Three intelligence officials told the Washington Post
the possible threats included releasing a biological
agent like smallpox or anthrax on a plane so those
aboard would spread the infection without knowing it.
British Airways, Air France and Continental Airlines
said on Saturday they had canceled several transatlantic
flights scheduled for Sunday and Monday citing security
concerns.
Continental Airlines also scrapped a flight on Sunday
from Washington to Houston, site of the Super Bowl
football championship which draws one of the biggest TV
audiences of the year in the United States.
A Homeland Security spokeswoman said the airline
canceled Flight 1519 after the department recommended
security measures in light of an unspecified threat. She
said there was no intelligence suggesting a threat to
the Super Bowl.
"The threat to this flight was similar to the type of
information we had about the British Airways and Air
France flights," the spokeswoman said, without
elaborating.
A grounded BA London-Washington flight was the same
service canceled several times in January because of
security worries.
"There are a handful of flights we are concerned
about, and British Airways has canceled about half of
them," a U.S. official said, on condition of anonymity.
"We have received threat reporting that indicates al
Qaeda's desire to target these particular flights."
Al Qaeda is held responsible for the September 11,
2001, attacks on the United States involving four
hijacked commercial planes. About 3,000 people were
killed in those attacks.
U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Tom Ridge has said
the U.S. government consistently receives intelligence
that al Qaeda is still interested in using aircraft for
attacks.
INTELLIGENCE VAGUE
The Washington Post cited intelligence officials as
saying attackers could try to hijack a plane by
releasing a chemical agent to incapacitate the crew and
passengers or smuggle a radiological device in luggage.
The newspaper said the intelligence on a possible
attack with a weapon of mass destruction was vague.
U.S. officials demanded enhanced security precautions
that some airlines were unable to take, so "it became
easier to just cancel the flights," an administration
official told the Post.
Senator Jay Rockefeller, a senior Democrat on the
Senate intelligence panel, said it was difficult to
counter the threat of chemical or biological weapons
smuggled onto planes.
"That's partly the problem of not checking cargo, and
it's partly the problem of biological weapons, which
nobody has figured out really what to do about yet," he
told Fox News.
"Nobody has any idea about what to do about them on
an airplane or on the ground."
Among the flights canceled was Continental's Sunday
flight from Glasgow to Newark and an Air France flight
from Paris to Washington Sunday and Monday. Sunday's
BA207 flight from London to Miami was also canceled.
In December, Washington raised its terror alert to
the second-highest level and asked British Airways and
Air France to cancel several U.S.-bound flights.
U.S. authorities also asked foreign airlines to put
armed marshals on some flights. Some EU countries oppose
the sky marshals but France and Britain said they were
ready to accept them in some cases.
(Additional reporting by Jeremy Pelofsky in
Washington, Astrid Zweynert in London, and Emelia
Sithole in Paris)