Jetta Disco/DHS file photo

Homeland Security to Announce New Terrorism Alert System

Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson says the president will soon announce a new terrorism threat alert system to address what he called intermediate-level threats to the United States.

The Obama administration will implement a new terrorism threat alert system in the coming days to address what he called intermediate-level threats to the United States, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson said Monday.

The new system would augment the current terrorism threat systems, called the National Threat Advisory System, an alert system that has never been used because it is activated only when there is a credible threat to the U.S.

“I believe in this environment we need to get beyond that and go to new system that has an intermediate level to it,” Johnson said at a Defense One Live event.  The new system will reflect “the current environment and the current realities.”

The change comes just days after a 14 were killed two in San Bernardino, California, by Syed Farook and Tashfeen Malik. Malik pledged her allegiance to the Islamic State terrorist group in a Facebook post prior to the shooting. It also comes less than a month after a group of ISIS militants killed 130 in a multiple attacks across Paris.

The Obama administration did away with a color-coded terrorism threat-level system put in place by the Bush administration following the Sept. 11, 2001, al-Qaeda attack on New York and Washington.

“We need a system that adequately informs the public at large, not through news leaks of joint intelligence bulletins to law enforcement, not through leaks from anonymous government officials,” Johnson said. “We need a system that informs the public at large what we are seeing … what we are doing about it and what we are asking the public to do.”

The current National Threat Advisory System has a “pretty high bar” before it gets activated, he said. Johnson said the new alert systems, which he is hoping to formally announce “in the coming days,” would remove “some of the mystery” of the global terrorist threat.

Since the Paris attack, the U.S. has been in a “heightened security posture.” While there is no specific threat of a terrorist attack on the U.S., officials are concerned about “copycat acts” and “terrorist-inspired acts by a lone wolf,” an attack that is nearly impossible to predict because an individual shows no warning signs of being radicalized.