FBI And DHS Warn Americans About Possible Attacks On Oct. 7 Anniversary
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The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security issued a statement on
Friday, warning Americans about possible violence and hate crimes that
could take place on the anniversary of October 7th, when Hamas terrorists killed at least 1,200 Israelis while abducting around 251 last year.
“Over the past year, we have observed violent extremist activity and
hate crimes in the United States linked to the conflict,” the public
service announcement stated.
Friday’s announcement follows the rapid increase in Middle East
escalation as Iran executed a missile campaign on Tuesday, targeting
nearly 200 ballistic missiles at Israeli military infrastructure after
Israel carried out assassinations against Iran’s proxy groups, including
Hezbollah military leader Hassan Nasrallah.
“Jewish, Muslim, or Arab institutions – including synagogues,
mosques/Islamic centers, and community centers – and large public
gatherings, such as memorials, vigils, or other lawful demonstrations,
present attractive targets for violent attacks or for hoax threats by a
variety of threat actors, including violent extremists and hate crime
perpetrators,” the announcement continued.
Following the Iranian missile attack, a senior DHS official expressed
his own worries regarding a potential Iranian threat on American soil.
“I don’t know that we’ve got a crystal clear assessment on that at
this point. We are literally in the earliest days of trying to
understand what exactly Iranian intentions might be. We do, though,
assess that Iran has a global capacity and a global capability, that it
can draw, that it can target U.S. interest around the world – that it
certainly has the reach and capacity to do, to carry out, to engage with
individuals here inside the United States in ways that present
potential threat to the United States, here in the homeland,” the DHS
official stated.
ABC News also reported that U.S. officials are concerned
that Al Qaeda and ISIS could convince lone offenders to carry out
attacks within the United States and other western allies.
Following the October 7th attacks, hate crimes have
sharply increased against Arab, Jewish, and Muslim communities,
officials say. Additionally, pro-Israel Christian groups have also faced
threats in recent months.
According to the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), reports of anti-Semitic incidents skyrocketed after October 7th, recording 2,031 reports of anti-Semitic incidents between October 7th and December 7th in 2023, just within the United States alone.
The incidents marked a shocking 337% increase in comparison to the same time period within 2022.
“FTOs (Foreign terrorist organizations) and other violent extremists
likely will continue to exploit narratives related to the conflict to
call for lone attackers to conduct violence in the United States. Online
messaging associated with FTOs and other violent extremists
highlighting the one-year anniversary of the October 7 attacks could
motivate threat actors across ideologies, including those who espouse
violent anti-Semitism and Islamophobia, to engage in violence.
Individuals inspired by this online messaging could act alone to commit
an attack with little to no warning,” the PSA concluded.
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