logo
FBI sharpens focus on counter-terrorism after Iran strikes

FBI sharpens focus on counter-terrorism after Iran strikes

BBC News5 hours ago

Officials across the US are on heightened alert after the US bombing of nuclear facilities in Iran.There is no specific threat but in recent days, the FBI and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have spoken with governors and law enforcement agencies across the country about the heightened threat environment. The FBI has also shifted some of its agents, who have been helping on immigration-related cases, back to counter-terrorism efforts, sources told the BBC's US partner CBS. Within two days of the Iranian strikes, US immigration officials arrested 11 Iranian citizens in the US, including men with alleged ties to Iran's military and paramilitary proxy groups.
Authorities have not suggested any of those arrested were involved or linked to a specific plot in the US, and the Department of Homeland Security has said there are no credible threats currently to US soil. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) told CBS, the BBC's news partner, that the arrests were part of President Donald Trump's efforts to deport immigrants in the US illegally.One man arrested in Minnesota is an alleged former member of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard who has "admitted connections to Hezbollah", according to ICE. Another man who was arrested In Mississippi had been living in the US for eight years and had allegedly been designated by the US as a known or suspected terrorist. Another man arrested in Alabama allegedly served for three years as a sniper in Iran's military before moving to the US in 2024. The arrests came after DHS and the FBI hosted calls over the weekend with state leaders and hundreds of law enforcement agencies to inform them of the heightened threat environment and ensure they are being vigilant and reaching out to those who could be at risk, including those in the Jewish community, US media reported. In recent days, Republican lawmakers and Trump administration officials have spoken often about the threat of Iranian "sleeper cells" who infiltrated the US under the Biden administration.Although no direct or public threat has been made by Iran to attack the US homeland - and there is a current ceasefire in effect in the conflict between Iran and Israel - the country has a long history of sponsoring violent attacks in the US, says Dr Lorenzo Vidino from the George Washington University Program on Extremism. In 1980, shortly after Iran's Islamic Revolution, an Iranian dissident was assassinated in the US state of Maryland. More recently, the US says Iran has planned assassinations of American officials, including Trump and his former National Security Adviser John Bolton.Dozens of people with ties to Iran have been arrested in recent years, according to Dr Vidino, although many of those arrests stem from sanctions violations. He cites a man who sold restricted night-vision goggles to Iran, but adds it's unclear whether the individual had ideological ties to Iran or simply was a businessman seeking to profit. The men most recently arrested, he suspects, had been watched by the US for some time. But agents decided to swoop in to detain them in light of the recent flare-up in violence between the US and Iran.Other Iranians in the US have been arrested in the past while scouting potential targets for attacks.In a separate bulletin, the National Terrorism Advisory System warned of a "heightened threat environment in the United States". While it did not mention any specific threats, it said it to be especially vigilant against "low-level cyber attacks against US networks".Discussions between federal and local officials regarding national security has been commonplace since the 11 September 2001 terror attacks on the US. Terror events, mass shootings or attacks targeting a segment of the population often lead to an increased law enforcement presence and heightened security stance. Since the US involvement in Iran, police patrols have been increased in communities nationwide at certain sensitive sites, including buildings with connections to the US or Israeli governments, or to Judaism. Some FBI personnel, who were focusing on immigration enforcement as part of Trump's deportation goals, have reportedly been brought back to focusing on counter-terrorism, according to CBS News. On Sunday, the bureau distributed a memo to field offices telling them to focus resources on terror threats.The FBI has not confirmed any shift in priorities. "The FBI does not comment on specific operational adjustments or personnel decisions," the agency said in a statement. "However, we continuously assess and realign our resources to respond to the most pressing threats to our national security and to ensure the safety of the American people."

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Donald Trump is not the first politician to swear in public. Here are six more infamous expletives
Donald Trump is not the first politician to swear in public. Here are six more infamous expletives

The Guardian

time14 minutes ago

  • The Guardian

Donald Trump is not the first politician to swear in public. Here are six more infamous expletives

