We do not have to wait for the present wave of terrorism to burn itself out, as it will surely do. There are things we can do to mitigate these vehicle attacks. We cannot stop them entirely, but we can make it so that after the first impact, the engine cuts out.
Here is a letter that I wrote to the National Security Council back in August. It says IN CONFIDENCE, because there might have been a slight advantage to bring this in without announcement, but they did not acknowledge or answer the letter, so I'm going public. If you see the advantage of the idea, you could send your own. It might get an answer if you send through your MP. My MP is not working for me atm, because I challenged the veracity of a statement he made about fracking.
Anyway, here's the plan:
The Secretary
National Security
Council
10 Downing St
London SW1
IN CONFIDENCE
Dear Sir or Madam
re Protecting the
public against terrorist attacks using vehicles
I am writing to the NSC
as you have the role of developing effective protective security
policies and capabilities for government.
The recent horrific
terrorist vehicle attack in Barcelona, following other such
atrocities in Nice, Berlin, London Westminster, Stockholm, London
Bridge, London Finsbury Park and Charlottesville are a cause of great
concern, as they turn every vehicle into a potential weapon. Physical
defence against such weaponry, building barriers to separate
pedestrians from traffic countrywide, would be enormously expensive
and disruptive.
There is a far more
cost-effective way to protect the public against these attacks.
A quick patent search
shows several Vehicle Collision Detectors (for example
JP2015081070(A)) registered by serious actors such as Toyota, Fuji
Heavy Industries Ltd and Denso Corporation. These are designed to
warn drivers when they have hit someone. It would be a very simple
matter to link one of these warning systems to the on board computer
so that the ignition was switched off immediately on impact.
The effect of this
would be to prevent the vehicle from continuing to power on through a
crowd of pedestrians, and so would mitigate the damage done by this
modality of terrorism.
This device could be
described as a Vehicle Impact Detector and Immobiliser (VIDI). It
could be developed and tested in a matter of weeks.
Every innovation has a potential downside. One is
that a vehicle fitted with a VIDI might hit a pedestrian and pin him
or her against an immobile structure. On level or upward sloping
ground the vehicle could be rolled away. On downward sloping land the
situation might persist until the engine could be restarted or the
vehicle pulled away. This would in any case be a rare event, so we
would have to balance this rare event against the prospect of
continued, multiple murders by terrorists, which could conceivably
continue for a few more years, with all that means for community
cohesion and confidence in Government.
I hope therefore that you will give this proposal
serious consideration. Please feel free to pose any questions that
you may have.
Sincerely,
Richard Lawson
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