UK Threat Levels
{{Short description|Alert states used by the British Government}}
{{EngvarB|date=March 2017}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2017}}
{{Infobox
| name =
| title = UK Threat Levels
| subheader = United Kingdom Terror Threat Levels
| image = 300px
| caption1 = Sign at the Ministry of Defence Main Building declaring a "HEIGHTENED" counter-terrorist response level
| header1 = General information
| label2 = Current level (National)
| data2 = SUBSTANTIAL
| label3 = Current level (Northern Ireland)
| data3 = SUBSTANTIAL
}}The United Kingdom Terror Threat Levels, often referred to as UK Threat Levels, are the alert states that have been in use since 1 August 2006 by the British government to warn of forms of terrorist activity. In September 2010, the threat levels for Northern Ireland-related terrorism were also made available.{{Cite web|title=Threat Levels|url=https://www.mi5.gov.uk/threat-levels|access-date=2021-08-15|website=www.mi5.gov.uk|language=en}} 30px Text was copied from this source, which is available under an [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/ Open Government Licence v3.0]. © Crown copyright. In July 2019, changes were made to the terrorism threat level system, to reflect the threat posed by all forms of terrorism, irrespective of ideology. There is now a single national threat level describing the threat to the UK, which includes Islamist, Northern Ireland, left-wing and right-wing terrorism. Before 2006, a colour-based alert scheme known as BIKINI state was used.[http://security.homeoffice.gov.uk/news-publications/publication-search/general/Threat-Levels Threat Levels] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070611002249/http://security.homeoffice.gov.uk/news-publications/publication-search/general/Threat-Levels |date=11 June 2007 }}, July 2006 The response indicates how government departments and agencies and their staffs should react to each threat level.
Categories of threat
Since 23 July 2019, the Home Office has reported two different categories of terrorist threat:
Previously, since 24 September 2010, the Home Office has reported three different categories of terrorist threat:{{cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-11408758|title=Irish terror attack a 'strong possibility'|date=25 September 2010|access-date=20 December 2010|publisher=BBC News}}{{cite web|url=http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/media-centre/news/terrorist-threat?version=1|title=Press Release: Increased risk of Irish-related terrorism|date=24 September 2010|access-date=20 December 2010|publisher=United Kingdom Home Office}}
- Threat from international terrorism.
- Terrorism threat related to Northern Ireland in Northern Ireland itself.
- Terrorism threat related to Northern Ireland in Great Britain (i.e. excluding Northern Ireland).
A fourth category of terrorist threat is also assessed but is not disclosed, relating to threats to sectors of the UK's critical national infrastructure such as the London Underground, National Rail network and power stations.{{cite news|url=http://news.sky.com/story/was-it-a-mistake-to-lower-the-uk-terror-threat-before-london-bridge-attack-10903687|title=Was it a mistake to lower the UK terror threat before London Bridge attack?|last=Bunkall|first=Alistair|publisher=Sky News|date=4 June 2016|access-date=4 June 2016}}
The Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) is responsible for setting the threat level from international terrorism and the Security Service (MI5) is responsible for setting both threat levels related to Northern Ireland. The threat level informs decisions on protective security measures taken by public bodies, the police and the transport sector.{{cite book|last=Foley|first=Frank|title=Countering Terrorism in Britain and France: Institutions, Norms and the Shadow of the Past|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jhevek8VvVkC|year=2013|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-1-107-02969-9|page=166}}
Threat levels
class="wikitable" |
colspan="2"|Threat level{{Cite web|title=Threat Levels and building response plans|url=https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/crowded-places-guidance/threat-levels-and-building-response-plans|access-date=2021-08-15|website=GOV.UK|language=en}} |
---|
width=90 | Critical
|width=220 | An attack is highly likely in the near future. !Exceptional |Maximum protective security. Critical measures to meet specific threats and to minimise vulnerability and risk. |
Severe
|An attack is highly likely. !rowspan="2"|Heightened |rowspan="2"| Additional and sustainable substantial and severe protective security measures reflecting the broad nature of the threat combined with specific business and geographical vulnerabilities and judgements on acceptable risk. |
Substantial
|An attack is likely. |
Moderate
|An attack is possible, but not likely. !rowspan="2"|Normal |rowspan="2"| Routine protective security. Low and moderate measures appropriate to the business concerned. |
Low
|An attack is highly unlikely. |
File:UK Home Office State of Response, July 2024.jpg, the headquarters of the Home Office, in July 2024]]
Threat Levels are decided using the following information:
- Available intelligence. It is rare that specific threat information is available and can be relied upon. More often, judgements about the threat will be based on a wide range of information, which is often fragmentary, including the level and nature of current terrorist activity, comparison with events in other countries and previous attacks. Intelligence is only ever likely to reveal part of the picture.
- Terrorist capability. An examination of what is known about the capabilities of the terrorists in question and the method they may use based on previous attacks or from intelligence. This would also analyse the potential scale of the attack.
- Terrorist intentions. Using intelligence and publicly available information to examine the overall aims of the terrorists and the ways they may achieve them including what sort of targets they would consider attacking.
