FORT BRAGG, N.C. (WTVD) -- The FBI has issued the strongest warning to date about possible attacks by the ISIS terrorist group against the U.S. military inside the homeland, officials tell ABC News.
In a joint intelligence bulletin from the FBI with the Department of Homeland Security, officials strongly urged those who serve in uniform to scrub their social media accounts of anything that might bring unwanted attention from "violent extremists" or would help the extremists learn individual service members' identities.
"The FBI and DHS recommend that current and former members of the military review their online social media accounts for any information that might serve to attract the attention of ISIL [ISIS] and its supporters," the federal bulletin sent to law enforcement agencies said, advising that troops "routinely exercise operational security in their interactions online."
Officials said they fear copycat attacks based on what happened in Canada last month, when two uniformed Canadian soldiers were killed in two separate incidents by young men who claimed they were ISIS followers.
In North Carolina, a Fort Bragg spokesman acknowledged the new warning, but kept details to a minimum regarding how local troops are being briefed.
"We take all threats against members of the Fort Bragg community seriously and have internal mechanisms to inform our service members, families and civilian workforce about these potential threats. Our force protection efforts aren't always a matter of public record because we don't want to inform our adversaries about the steps we take to protect the force and we also don't want to validate and feed the threats made by terrorist organizations," said spokesman Benjamin Abel through a statement.
At the end of the month, 250 82nd Airborne paratroopers will deploy to Southwest Asia in support of Operation Inherent Revolve, the newly named ISIS-centered mission. The Bragg troops will replace an unarmed unit, and carry out a security-related mission. They will return in nine months.
Some in U.S. special operations and other military branches have told ABC News they deactivated, scrubbed or locked Facebook and other personal social media accounts months ago at the urging of security officers as the U.S. began bombing ISIS in Iraq and Syria last August.
But the government on Sunday night indicated they had obtained fresh intelligence that ISIS wants to recruit or inspire sympathizers inside America to hurt military members where they live.
"The FBI recently received reporting indicating individuals overseas are spotting and assessing like-minded individuals who are willing and capable of conducting attacks against current and former U.S.-based members of the United States military," the bulletin said.
Attacks such as those in Canada -- which apparently were carried out without direct contact between ISIS and the perpetrators -- may "embolden" and "motivate" those who support ISIS, the FBI and DHS said.
Monday, a spokesperson for the Pentagon said the bulletin reinforces information the military been providing troops since the Ottawa shootings.
The spokesperson, Col. Steve Warren, told reporters he wasn't aware of any new intelligence that might have triggered the bulletin and deferred questions to the FBI and DHS.
"It's advice to be vigilant. There's an enemy out there [and] that enemy has made very clear that they seek to make harm to Americans so this advisory was to ensure that you're taking all appropriate cautions for individual force protection," Warren said.
The day before the U.S. launched its biggest air blitz against the terrorist group in Iraq and Syria in late September, ISIS spokesman Abu Mohammad al-Adnani called upon Muslims in the U.S. and Europe to attack members of the military.
"Do not ask for anyone's advice and do not seek anyone's verdict. Kill the disbeliever whether he is civilian or military, for they have the same ruling. Both of them are disbelievers. Both of them are considered to be waging war," Adnani said in an audio speech posted online on Sept. 21.