According to Donald Trump, Iran and Israel 'don't know what the fuck they're doing'. Waking up to find the ceasefire he had brokered had been violated, the US president told reporters outside the White House: 'Israel, as soon as we made the deal, they came out and they dropped a load of bombs, the likes of which I've never seen before, the biggest load that we've seen.' 'We basically have two countries that have been fighting so long and so hard that they don't know what the fuck they're doing.' Asked about Trump's comments on Wednesday, the Australian prime minister Anthony Albanese said, 'I think that he stated his views pretty abruptly and I think they were very clear.' Sign up for Guardian Australia's breaking news email The furious expletive reflected 'the gravity, the enormity of the situation in the Middle East', the treasurer, Jim Chalmers, said earlier in the day. Trump is not the first leader to drop the f-word in a high-profile situation. Here are similarly startling instances. Amid all-night climate talks with world leaders in Copenhagen in 2009, former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd used the phrase 'rat-fucking' to describe China's stone-walling on a deal. Rudd was exhausted and exasperated when he began his rant against the Chinese government, political commentator David Marr wrote in his Quarterly Essay on Rudd. 'His anger was real, but his language seemed forced, deliberately foul,' Marr wrote. 'In this mood, he'd been talking about countries 'rat-fucking' each other for days. Was a deal still possible, asked one of the Australians. 'Depends whether those rat-fucking Chinese want to fuck us'.' (Rudd said this in a briefing off the record, but it was reported anyway. It was not his only brush with having his swearing leaked.) As King Charles finished addressing Australian parliament during his visit in 2024, he was met by a protest from independent senator Lidia Thorpe, who approached the stage yelling, 'This is not your country'. 'You committed genocide against our people. Give us our land back. Give us what you stole from us – our bones, our skulls, our babies, our people,' Thorpe, a Gunnai, Gunditjmara and Djab Wurrung woman said. 'You destroyed our land. Give us a treaty.' As security officers escorted Thorpe out, she shouted: 'This is not your land. You are not my king. You are not our king.' And as she was forced back into the foyer, she could be heard shouting: 'Fuck the colony!' Former Mexican president Vicente Fox gave an uncompromising response to Trump's plans as Republican presidential frontrunner to make Mexico pay for a wall sealing off the country along the US border. 'I'm not going to pay for that fucking wall. He should pay for it. He's got the money,' Fox told Jorge Ramos on Fusion in 2016. Fox was asked if he was 'afraid that he's going to be the next president of the United States?', and what that would mean for Mexico. His response: 'No, no, no, – democracy can not take that.' After introducing Barack Obama at the signing ceremony for a healthcare reform legislation at the White House in 2010, then-vice-president Joe Biden turned, hugged the then-US president, and excitedly whispered: 'This is a big fucking deal!' But he was loud enough to be picked up by microphones, and Fox News repeatedly ran the clip, adding to the lore of Biden's loose lips. Paul Gogarty, an Irish Greens member of parliament, had to apologise for using 'unparliamentary language' against a Labour counterpart in a heated exchange over plans to cut social welfare payments. 'I respected your sincerity, I ask that you respect mine,' Gogarty said, before shouting: 'With all due respect and in the most unparliamentary of language, fuck you Deputy Stagg. Fuck you!' Gogarty then immediately apologised: 'I now withdraw and apologise for it, but in outrage, that someone dares to question my sincerity on this issue.' In another Trump-related moment, representative Rashida Tlaib literally swore to impeach the US president just hours after she was sworn in as one of the first two Muslim women in Congress. 'We're gonna impeach the motherfucker,' she said at a 2019 event hosted by the liberal group MoveOn. It drew applause from the room, but also sparked political pushback from Tlaib's Democratic colleagues in the House.

Drone debris found in Ukraine indicates Russia is using new technology from Iran
Drone debris found in Ukraine indicates Russia is using new technology from Iran

The Independent

time30 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Drone debris found in Ukraine indicates Russia is using new technology from Iran

