US Hospital Terrorist Threat Assessment 2025 (Updated)
CommandEleven’s updated threat assessment of terrorist targeting risk against US hospital infrastructure — covering attack vectors, known threat actor interest, and recommended security posture.
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A global surveillance node dedicated to tracking extremist ideologies, recruitment patterns, and kinetic threats. It integrates signals intelligence (SIGINT) and open-source intelligence (OSINT) to preemptively identify radicalization hubs and potential attack vectors.
CommandEleven’s updated threat assessment of terrorist targeting risk against US hospital infrastructure — covering attack vectors, known threat actor interest, and recommended security posture.
The aftermath of the recent Pahalgam attack in Kashmir, for which Indian officials quickly pointed fingers at Pakistan, has only deepened hostilities. India used the incident to bolster its anti-Pakistan narrative planned for isolating Islamabad on the international stage.
CommandEleven’s Q1 2025 threat compilation — covering terrorism alerts, active incidents, and emerging threat vectors across the United States, Europe, and MENA for January–March 2025.
The threat assessment presented below is to advise and assist hospitals and trauma centers in preparing for an upcoming terrorist attack orchestrated by Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISKP), as a prelude to a secondary attack by al Qaeda.
CommandEleven assesses the current al-Qaeda threat to the US homeland — evaluating organizational capacity, AQAP and affiliate activity, and the probability of a mass casualty attack on American soil.
The announcement of the “newly formed high powered committee” comically named “Iron Shield,” is just another failure for Pakistan’s inept national security infrastructure.
Pakistan’s security situation has long evolved as a consequence of the complex intersection of multiple factors, including geopolitical dilemmas, internal dissension, and history. The recently suggested notion of Pakistan being a hard state—one that prioritises security over other aspects of governance and socio-economic development—is being widely debated in drawing rooms, a select few editorials and op-eds, and YouTube vlogs.
The battlespace changed again when the US invaded Iraq and deposed Saddam Hussain. The mistake most make is assuming the battlefield changed on 9/11. That was the instigating event that weakened al Qaeda and created a space for another group to emerge.
For the observer, looking at each event in isolation, it won’t make sense. When you combine them all, Haqqani’s resignation makes a great deal of sense at this time.
A few days ago, Afghanistan International, a newspaper with a reputation of questionable values and even more questionable reporting, published an article about the “Mir Ali Agreement” that was signed between Sirajuddin Haqqani and various terrorist groups before the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 2021.