US faces elevated terrorism threats against backdrop of Iran war and cuts at FBI, Justice Department

Frank Montoya News

US faces elevated terrorism threats against backdrop of Iran war and cuts at FBI, Justice Department
Edward HerbstQassem SoleimaniU.S. News
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Three acts of ideologically inspired violence in the last week have laid bare the heightened terrorism threat unfolding against the backdrop of a U.S. war with Iran and a counterterrorism system strained by the widespread departures of experienced national security professionals at the FBI and Justice Department.

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Ron DeSantis’ desk for 2026. Here’s a look at some of them FILE - A Super Tuesday voter walks past a sign requiring a photo ID at a polling location, March 5, 2024, in Mount Holly, N.C. Florida could soon ask residents to prove their citizenship at ballot box after state lawmakers pass voter ID bill Read full article: Florida could soon ask residents to prove their citizenship at ballot box after state lawmakers pass voter ID bill FILE - Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks during a news conference, Aug. 12, 2025, in Tampa, Fla. Police tape hangs outside the Temple Israel synagogue Friday, March 13, 2026, in West Bloomfield Township, Mich. Police arrive outside Old Dominion University's campus after reports of an active shooter on Thursday, March 12, 2026, in Norfolk, Va. NYPD officers stand outside Carl Schurz Park as they investigate suspicious device, Tuesday, March 10, 2026, in New York. FILE - FBI director Kash Patel arrives before President Donald Trump speaks in the East Room of the White House, Jan. 15, 2026, in Washington. FBI Director Kash Patel takes part in a U.S. Hostage and Wrongful Detainee Flag Raising ceremony at the State Department, Monday, March 9, 2026 in Washington. Police tape hangs outside the Temple Israel synagogue Friday, March 13, 2026, in West Bloomfield Township, Mich. was heard yelling “Allahu akbar” before opening fire at a university in an attack that officials said ended when the shooter was killed by students. The three acts of ideologically inspired violence in the last week have laid bare the heightened terrorism threat, a concern that comes as the U.S. is at war with Iran and as the counterterrorism system is strained by the, coupled with the diversion of resources and personnel over the last year to meet other Trump administration priorities, have fueled concerns about the capability to head off a potential surge in threats. “So much experience has been decimated from the ranks,” said Frank Montoya, a retired senior FBI official who led the U.S. government's Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive. “The folks that were best-positioned to get to the bottom of it before something really bad happened” are in many cases no longer with the government, he said, meaning less experienced personnel assigned to the threat are “starting from way behind.” The FBI said it would not comment on personnel numbers and decisions, but issued a statement saying “agents and staff are dedicated professionals working around the clock to defend the homeland and crush violent crime. The FBI continuously assesses and realigns our resources to ensure the safety of the American people.”, and though the fighting has so far been confined to the Middle East, the Islamic Republic has long professed its determination to carry out violence on American soil.was convicted in New York last week of trying to hire hit men in 2024 for assassination plots targeting public figures, including President Donald Trump, who was then running for president. Though much attention has focused on Iran's use of proxies or hired hands to carry out plots, the country's capability to organize a large-scale assault on the U.S. remains unclear despite clear angst over the potential. The FBI warned in a recent bulletin to law enforcement about Iran’s aspiration to conduct a drone attack targeting California, but after the warning was publicized, officials emphasized that the intelligence was unverified and no specific plot was known to exist.for a cyberattack this week against U.S. medical device company Stryker. The Justice Department on Friday announced that it had seized the domains of four websites used by Iran to call for the killings of dissidents.The U.S. government, after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, overhauled its intelligence and national security apparatus to prevent similarly catastrophic events. But in the years since, lone actors radicalized online have proved harder to stop, carrying out shootings like theThose plots have proved notoriously difficult to prevent and have occurred even when the FBI has not been roiled by firings and internal upheaval, like during the first year of the Trump administration. “They're self-directed,” said retired FBI official Edward Herbst. “That’s what makes them really lethal. You never know when they're going to rise up. You never know when and where they're going to attack.” Those concerns typically rise during times of international conflict when military action overseas is accompanied by increased vigilance, including outreach from agents to their sources, more active sharing of tips between federal and local law enforcement and closer coordination among FBI joint terrorism task forces, said Claire Moravec, a former FBI national security official who served as deputy homeland security adviser in Illinois. Officials have said there is no indication that either the men arrested in connection with the explosives in New York, or the man responsible for Thursday’s Old Dominion University shooting, were motivated explicitly by the Iran war. The man who crashed into Temple Israel synagogue near Detroit on Thursday lost four family members in an Israeli airstrike in his native Lebanon last week, an official in Lebanon said. Regardless, wars like the one in Iran can function as “accelerants,” raising the volume and intensity of grievances for the disaffected, Moravec said. “Ultimately, the goal during these periods is not ‘surveillance’ but maintaining a broad awareness of how international events could translate into domestic security risks, so that threats can be identified and disrupted early,” she said in an email.The Justice Department's National Security Division was established in 2006 to address terrorism threats and related concerns. But in the last year, lawyers in the division found themselves assigned to review the Jeffrey Epstein files to prepare them for release, and elite sections dedicated to prosecuting terrorists and catching spies have endured turnover. About half of the division's counterterrorism prosecutors have left since the beginning of the Trump administration, along with about a third of its senior leadership, according to estimates from Justice Connection, a network of department alumni. A Justice Department spokesperson said the division's singular focus remains “keeping the American people safe from threats foreign and domestic” and that there are no known or credible threats to the homeland.who worked on the counterintelligence investigation into Trump's retention of classified documents at his Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida, including some who worked on Iran cases. “This is not an exaggeration to say that they are not as capable as they were a year and a half ago,” Matthew Olsen, who led the National Security Division during the Biden administration, said this week on the Lawfare podcast, adding that “they’ve lost, forced out, fired, the most capable, the most experienced FBI agents, FBI officials and DOJ prosecutors, that were working on the Iran threat.” In the national security realm, where experience and source development are vital, the loss of institutional knowledge and community relationships can be a crushing blow, said Montoya, the former FBI official. “There was no transition,” Montoya said of the agents who have been abruptly fired. “These guys were just walked out of the building. The new guys can call them and say, ‘Hey, can you tell me what you were doing?’ but even so, “you're still introducing a brand new face into the equation.” Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.From Gumbo to Golf, Weather Authority weekend forecastJacksonville’s first outdoor food hall is opening this month | Here’s an inside lookJEA says company tied to influencer, Jacksonville properties owes more than $330K in past due fees0:17The Players kicked off on Thursday morningFlorida bill that would increase pay for coaches heads to Gov. DeSantis' deskMayor Deegan calls JEA investigative committee a ‘spectacle’ as council expands probe beyond auditCaptain Sandy questions state’s handling of plea deal in Nocatee homebuilding fraud caseCity Council president forms committee to investigate JEACaught up with Anton Harrison. It was his first time at The Players Championship.TPC Sawgrass packed the day before the Players kicks off

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Edward Herbst Qassem Soleimani U.S. News John Bolton Matthew Olsen Ali Ayatollah Khamenei Claire Moravec Washington News Kash Patel Donald Trump Jeffrey Epstein

 

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