New Royal Baby's Security Will Be 'Discreet,' Expert Says

Kate Middleton expected to have her second child at the same London hospital.

— -- Security surrounding the birth of the next royal baby is likely to be high, even if it goes mostly unnoticed.

"It'll be done in the usual British way: discreet," Dai Davies, former head of London's Metropolitan Police, which provides protection for the royal family, told ABC News.

"It's a fairly smooth machine," Davies said, explaining that there's a well-tried system in place. "His father had it, his father had it before him and so on."

The Palace never comments on security matters around the royal family.

Even as security in Britain is at its highest level ever amid terrorist attacks earlier this year in France and Belgium, Davies said the biggest concerns about safety come from those who are mentally ill or fixated on the royals.

"That's where the core threats come from," he said.

Of course, the command is on the lookout for terrorists as well. Already there are plenty of plainclothes officers doing reconnaissance before Middleton goes into labor, Davies said.

Notices have already been posted outside the hospital, forbidding any parking 24 hours a day from April 15 through the 30th. Middleton is expected to give birth during that time.

"Watching the watchers is a key factor," Davies said. "Contingency planning it's called."

He added, "You think the impossible, then you think it again."

After the birth, the family will likely head immediately to Kensington Palace in London, where they'll spend the first couple of days with their new baby, royal commentator Victoria Murphy told ABC News recently.

"After that the intention is for them to leave and to go to their country home of Anmer Hall," Murphy said of their estate in Norfolk, England. "And really that is where they consider to be their home now, where they feel most comfortable and where they will spend the next few weeks."

Roya Nikkhah, a royal family commentator and writer, explained that the country home has everything the family of four needs in one secure place.

"There's a huge amount of private space there," Nikkhah told ABC News recently. "There's an enormous garden. There's tennis, there's swimming but all in one place. They don't have to get protection officers to take them from one bit to the other as they do in London."