Security
conditions at U.S. military bases have been increased over growing
concerns about terror threats, officials said Friday.
A U.S. official confirmed to CNN that U.S. military bases are now at "Force Protection Bravo,"
which is defined by the Pentagon as an "increased and predictable
threat of terrorism." It is the third-highest threat level on a
five-tier scale used by the Department of Defense.
U.S. military officials added Friday that the announcement, which comes in the aftermath of the shooting at a Texas cartoon contest
featuring drawings of the Prophet Mohammed, was not the result of a
specific threat but because the military had become concerned about
several recent incidents.
The military
became alarmed when one of the jihadists linked to the Garland attack
tweeted the name and address of a U.S. military officer connected to the
military's Syrian rebel training program, a U.S. military official told
CNN.
The tweet, first published on an
account connected to British-born jihadist Junaid Hussain, was sent out a
few days before the attack on the cartoon exhibit and appeared to
encourage an attack on the address.

Two shot and killed at 'Muhammad Art, Cartoon Contest' in Texas 4 photos
Hussain
is the same jihadist who is also believed, according to U.S. law
enforcement officials, to have been messaging with Elton Simpson, one of
the two attackers of the Texas event, and had been urging Simpson to
take action.
That followed the
publishing several weeks ago on ISIS-connected accounts of the name and
addresses of about 100 military members.
On
Thursday, FBI Director James Comey told reporters that there are
thousands of ISIS, also known as ISIL, followers online in the U.S.
"We
have a general concern, obviously, that ISIL is focusing on the
uniformed military and law enforcement," Comey told reporters Thursday.
The
order to upgrade the threat level was signed by Admiral William
Gortney, head of the U.S. Northern Command, which oversees all U.S.
military installations in the continental U.S. The security order
affects 3,200 sites, including bases, National Guard facilities,
recruiting stations and health clinics, a Pentagon official said.
"We
have the same concern about the potential threat posed by violent
homegrown extremists," said Captain Jeff Davis, spokesman for the U.S.
Northern Command, or NORTHCOM.
Davis declined to specify the new security measures.
But
the change in threat level status could mean more checks of vehicles
entering bases, and more thorough identity checks of all personnel.
Davis emphasized that "this is the new normal, that we are going to have
increased vigilance and force protection. We seek to be unpredictable."
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