Record crowds to attend inauguration

Record crowds to attend inauguration

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Washington: Barack Obama's inauguration as the first US black president will take place on Tuesday amid unprecedented security aimed at protecting him as well as the record crowds expected to attend.

With about 1.5 million people expected to take part in three days of festivities - including the swearing-in, parade and inaugural balls - tens of thousands of police and troops will guard the land, skies and waters around Washington.

The Homeland Security Department and other authorities see no credible or specific threat of an attack. But they say they are prepared for a wide range of potential catastrophes, including a chemical weapons attack and bitterly cold weather.

"You've got to stretch your imagination because we're really almost talking the unthinkable," said Army General Richard Rowe, who oversees the military's inaugural preparations as head of the joint military task force for the Washington area.

Raised fears

This will be the first inauguration of a new president since the September 11 attacks that sharply raised America's fears of a domestic attack and elevated security measures.

Obama will inherit wars with Al Qaida and other enemies in Afghanistan and Iraq. Al Qaida leader Osama bin Laden taunted Obama in a message this week, declaring that the new US president faced a guerrilla war that would only widen.

Obama's election - seen as a triumph in the long struggle for equality by African-Americans - also has stirred white supremacists to anger, sparked arrests during his campaign and raised assassination fears. Security officials say they have planned, staffed and exercised for more than a year against a vast array of potential threats.

"In my over 25-year career, this is the biggest event that I have been a part of," said Mark Sullivan, director of the Secret Service, which is in charge of overall inaugural security.

Asked whether Obama's historic inauguration posed special concerns, Sullivan said: "No matter who we're protecting, we're always concerned with their security. We take a look at each event, we take a look at the people we protect, and we put a plan together."

An estimated 8,000 police officers, about half from outside the Washington area, will be deployed, said Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty. Some 10,000 National Guard reserve troops and 7,500 active-duty soldiers will also take part.

An intensified air patrol will guard the skies, and rivers bordering the city will be patrolled. Other security measures include stationing chemical-sensing teams, closing bridges into the city and sealing off a large area of downtown to cars.

"There are going to be a lot of things out there you're going to see, and there are going to be lot of things you don't see," said Sullivan.

Precautions

The threat of chemical, biological or radiological weapons figured prominently in the precautions, and the November attacks in Mumbai by heavily armed gunmen were a wake-up call, said Rowe, who acknowledged, "It gave me willies."

Obama will ride in a new high-security Cadillac limousine for the inaugural parade, in front of an anticipated capacity crowd of about 350,000 spectators.

"It is safe to say that this car's security and coded communications systems make it the most technologically advanced protection vehicle in the world," said the Secret Service, which declined to give specifics.

Officials expect to break the crowd record of 1.2 million people set for Lyndon Johnson's inauguration in 1965 and Washington authorities expect close to 10,000 buses to bring in visitors.

Said Virginia Governor Tim Kaine, an early Obama supporter: "The are are not a lot of days in a life where you know when you wake up you'll remember it for the rest of your life. This is going to be one of those days."

Washington (Bloomberg) Bill Clinton said his presidential honeymoon lasted 35 seconds. Dwight Eisenhower's never really ended. Gerald Ford's monthlong glow vanished overnight with his "full, free and absolute" pardon of Richard Nixon.

All new presidents enjoy that fickle grace period marked by relative harmony and low-decibel partisanship.

For Barack Obama, the question is how long his honeymoon will endure and how much of his ambitious agenda he can achieve before it ends, perhaps - if history is a guide - as a result of his own actions.

"New presidents abort their own honeymoons," said political analyst Charlie Cook.

"There's a residual goodwill that comes into office with them, and it stays with them until they end it by making mistakes."

Presidential honeymoons provide Americans a first in-depth look at their newly elected leader while granting him a chance to set a tone and style that is likely to carry long-term consequences for the country and his presidency.

"First impressions tend to be lasting ones," said Thomas Mann, a political analyst at the Brookings Institution, a research organisation in Washington.

"Mistakes made early can certainly weaken a president - not necessarily destroy his presidency but slow him down."

Obama, 47, inherits two wars and what is billed as the worst economic climate since the Great Depression. Still, he is poised to enjoy a sweeter honeymoon than most of his predecessors.

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