The UK’s terrorism threat level has been downgraded from “severe” to “substantial”, the Home Office says.
Home Secretary Priti Patel said the UK was still at “a high level of threat” and an attack could “occur without further warning”.
The terrorism threat is now at its lowest since August 2014. Substantial is the third of five ratings at which the threat level can stand.
The separate terrorism threat level for Northern Ireland remains “severe”.
Ms Patel said in a statement on Monday that terrorism remained a “direct and immediate” risk to the UK’s national security.
Assessments determining the country’s threat level are taken by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre (JTAC) – part of MI5 – which makes its recommendations independently from the government.
where eight people were killed
“Government, police and intelligence agencies will continue to work tirelessly to address the threat posed by terrorism in all its forms,” Ms Patel said.
The threat level is kept under “constant review”, she added.
Neil Basu, head of counter terrorism policing, said there had been “positive developments” in the fight against terrorism but it was “vital that we all maintain a high level of vigilance”.
He said the UK’s counter terrorism policing team had about 800 live counter terrorism investigations – while 24 attack plots had been thwarted since the Westminster attack in March 2017.
This is a significant change in the only official public measure of the threat posed by terrorism to the UK – but it’s not a sign that there are suddenly fewer people with aspirations to do us harm.
The security services are still monitoring thousands of “subjects of interest” – the top-tier of would-be plotters from jihadist groups to the far-right.
Many of these people are very dangerous because, in the jargon, they are “lone actors” bent on DIY violence.
But what appears to have changed is the resources and capability available to IS-supporting plotters who need help.
Quite simply, a huge number of the foreign fighters who played a key role linking these followers to resources and support died on the battlefields of the militant group’s last stand.
Continuing propaganda from the survivors, portraying IS as a force to be reckoned with, also has less credibility for would-be recruits.
And so it has become harder – for now at least – for some of those with intent to get the help they need to carry out their aspirations.
The UK’s terrorism threat level was raised to the highest rating, “critical”, in the days following the Manchester Arena bombing in May 2017.
It last reached this level again briefly in September that year, after a bomb partially exploded on a Tube train at Parsons Green.
The threat level had remained at the second highest rating, “severe”, until Monday.
The Northern Ireland threat level specifically refers to threat to the country from Northern Ireland-related terrorism. It remains at severe – the second-highest level.