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The Homeland Security Advisory System shall be binding on
the executive branch and suggested, although voluntary, to
other levels of government and the private sector. There are
five Threat Conditions, each identified by a description and
corresponding color. From lowest to highest, the levels and
colors are:
| Low |
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| Guarded |
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| Elevated |
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| High |
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| Severe |
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Click a link below to view the recommended actions under
each threat level for:
The higher the Threat Condition, the greater the risk of
a terrorist attack. Risk includes both the probability of
an attack occurring and its potential gravity. Threat Conditions
shall be assigned by the Attorney General in consultation
with the Assistant to the President for Homeland Security.
Except in exigent circumstances, the Attorney General shall
seek the views of the appropriate Homeland Security Principals
or their subordinates, and other parties as appropriate, on
the Threat Condition to be assigned. Threat Conditions may
be assigned for the entire Nation, or they may be set for
a particular geographic area or industrial sector. Assigned
Threat Conditions shall be reviewed at regular intervals to
determine whether adjustments are warranted.
For facilities, personnel, and operations inside the territorial
United States, all Federal departments, agencies, and offices
other than military facilities shall conform their existing
threat advisory systems to this system and henceforth administer
their systems consistent with the determination of the Attorney
General with regard to the Threat Condition in effect.
The assignment of a Threat Condition shall prompt the implementation
of an appropriate set of Protective Measures. Protective Measures
are the specific steps an organization shall take to reduce
its vulnerability or increase its ability to respond during
a period of heightened alert. The authority to craft and implement
Protective Measures rests with the Federal departments and
agencies. It is recognized that departments and agencies may
have several preplanned sets of responses to a particular
Threat Condition to facilitate a rapid, appropriate, and tailored
response. Department and agency heads are responsible for
developing their own Protective Measures and other antiterrorism
or self-protection and continuity plans, and resourcing, rehearsing,
documenting, and maintaining these plans. Likewise, they retain
the authority to respond, as necessary, to risks, threats,
incidents, or events at facilities within the specific jurisdiction
of their department or agency, and, as authorized by law,
to direct agencies and industries to implement their own Protective
Measures. They shall continue to be responsible for taking
all appropriate proactive steps to reduce the vulnerability
of their personnel and facilities to terrorist attack. Federal
department and agency heads shall submit an annual written
report to the President, through the Assistant to the President
for Homeland Security, describing the steps they have taken
to develop and implement appropriate Protective Measures for
each Threat Condition. Governors, mayors, and the leaders
of other organizations are encouraged to conduct a similar
review of their organizations= Protective Measures.
The decision whether to publicly announce Threat Conditions
shall be made on a case-by-case basis by the Attorney General
in consultation with the Assistant to the President for Homeland
Security. Every effort shall be made to share as much information
regarding the threat as possible, consistent with the safety
of the Nation. The Attorney General shall ensure, consistent
with the safety of the Nation, that State and local government
officials and law enforcement authorities are provided the
most relevant and timely information. The Attorney General
shall be responsible for identifying any other information
developed in the threat assessment process that would be useful
to State and local officials and others and conveying it to
them as permitted consistent with the constraints of classification.
The Attorney General shall establish a process and a system
for conveying relevant information to Federal, State, and
local government officials, law enforcement authorities, and
the private sector expeditiously.
The Director of Central Intelligence and the Attorney General
shall ensure that a continuous and timely flow of integrated
threat assessments and reports is provided to the President,
the Vice President, Assistant to the President and Chief of
Staff, the Assistant to the President for Homeland Security,
and the Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs.
Whenever possible and practicable, these integrated threat
assessments and reports shall be reviewed and commented upon
by the wider interagency community.
A decision on which Threat Condition to assign shall integrate
a variety of considerations. This integration will rely on
qualitative assessment, not quantitative calculation. Higher
Threat Conditions indicate greater risk of a terrorist act,
with risk including both probability and gravity. Despite
best efforts, there can be no guarantee that, at any given
Threat Condition, a terrorist attack will not occur. An initial
and important factor is the quality of the threat information
itself. The evaluation of this threat information shall include,
but not be limited to, the following factors:
- To what degree is the threat information credible?
- To what degree is the threat information corroborated?
- To what degree is the threat specific and/or imminent?
- How grave are the potential consequences of the threat?
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