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Unprecedented threats drive Secret Service inauguration security
Secret Service Director Joseph Clancy says the threat environment for this inauguration and the campaign that led up to it is “different” from previous ones.
WASHINGTON — Members of U.S. law enforcement will deploy countermeasures to prevent a large truck attack, such as those that killed dozens in Nice, France and Berlin last year, from happening during the inauguration of Donald Trump as president.
But Secret Service Director Joseph Clancy and his partners are convinced attempts to launch other violent and dangerous acts are well within the realm of possibility. Clancy said the threat environment for this inauguration and the campaign that led up to it is “different” from previous ones. “I think people today are willing to do things they may not have been willing to do in the past,” Clancy said. He cited several episodes that took place during the campaign, “where people jumped over those bike racks or security zones into our buffer. In the past, it was very rare for somebody to do that. Today, in this past campaign, people were willing to do it.”Clancy was quick to point out, without saying how, that Secret Service agents know what to do when it happens.
IMPULSIVE OR PREPLANNED incidences of people jumping barricades are among the least of their concerns, though. The willingness of lone wolves and terror organizations to develop more creative plots are worries. “We know that this (Washington region) is a high-profile [terror] target. It’s been attacked in the past, historically,” said Paul Abbate, the FBI’s executive assistant director for the Criminal, Cyber, Response and Services Branch.
Other FBI officials have confirmed that Washington is mentioned on a daily basis as a potential target in intercepted terrorist chatter and communications. “We, from the FBI standpoint, are ready to counter terrorist attacks and are working with our partners in building out the intelligence picture,” Abbate said.On Friday, Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson spoke to reporters about preparations for the inauguration.
“We know of no specific credible threat directed toward the inauguration,” he said. But in the same statement, he acknowledged, “that is only part of the story.”Other parts of that story include the unknown, according to Clancy, and that is causing him to lose sleep.“Every night I wake up and I wonder do we have some issue covered,” Clancy said.
Violence from U.S.-based groups may figure prominently, according to a top private sector security firm.“The bigger threat is probably coming from anti-government/anarchist groups who are likely to try and disrupt the inauguration, and may engage in violence to do so,” said Mike Maness, director of Trapwire.Maness says, however, “From what we have seen the security measures and first-responder preparations have been excellent for the event.”
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All the more reason for everyone in the crowd to be armed. That's how you keep people safe
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Probably, fake news about threats is being used to justify more forces to suppress legal protest rights.
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Terrorists are always looking at ways to spread the terror. We have seen examples of the same recently in Europe. Most have been by "lone wolves" which are the hardest to detect and deter. Our security forces have done admirable work in preventing most of these type incidents since 9/11. We, however, live in a dangerous world.
Let's hope the Trump administration will keep us as safe at home as the Obama administration has.