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U.S. warns against having same airport security systems

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A Yemeni security officer searches a passenger in the departure lounge at Sanaa International Airport January 19, 2010. REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah

A Yemeni security officer searches a passenger in the departure lounge at Sanaa International Airport January 19, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Khaled Abdullah

TOLEDO | Fri Jan 22, 2010 7:54am EST

TOLEDO (Reuters) - The United States does not want countries to use identical airport security systems which could make it easier for potential attackers to elude them, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano said on Friday.

"What we want to avoid is a 'cookie cutter' (identical) approach, because then the terrorists know about the approach and they plan around it," Napolitano said during a visit to Europe to discuss tightening airport security.

U.S. use of full body scanning airline passengers has increased in the wake of a failed bombing attempt last month on a U.S. passenger jet, though some European countries are reticent to introduce technology that could violate privacy.

"There is a whole mix of technology and practices that can be done at airports independently of scanners and this is what we are focused on as an international consensus," the Security Secretary said.

Napolitano is flying to Geneva to meet airline associations after agreeing with her EU counterparts on Thursday in the Spanish city of Toledo to propose new measures on airline passenger information sharing by April.

Thursday's meeting was prompted by the failed Christmas Day attempt to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner blamed on Nigerian Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, who boarded the plane in Amsterdam carrying a home-made explosive device.

(Reporting by Jonathan Gleave, Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

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