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Federal officials in the United States have not disclosed any imminent, specific terrorist plots against domestic targets in the past 48 hours, but a series of developments highlights how authorities are recalibrating their response to evolving threats.

In Washington, long-running concerns about political violence resurfaced as new details emerged around the arrest of Brian Cole Jr., the Virginia man charged with planting pipe bombs near the Democratic and Republican National Committee headquarters on January 6, 2021. According to coverage from TNND and its affiliates, investigators say a search of Cole’s home uncovered materials used to construct pipe bombs, and former FBI special agent Jody Weis has publicly questioned why it took nearly five years of basic cell phone and financial analysis to identify and charge a suspect, raising broader questions about resource allocation in domestic terrorism cases. Officials have emphasized that, although the devices never detonated, they were “typical but potentially dangerous” improvised explosives.

While there have been no new high-profile arrests announced in the last two days, the federal government has continued to stress prevention. The Associated Press recently reported that the United States has intensified pressure on the Venezuelan-origin criminal organization Tren de Aragua, which Washington has designated a foreign terrorist organization. The Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control has imposed sanctions on suspected facilitators and boosted rewards to as much as $5 million for information leading to the arrest or conviction of a key leader, underscoring concern that transnational criminal networks with terrorist designations are contributing to violence and drug trafficking in U.S. cities.

At the policy level, debates over how terrorism is defined and countered remain active. The advocacy group Defending Rights & Dissent noted in a recent analysis that U.S. counterterrorism efforts increasingly blur lines between traditional warfare, terrorism, and organized crime, as the government conducts overseas strikes while also expanding domestic surveillance and joint military–law enforcement operations. Commentators warn that these measures, justified in part by terrorism concerns, can carry civil liberties implications inside the United States.

Internationally, think tanks such as the Washington Institute and commentators writing for outlets like Eurasia Review continue to track how groups including the Taliban and ISIS retain global reach and the potential to inspire or enable actors far from active conflict zones, including within the U.S., even absent a specific, public threat in the last 48 hours.

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