Vympel wrote:The lax security of a power plant and the difficulty of stopping a suicide bombing at an airport are two different issues. But as for airport bombings in the Soviet Union, who had a reason to bomb airports in the Soviet Union? Many countries today are safe from terrorism not because their security is great (or even exists) but because they're simply not a target.
Are you saying the wahhabists in the Caucasus just popped out of nowhere in the last 20 years? Or maybe - just maybe - the collapse of the USSR and subsequent civil wars in the Caucasus created mass poverty which was used to recruit jihadists and suicide bombers?
Vympel wrote:So? If anyone wanted to bomb a Chinese railway station, he'd just get into the crowd before reaching the checkpoint and kill dozens. Mission accomplished.
See below. Mission
not accomplished with the same efficiency as inside. The queue is always less people than the terminal itself contains, and outside explosions do not benefit from increased inside pressure. Russian airport halls are not that spacy either. If one watches the video, the explosion was done in a pretty crammed place, at least it seems so from the youtube reports.
Vympel wrote:Any airport is already massively open as it is, the probability of nearby walls making things significantly more lethal isn't considerable, though ceilings might be a factor depending on how low they are. I've been to dozens of airports in my life, and I've never seen a checkpoint which baggage run-through at the entrance. Probably because it'd be painfully inconvenient for everyone.
They used to have a few at several Sheremetyevo terminals when I was flying, but I've seen none elsewhere. However, considering the high level of threat to public transport in Russia, I would consider inconvenience an acceptable price.
Vympel wrote:I just read that this airport *did* have a security entrance at the concourse entrance, but it was removed last spring - because of the inconvenience.
How inconvenient! Now we have thirty dead bodies and a hundred wounded. I believe it matters a bit more than the inconvenience.
To make it clear - my relatives in Moscow use that airport (Domodedovo) on a more or less regular basis.