It’s a year later, but are we any safer?
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While the anniversary of Sept. 11 is sparking great reflection and
massive amounts of news coverage this week, the origin for the Daily
Pilot’s main stories today can be traced back to last May.
That’s when 10 Chinese immigrants were dropped off naked somewhere
near the El Morro Mobile Home park in the dead of night.
They floated ashore at Crystal Cove with life jackets and buoys
and rafts and a set of dry clothes to change into. They would have
gotten away clean were it not for the alertness of teenage girls up
late for a slumber party at El Morro.
Think about that. A band of men in the dead of night landing on
local shores, unbeknownst to any of us. Incredible right? Especially
after what we had just experienced on Sept. 11.
And then came this chilling line from our harbor columnist Mike
Whitehead a few day later:
“In closing, if the 10 Chinese illegal immigrants that were caught
after swimming ashore at Crystal Cove had simply disembarked at high
noon at a dock in Newport Harbor under the guise of a private boat
cruise, would anyone have noticed?”
And I had more questions.
What if they were Al Qaeda terrorists, or some other group with
nothing but harmful intents? And are local officials still performing
business as usual when it comes to our safety?
So I asked my news staff to see if they could answer Whitehead’s
and my questions.
I’m not sure that we have.
Today, we launch four days worth of coverage surrounding the
anniversary of Sept. 11. called One Year Later: Newport-Mesa
Reflects.
In the next few days, we will learn how public safety, emergency,
airport and health officials are prepared to handle a potential
terrorist attack, how life has changed for all of us from
grade-school teachers to firemen and, on Wednesday, we’ll celebrate
along with the rest of the nation the deep unity we now feel.
But are we safer?
Today, we begin by asking and trying to answer that tough
question.
To be sure, the agencies charged with protecting the beaches and
harbors -- the Coast Guard, the Harbor Patrol, the police and the
lifeguards -- have certainly stepped up their awareness.
But for those readers who sleep easy at night because they believe
the Coast Guard or the military is patrolling our shores to make sure
we are safe, I hate to break this news to you, but that is an
impossible task.
Not only that, but much like the days before the Sept. 11 attacks
were seared into our memory banks, it seems the attitude that we
really are not at risk -- that terrorism can’t happen here -- has
become as pervasive as ever.
Take for example an exchange between my reporters and security
officials a few months back when we learned that a terrorist alert
had been issued for the nation’s ports and harbors.
The alert, issued on a slow Sunday afternoon, was broadcast on
local news stations and carried by other media outlets.
When we called our local agencies to see what measures they were
taking in light of the terrorist alert, they didn’t know what we were
talking about.
I know, I know, most of you are thinking it’s not very likely that
terrorists will strike Newport Harbor. That it’s not likely that
Osama bin Laden’s forces are poised to land at Crystal Cove.
And you’d probably be right.
But then again, how many of us thought it likely that terrorists
would use airplanes to demolish the World Trade Center towers and
take a chunk out of the Pentagon and drive a knife of terror through
all of our hearts?
So instead of playing a dangerous false-sense-of-security game, we
will continue to ask those questions, continue to find out from our
security officials if they are on a heightened sense of alert.
Because just like everything else that changed that fateful
September morning, the truth is, never again can we utter the words:
“It can’t happen here.”
* TONY DODERO is the editor. He can be reached at 949-574-4258 or
via e-mail at [email protected].
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