In December 1999, Algerian terrorist Ahmed Ressam was arrested by U.S. border agents as he crossed by ferry from Canada to Port Angeles, Wash. In his car was a trunkload of explosives and detonators that he later said was intended for LAX. Ressam, who plead guilty to the crime, has testified that he trained for his mission in Afghanistan. Even more chilling for anyone who lives near LAX or regularly flies out of its terminals are the scattered reports from a variety of news media that American troops and intelligence agents searching Al Qaeda strongholds have found mockups or plans of LAX. When all this evidence is considered in light of the terrorists' previous tenacity once they identify a target, it makes the Los Angeles Police Department, the LAX Police, and the other men and women charged with protecting the airport just a bit nervous.
It also adds to the urgency of the mission of the 146th Airlift Wing of the California Air National Guard. As part of Operation Noble Eagle (the defense of the American homeland), the men and women of the Air Guard-sharing duties with an Army Guard unit-stand posts throughout the terminals of LAX with loaded M-16s and sidearms.
Ironically, the primary mission of the Channel Islands-based Air Guard unit is not security but emergency airlift for medical evacuations. But times of war bring unusual marching orders, and the unit is proud to be an integral part of Operation AeroSafe (South), the defense of Southern California's airports. And it's important to note that even though security is not the primary duty of the 146th Airlift Wing, when it comes to successfully executing its new mission, the unit has one major hole card: cops in the ranks.
"When all this happened in September, being a patriot and an American, and being involved in the military, I wanted to fly to New York the next day," says Lt. Bob Parks, a patrolman with the San Fernando (Calif.) Police Department in "civilian" life. "When this mission came up, I thought, 'What better mission for me with my law enforcement background?' This is both a law enforcement and a security mission. I went to my commanders, and I said, 'Hey, if you need me, I'm there.'"
For obvious reasons, Air Guard officials won't say how many troops muster at their westside L.A. armory for duty at LAX, nor what percentage of these individuals have been called up from daily life as law enforcement officers. They will say, however, that the Air Guard ranks of "Team LAX" include police officers from numerous Southern California cities, sheriff's deputies from Los Angeles and surrounding counties, corrections officers, and U.S. Border Patrol agents.