Last week, Ukrainian drone hunters picking up the debris from Russia's nightly assault on their cities found a weapon that stood out from the rest. It had an advanced camera, a computing platform powered by artificial intelligence and a radio link, allowing an operator to pilot it remotely from Russia. It also contained new, Irania n-made, anti-jamming technology, according to a Ukrainian drone expert. Most Russian attack drones are black, said Serhii Beskrestnov, an electronics expert more widely known as Flash. The new one, he told The Associated Press, was white. Inside, there were no markings or labels consistent with Russian-made drones. Instead, the stickers followed a 'standard Iran labeling system,' Beskrestnov said. Experts who spoke to AP said the labels are not conclusive proof but the English-language words are consistent with how Iran marks its drones. It is quite possible, they said, that it was sold by Iran to Russia to test in combat. Moscow has pummeled Ukraine almost nightly with Iranian-designed drones throughout the course of the war, now in its fourth year. They swarm above Ukrainian cities, their moped-like sound filling the air, as air defenses and sharpshooters take aim. While some carry warheads, many are decoys. Russia is improving its drone technology and tactics, striking Ukraine with increasing success. But the U.K's Defense Ministry said Israel's strikes on Iran will 'likely negatively impact the future provision of Iranian military equipment to Russia," since Tehran had supplied 'significant quantities' of attack drones to Moscow. Israeli attacks on Iran Israel's military would not comment on what it struck. Although it has carried out sweeping attacks across Iranian military facilities and the U.S. bombed nuclear sites, the impact on Iran's drone industry is not yet clear. The anti-jammer in the latest drone discovered in Ukraine contained new Iranian technology, suggested Beskrestnov. Other components in Russia's drones often come from Russia, China and the West. Although Russia's drones are based on an Iranian design, the majority are now made in Russia. And because much of the technology to make them, including the Iranian software and technical expertise, has already been transferred to Russia, the immediate impact on Moscow's drone program could be limited, experts said. However, if Israel struck facilities producing drones and components — such as engines and anti-jamming units — which are shipped to Russia, then Moscow could face supply shortages, experts suggested. A secretive Russian factory Moscow makes its Shahed — meaning 'witness' in Farsi — drones based on an Iranian model in a highly secure factory in central Russia. The Alabuga plant in the Tatarstan region took delivery of its first Iranian drones in 2022 after Russia and Iran signed a $1.7 billion deal. It later established its own production lines, churning out thousands of them. The upgrades identified from debris in Ukraine are the latest in a series of innovations that began with Russia buying drones directly from Iran in the fall of 2022, according to leaked documents from Alabuga previously reported on by AP. In early 2023, Iran shipped about 600 disassembled drones to be reassembled in Russia before production was localized. In 2024, the design was adapted. Specialists added cameras to some drones and implemented a plan, revealed in an AP investigation, dubbed Operation False Target — creating decoys to overwhelm Ukrainian air defenses. Alabuga also modified the Shahed to make it more lethal, creating a thermobaric drone which sucks out all the oxygen in its path — potentially collapsing lungs, crushing eyeballs and causing brain damage. The size of the warhead was also upgraded. Jet-propelled drones and AI In at least one case, Iran shipped a jet-powered Shahed that Russia 'experimented' with in Ukraine, said Fabian Hinz, an expert on Russian and Iranian drones at the International Institute for Strategic Studies in London. Ukraine's air force found two more examples of jet-powered Shaheds in May but it appears they have not been widely adopted. That's possibly because the Iranian design uses a very sophisticated jet engine that also powers Iran's cruise missiles, Hinz said. That likely makes it too expensive to use nightly in Ukraine, he said, even if the engine is swapped to a cheaper Chinese model. The electronics in the drone most recently found in Ukraine are also very expensive, Beskrestnov said, pointing to its AI computing platform, camera and radio link. It's unclear why it was deployed but Beskrestnov suggested it could be used to target 'critical infrastructure,' including electrical transmission towers. Previous versions of the Shahed drone could not hit a moving object or change their flight path once launched. They sometimes ended up 'traveling in circles all through Ukraine before they finally hit a target,' which made them easier to shoot down, said David Albright of the Washington-based Institute for Science and International Security. The radio link means an operator can communicate with the drone from Russia, introduce a new target and potentially control many drones at the same time, the experts said. The remotely operable Shahed has similarities to drones Russia is already using on the front lines and is particularly resistant to jamming, Beskrestnov said. There are eight, rather than four, antennas on the drone which means it is harder for Ukraine to overwhelm it with electronic warfare, he said. The new drone has markings that suggest the anti-jamming unit was made in Iran within the past year and similarities to Iranian components found in older models of the Shahed, said Beskrestnov. Such advanced antennas, said Hinz, have not previously been seen on drones used in Ukraine but have been found on Iranian missiles destined for Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen. In a statement, Ukraine's Ministry of Defense told AP in the past four months it had found drones with eight and 12 antennas made in China and Russia. Despite sanctions, both Russia and Iran have continued to find ways to procure Western technology. The drone's AI computing platform can help it autonomously navigate if communications are jammed. Similar technology was used by Ukraine to attack aircraft deep inside Russia during Operation Spiderweb, when it used drones to target Russian air bases hosting nuclear-capable strategic bombers. Changing tactics Russia is improving its technology at the same time as it is also changing its tactics. Moscow is flying the Shahed drones at high altitudes where they are out of reach of Ukrainian shooters, as well as lower down to avoid radio detection. It is also carrying out massive group attacks on cities including where drones sometimes dive-bomb a target, Ukraine's Ministry of Defense said. The drones can be used to clear a path for cruise missiles or to exhaust Ukrainian air defenses by sending a wave of decoys followed by one or two with a warhead. The tactics appear to be working. AP collected almost a year's worth of Russian drone strike data on Ukraine posted online by the Ukrainian air force. An analysis shows that Russia significantly ramped up its attacks after U.S. President Donald Trump was inaugurated in January. And Russian hits have increased markedly since March — shortly before reports emerged that Russia was using Shahed drones with advanced jammers. In November 2022, only around 6% of drones hit a discernible target but, by June, that reached about 16%. On some nights, almost 50% of drones got through Ukraine's air defenses. Ukraine's Ministry of Defense said the Shaheds' effectiveness is likely because Russia is firing more drones, including decoys, as well as the change in technology and tactics. But although Russia appears to have had increasing success striking Ukraine, it is not clear if that will continue. Israel's strikes on Iran will 'certainly' hurt Russia long-term, Albright said. Moscow, he said, is 'not going to be able to get as much assistance from Iran as it has been.' —— Associated Press journalists Lydia Doye in London, Volodymyr Yurchuk and Illia Novikov in Kyiv, Ukraine, and Sam Mednick in Tel Aviv, Israel, contributed to this report.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store