Secret Service Ramps Up Security Across Washington After U.S. Strikes on Iran

 March 1, 2026

The U.S. Secret Service has enhanced security for its high-profile protectees in Washington, D.C., and elsewhere following President Donald Trump's order for a coordinated U.S.-Israeli strike on Iran. The agency said it is actively monitoring the ongoing operation and cooperating with federal and local partners.

Trump gave the order for "Operation Epic Fury" overnight from his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, where he remained on Saturday, according to his schedule. Vice President JD Vance, Energy Secretary Chris Wright, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, and Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard were reportedly monitoring the joint strikes from the White House's Situation Room.

Federal law enforcement said there are no known credible threats to the country at this time. But the security posture tells a different story than "business as usual."

A Visible Show of Force

According to the Washington Examiner, the Secret Service acknowledged that the public would notice the difference. In a statement released Saturday, the agency laid out the situation in measured but unmistakable terms:

"While we do not discuss our specific protective measures for operational security reasons, the public may notice an increased law enforcement and federal presence around U.S. Secret Service protected sites."

The agency added that any temporary traffic or pedestrian impacts would be communicated through local law enforcement partners. It also urged public cooperation:

"As always, if something appears unusual or concerning, individuals are encouraged to report it to law enforcement."

The Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C., said it is "prepared to increase our presence as needed." And the heightened posture extends well beyond the capital. New York City and Los Angeles are among the major U.S. cities increasing their police presence following the strikes on Iran. Both cities are deploying police patrols to religious sites and other sensitive locations.

The Mar-a-Lago Shadow

The security escalation carries additional weight given what happened just days earlier. On Feb. 22, a young man carrying a shotgun and a fuel can infiltrated Mar-a-Lago before he was fatally shot by two Secret Service agents and a local sheriff's deputy. Trump was not present at the resort at the time of the incident, according to the Secret Service.

That breach, at the very location from which the president would later order strikes on a hostile foreign power, underscores why the current posture is more than a routine precaution. A sitting president's home was physically penetrated by an armed intruder barely a week before he used that same location to direct a major military operation. The timeline alone demands the kind of visible, layered security now being deployed across the country.

Wartime Footing, Domestic Reality

There is a pattern worth noting in how American cities respond when U.S. forces engage adversaries abroad. The concern is never really about the foreign military striking the homeland directly. It is about the domestic ripple effects: lone actors inspired by propaganda, opportunistic threats against soft targets, or violence aimed at religious communities caught between geopolitics and their own neighborhoods.

That is why New York and Los Angeles are sending officers to houses of worship and sensitive sites. It is the prudent, unglamorous work of homeland security that rarely makes headlines until something goes wrong.

The decision to deploy visible patrols rather than rely solely on intelligence and surveillance reflects a straightforward calculation. Deterrence works. A patrol car parked outside a synagogue or a mosque does more to prevent an incident than a classified briefing that never reaches the street. The cities deploying those patrols are making the right call.

The Broader Security Picture

What stands out about Saturday's response is its coordination. The Secret Service, Metropolitan Police, and major city police departments moved in concert. Federal law enforcement assessed the threat level publicly. The White House's national security principals gathered in the Situation Room. This is what a functioning security apparatus looks like when a president takes decisive military action: every layer activating simultaneously, each one reinforcing the others.

The administration ordered strikes on Iran and, in the same motion, ensured the home front was locked down. No daylight between the offense abroad and the defense at home.

For the public in Washington, New York, Los Angeles, and anywhere near a protected site, the message is simple. You may see more officers. You may hit a detour. The inconvenience is the point. It means the system is working.

Copyright 2024, Thin Line News LLC