Security Committee, praised the decision made to terminate the program. Green stated that while the Quiet Skies Program was designed to reduce threats to U.S. Aviation Security, it has now been revealed to be a political watchlist.

On the list, passengers are subjected to enhanced screening. This includes a patdown and an explosives detection, as well as a physical search of their property, electronics and shoes. In a 2020 report, the inspector general criticized the program. It said that the TSA had not "developed outcome-based performance measures and goals to demonstrate program efficacy" and there were software algorithm and systems malfunctions. In 2018, the American Civil Liberties Union said that the program was "covert surveillance" of innocent flyers and that the TSA used "secret criteria including travel patterns and specific behavior to determine which travellers to target."

After Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab's 2009 attempt to detonate an explosive hidden inside his underwear aboard a U.S. aircraft near Detroit, the U.S. Government sought to improve screening for potential threats.

TSA began using factors based on risk in 2012 to identify passengers who may be at higher risk and assign them to the Quiet Skies Program. In 2018, the Federal Air Marshal Service started prioritizing air marshals for flights with Quiet Skies passengers.

(source: Reuters)