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US officials removed over Biden's airline passenger watchlist

The Trump administration announced Tuesday that it has removed five senior officials for suspicions of targeting political opponents of former President Joe Biden with an aviation security watchlist, which is now abolished.

Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Kristi Noem announced that she would refer the matter to the Justice Department Civil Rights Division as well as to Congress to conduct further investigations.

The Transportation Security Administration’s “Quiet Skies” program, which was scrapped in late June, required enhanced screening of some air passengers who were deemed to pose a greater security risk.

Noem's department, which includes the TSA (Transportation Security Administration), said that the program costs $200 million per year and was used to "target and benefit political allies and political opponents."

Her department stated that under Biden the program would have watchedlisted and denied boarding passengers who refused to comply with COVID's mask mandates in airplanes and others connected to a mob assault on the U.S. Capitol, on January 6, 2021. This was to prevent Biden winning the 2020 election.

Trump fired the TSA's head on January 20, and he hasn't named a permanent successor. The program was heavily criticized by many Republicans in Congress.

TSA screens over 900,000,000 airline passengers annually and continues to perform vetting duties tied to commercial aviation safety.

The executive assistant administrator of the TSA for operations support, and the assistant assistant administrator in charge of intelligence and analysis have been removed.

Tulsi Gabrield, then a congresswoman and now Trump's director for national intelligence, was briefly on the TSA "Quiet Skies Watchlist".

A report by the Inspector General in 2020 stated that the TSA failed to set benchmarks for demonstrating the effectiveness of the program, and software and system failures meant that passengers were not taken off the list at the appropriate time.

After Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab's 2009 attempt to detonate an explosive concealed in his underwear aboard an American airliner near Detroit, the U.S. Government sought to improve screening for potential threats. (Reporting and editing by Chizu Nomiyama, Kevin Liffey and David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)