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posted by martyb on Sunday June 04 2017, @08:53PM   Printer-friendly
from the is-there-a-solution-that-is-less-bad-than-the-problem? dept.

If it seems like every week, there's another terrorist attack – well, you're not wrong. According to one crowdsourcing map, there have been over 500 attacks around the world since the start of 2017, with over 3,500 fatalities. For a period in 2016, ISIS-initiated attacks were occurring, on average, every 84 hours.

Despite improvements in methods and coordination among law enforcement agencies over the past 25 years, they're still hamstrung in a number of ways. With large public gatherings of people becoming more attractive targets for terrorists, what are the best strategies moving forward?

[...] But despite huge budgets and the presence of thousands of added security personnel, it's virtually impossible to prevent a determined terrorist, or guarantee absolute safety. While security efforts for events like the Olympic Games have escalated, terrorists today no longer wait for major events that draw global interest.

[...] The odds are in favor of terrorists. All they have to do is succeed once, no matter how many times they try. For public safety professionals to be fully successful, they have to prevent 100 percent of the terror attempts. It's a number to aspire to, but even the most experienced countries fighting terror – such as Israel and the U.K. – can't measure up to this standard.

[...] These days, it's necessary to consider any place where crowds congregate as vulnerable "soft targets" for the attackers. To better prepare for securing soft targets (and this isn't to say threats against "hard targets," like planes, buildings and infrastructure, have diminished) law enforcement agencies must improve coordination among one another, whether it's via intelligence, information sharing and training. And then there's the need for deconfliction, which refers to avoiding self-defeating behavior – from interagency rivalries and poor communication to insufficient coordination – by people who are on the same side.

[...] Given that there is no way to guarantee complete safety, and that the threat assessment expects more attacks, there are two more elements that ought to receive more attention: community resilience and community policing.

https://theconversation.com/how-can-we-better-protect-crowds-from-terrorism-78443

[Related]:

1996 Atlanta Olympic Games: https://www.britannica.com/event/Atlanta-Olympic-Games-bombing-of-1996

Secure Airport Design: https://skift.com/2016/07/04/how-smart-airport-design-can-make-spaces-more-secure/

Do you agree with this assessment of the security situation ? What do you think could be done to mitigate the effects of such asymmetric warfare ?


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 05 2017, @03:05AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 05 2017, @03:05AM (#520549)

    A stick is much simpler to make and to use

    I already used the word "versatile".
    You can hold both ends in 1 hand and have a stick.
    You can also use it like a nutcracker to apply pressure to a forearm and get instant compliance.
    The fact that is suddenly becomes twice as long when 1 end is released is for those situations that call for that.

    I don't think you've seen a proper demonstration of the multitude of proper uses by police.

    regarding line breaks: I don't want to make people scroll sideways

    I don't think that you understand how HTML works at all.
    No one else does what you do, yet their text appears normally.
    Whitespace at/near the end of the line will allow for automatic linefeeds that make the text flow.
    The only way to get what you described is to PURPOSELY put non-breaking spaces between all your words.
    ...or to make a string of unbroken text (no spaces) that is longer than the viewer's window is (e.g. a heinously-long URL).
    ...and the way this site's stylesheet works, even that last thing is dealt with to avoid scrollbars.

    What you are doing is absolutely unnecessary.
    ...and, as I said to the other guy, making assumptions about what other folks have for a system configuration is bound to not work for everyone anyway.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]