- Timescale. The threat level expresses the likelihood of an attack in the near term. We know from past incidents that some attacks take years to plan, while others are put together more quickly. In the absence of specific intelligence, a judgement will need to be made about how close an attack might be to fruition. Threat levels do not have any set expiry date, but are regularly subject to review in order to ensure that they remain current.
History
Threat levels were originally produced by MI5's Counter-Terrorism Analysis Centre for internal use within the British government. Assessments known as Security Service Threat Reports or Security Service Reports were issued to assess the level of threat to British interests in a given country or region. They had six levels: Imminent, High, Significant, Moderate, Low and Negligible. Following terrorist attacks in Indonesia in 2002, the system was criticised by the Intelligence and Security Committee of Parliament (ISC) as insufficiently clear and needing to be of greater use to "customer departments".{{cite book|last1=Hennessey|first1=Thomas|last2=Thomas|first2=Claire|title=Spooks the Unofficial History of MI5 From the First Atom Spy to 7/7 1945–2009|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=eTOIAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT228|year=2011|publisher=Amberley Publishing Limited|isbn=978-1-4456-0801-3|pages=228–9}}
The 7 July 2005 London bombings prompted the government to update the threat level system following a recommendation from the ISC that it should deliver "a greater transparency of the threat level and alert systems as a whole, and in particular [it is recommended] that more thought is given to what is put in the public domain about the level of threat and required level of alert." The system was accordingly simplified and made easier to understand.{{cite book|last1=Staniforth|first1=Andrew|last2=Sampson|first2=Fraser|title=The Routledge Companion to UK Counter-Terrorism|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kdzfCgAAQBAJ|year=2012|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-136-25430-7|page=276}} Since 2006, MI5 and the Home Office have published international terrorism threat levels for the entire UK on their websites, and since 2010 they have also published threat levels for Northern Ireland, with separate threat levels for Northern Ireland and the rest of the UK.{{cite web|url=https://www.mi5.gov.uk/threat-levels|title=Threat levels|publisher=MI5|accessdate=1 April 2017}}
= 2019 'New Reporting Format' =
In July 2019, changes were made to the terrorism threat level system creating a 'New Format' of threat levels, to reflect the threat posed by all forms of terrorism, irrespective of ideology. There is now a single national threat level describing the threat to the UK, which includes Islamist, Northern Ireland, left-wing and right-wing terrorism.
Changes to threat levels
The following table records changes to the threat levels from July 2019 – Present:
= Old-format historical threat levels =
Since 2006, information about the national threat level has been available on the MI5 and Home Office websites. In September 2010 the threat levels for Northern Ireland-related terrorism were also made available. The following table records changes to the threat levels from August 2006 – July 2019 before the 'New Format' was put into place:
class="wikitable" | |
rowspan="2" | Date | rowspan="2" | National Threat Level of International Terrorism
! colspan="2" |Threat from Northern Ireland-related terrorism |
---|---|
in Northern Ireland
!in Great Britain | |
1 August 2006 | Severe
| colspan="2" rowspan="7" |Not Reported |
10 August 2006 | Critical{{efn|Threat level increased following the 2006 transatlantic aircraft plot.}} |
13 August 2006 | Severe |
30 June 2007 | Critical{{efn|Threat level increased following the 2007 Glasgow Airport attack.}} |
4 July 2007 | Severe |
20 July 2009 | Substantial |
22 January 2010 | rowspan="2" | Severe |
24 September 2010
| rowspan="10" |Severe | rowspan="2" |Substantial | |
11 July 2011 | rowspan="2" | Substantial |
24 October 2012
| rowspan="2" |Moderate | |
29 August 2014 | rowspan="2" | Severe |
11 May 2016
| rowspan="5" |Substantial | |
23 May 2017 | Critical{{efn|Threat level increased following the Manchester Arena bombing.}} |
27 May 2017 | Severe |
15 September 2017 | Critical{{efn|Threat level increased following the Parsons Green bombing.{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2017/09/15/uk-terror-threat-level-raised-critical-meaning-attack-imminent/|title=UK terror threat level raised to critical, meaning an attack is imminent, Prime Minister says'|date=15 September 2017|access-date=15 September 2017|newspaper=The Telegraph|last1=Ward|first1=Victoria}} }} |
17 September 2017 | rowspan="2" | Severe |
1 March 2018
|Moderate |
{{Notelist}}
See also
{{cmn|
- UK Emergency Alert System
- DEFCON
- Combat readiness
- EMERGCON
- FPCON
- INFOCON
- LERTCON
- REDCON
- Situation awareness
- Torino scale
- COGCON
- Operation Temperer
- Terrorism in the United Kingdom
- National Terrorism Advisory System, a similar scale for terrorism threat used in the United States
}}
Historic/Defunct:
{{cmn|
- HANDEL
- BIKINI state
- CONELRAD
- National Emergency Alarm Repeater
- Homeland Security Advisory System
- United States color-coded war plans
- Four-minute warning
- Preparing for Emergencies
}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
External links
- [http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/counter-terrorism/current-threat-level Current Threat Level], Home Office