Pubdate: Fri, 22 Sep 2006 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Sheldon Alberts, CanWest News Service VIRTUAL FENCE TO LINE B.C. BORDER Provincial Crossings Vulnerable To Smugglers And Terrorists WASHINGTON -- Sections of the Canada-U.S. border in British Columbia and southwestern Ontario -- areas deemed most vulnerable to drug smuggling and terrorist infiltrations -- are likely the first locations where American authorities will deploy a "virtual fence" of high-tech monitoring equipment to stop illegal crossings, Homeland Security officials said Thursday. Detailing plans for an array of sensors, infrared cameras, watchtowers, and drones that will eventually stretch across America's entire 8,890-km border with Canada, U.S. authorities said their goal is to have the world's longest undefended border under surveillance within three to six years. "We are looking at making it just that, making it a guarded border," U.S. Border Patrol chief David Aguilar told reporters. His comments followed a Department of Homeland Security announcement that Chicago-based Boeing Corp. has been awarded an initial $67-million US contract to begin work on the project, known as the Secure Border Initiative. Starting with a 45-km section of the U.S.-Mexico border south of Tucson, Ariz., the project will expand along both the Canadian and Mexican boundaries based on evaluations of the threat posed by illegal immigrants, drug smugglers and terrorists. "What we are looking to build is a virtual fence, a 21st-century virtual fence," said U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff. "The border is not just a uniform place. It is a very complicated mix. . . . What applies in one stretch of the border is not going to be what applies in another stretch." U.S. officials said their priority is to gain operational control of its southern border with Mexico, where more than one million immigrants are caught sneaking into the country every year. Fewer than 10,000 people were detained trying to enter the U.S. illegally from Canada in 2004, but American officials have struggled to prevent the flow of narcotics across its northern border. It has also identified Toronto and Vancouver as hubs for the smuggling of Asian immigrants into the U.S. "We will expand rapidly to take on the task at hand," said Michael Jackson, the deputy secretary of Homeland Security. "Our preliminary focus is on the southwest border but from the very beginning we will be looking at the northern border and trying to define the right [surveillance equipment] to do the job there." Aguilar identified border areas stretching from Detroit to Buffalo, N.Y., the area surrounding Blaine, Wash., and remote stretches in Vermont and Maine as the areas most in need of high-tech surveillance. It was at the Port Angeles, Wash., ferry terminal, west of Blaine, that border agents apprehended would-be millennium bomber Ahmed Ressam arriving from Victoria in December 1999. In 2005, U.S. agents discovered a 120-metre-long smuggling tunnel linking a Quonset hut in Aldergrove to the living room of a house in Lynden, Wash. "Those are basically your lay down areas of interest to us," Aguilar said. "We don't ignore the others. But based on a risk-management prioritization, those are the ones we take a look at." Boeing's initial contract proposal had called for a total of 1,800 high-tech surveillance towers along both the Mexican and Canadian borders, but Homeland Security officials said Thursday they "had not reached a decision" on the final number to be erected on either boundary. The towers would be equipped with a gaggle of heat and motion sensors and infrared cameras that could be controlled remotely by U.S. Border Patrol agents. Boeing will also employ a system of ground-based radars, "smart-fencing technology," unmanned aerial drones and even subterranean scanners aimed at helping border agents properly identify who -- or what -- is crossing into U.S. territory. The information gathered by the surveillance equipment will be available in real-time to border agents. "We don't want to send the border patrol chasing coyotes ...that are coming across the border," said Chertoff. "We want them chasing people coming across the border." Homeland Security refused to speculate on the ultimate cost of the Secure Border Initiatives, but industry officials have estimated it could reach $2.5 billion US. Plans for the "virtual fence" are separate from efforts by Republicans in Congress to build more than 1,100 kilometres of double-layered security fences along the U.S.-Mexico border. The congressional plan would also require Homeland Security to study the feasibility of erecting physical barriers along the Canada-U.S. border as a complement the surveillance technology. The U.S. surveillance plan has drawn no protest from Ottawa, which is far more worried about a plan to require Canadian travellers to have passports or another approved secure documents at land borders by 2008. Still, there is concern among Canadian and U.S. business interests that the Secure Border Initiative will draw precious funding away from the construction of border infrastructure to help speed commerce between the two countries. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek