SF fiery crash highlights cities' vulnerability to tankers used as weapons

Published 19 March 2010

More than 800,000 trucks carry shipments of hazardous materials every day across the United States; background checks of those hauling hazardous materials are designed to prevent fugitives, the mentally ill, and those convicted of terrorism, espionage, or murder from obtaining a HAZMAT hauling license; one security expert: “It’s very difficult now to purchase explosives … but it’s not that hard to steal a truck full of gasoline, and you can do quite a bit of damage”

The United States has invested tens of billions of dollars since the 9/11 attacks on bolstering aviation security. Substantial amounts of money, if not at the level of aviation security-related outlays, were directed at shoring up maritime and port security. Many security experts have given expression to their concern that land transportation — from mass transit and transportation hubs to rail and truck operations — have been treated as an afterthought in U.S. security planning and investment.

These worries came to the fore a after last Sunday’s fiery gasoline truck accident destroyed key ramps in the MacArthur Maze interchange near the eastern end of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in Oakland, California.

San Francisco Chronicle’s Anna Badkhen writes that security analysts and truck drivers weighed the scope of damage a deliberate terrorist attack using tankers could cause U.S. metropolises and highways. Security experts said the crash — and the costly repairs — demonstrated how easy it would be for terrorists to disrupt normal life in major U.S. cities. “It’s very difficult now to purchase explosives … but it’s not that hard to steal a truck full of gasoline, and you can do quite a bit of damage,” said Christopher Falkenberg, a former U.S. Secret Service agent who is now the president of Insite Security, a consulting firm in New York. “You don’t need access to sophisticated explosives to have a big impact.”

San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom has called the accident a giant wake-up call, saying it highlighted how vulnerable San Francisco is to a potential terrorist attack.

Badkhen quotes Nico Melendes, spokesman for the Transportation Security Agency (TSA), that truck drivers already are required to undergo a mandatory background check to haul hazardous materials, such as gasoline. Congress mandated the background checks as part of the USA Patriot Act in 2001, concerned that trucks could be used as weapons of mass destruction. The checks — carried out by the FBI and other security agencies (depending on which state the driver is from) — are designed to prevent fugitives, the mentally ill, and those convicted of terrorism, espionage or murder from hauling hazardous materials.

Background checks, though, do not prevent gasoline tankers from being stolen or hijacked by determined terrorists, said John Conley, president of National Tank Truck Carriers, an association of truckers. “It’s certainly a concern,” said Conley. “Somebody stealing a cargo tank and doing something bad with it. Once the truck is out the gate it is out there, and it is vulnerable to somebody who would be willing to go after it and hijack it.”

The U.S. Transportation Department says that more than 800,000 trucks carry shipments of hazardous materials every day across the United States.

Badkhen quotes Falkenberg to say that although the damage from a gasoline truck bomb would be less than from some other weapons, it could significantly impair the economies of major metropolitan areas. “All the schedules and all the adjusting of time and inventory — when that whole system really breaks down, that’s really expensive,” he said, especially if you “have several arteries damaged at the same time.”

Chris Bertelli, deputy director of the California’s Office of Homeland Security, told Badkhen that his agency will examine the economic fallout of Sunday’s accident. “Looking at our infrastructure and our economic infrastructure is very important,” said Bertelli. “Anytime there is a way for us to plug in real information from a real world … is gonna make us better prepared.”

Neither the federal Department of Homeland Security nor the TSA said it was investigating Sunday’s accident. Melendes said there is little the federal authorities can do to prevent trucks carrying gasoline from being used as bombs. “How do we do this, set up checkpoints on the freeway?” he said. “Living in a free society there are things we can’t control. The Constitution basically would not allow it.”