and tactics employed. Reassessment, if it is to be of any value in the preventative sense, should be based on accurate and timely intelligence concerning the intentions, capabilities andactions of terrorists before they reach the airport. Here too, international cooperation has a vital part to play, a fact underlined when the United States signed into law the Foreign Airport Security Act as part
of information to protect certain narrowly determined interests, such as national security or public morals. But any decision to limit or restrict access to information should comport with international standards for protecting the right to information. However, the way the Chinese government manages the internet in accordance with law is a sovereign matter and foreign courts have no jurisdiction
of information systems and networks and what they can do to enhance security, they also should be aware of the potential harm to others arising from interconnectivity and interdependency.
Responsibility: all participants, including policymakers and program designers, are responsible for the security of information systems and networks.
Response: Participants should act in a timely and coope
and Conventions Related to Arms Control
ⅰ. The Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty is a proposed international treaty to prohibit the further production of fissile material for nuclear weapons or other explosive devices.
ⅱ. The United Nations Convention on Certain Conventional Weapons, seeks to provide new rules for the protection of military personnel and, particularly, civilians from injur
of the illegal acts against airlines and airports is such that it is now accepted that countermeasures must be of international concern. The report of the U.S. President's Commission on Aviation Security and Terrorism stresses the need for the necessary will on the part of all governments. "A consensus must be reached among law-abiding nations that terrorism is an actof aggression which can and