FBI warns Iran aspired to attack California with drones in retaliation for war: Alert
A federal wartime alert pushes domestic policing into a heightened-security posture on incomplete threat details, normalizing emergency readiness as a standing condition of governance.
Sources
Summary
The FBI distributed a bulletin to California police warning that Iran allegedly aspired to launch a surprise drone attack from an unidentified vessel off the U.S. coast against unspecified targets in California if the U.S. conducted strikes on Iran. The warning reflects a federal shift toward treating offshore drone-launched attacks as a near-term domestic threat requiring state and local operational readiness. In practical terms, it drives elevated patrols, security coordination, and resource positioning despite the FBI stating it lacks specifics on timing, method, targets, or perpetrators.
Reality Check
Normalizing elevated domestic security postures on sparse, uncorroborated details trains our institutions to treat exceptional measures as routine. When threat bulletins become a default trigger for expanded patrols and protection priorities, public safety decisions drift toward permanent crisis management rather than accountable, bounded governance. Over time, that shift weakens the expectation that extraordinary operational changes require clear, specific justification and tight oversight.
Detail
<p>In late February, the FBI distributed an alert to police departments in California stating it had acquired information that, as of early February 2026, Iran allegedly aspired to conduct a surprise attack using unmanned aerial vehicles launched from an unidentified vessel off the coast of the U.S. homeland, targeting unspecified locations in California if the United States conducted strikes against Iran. The alert stated the FBI had no additional information on timing, method, target, or perpetrators.</p><p>The warning coincided with the Trump administration’s ongoing military assault against Iran, while Iran has retaliated with drone strikes in the Middle East. An FBI spokeswoman in Los Angeles declined to comment, and the White House did not immediately respond to a request for comment.</p><p>California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office said the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services is working with state, local, and federal security officials. The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department reported an elevated readiness posture, including increased patrols around places of worship, cultural institutions, and other prominent locations, and reviewed deployment plans and resource availability.</p>