Olympic Security Tightens Amid US-Europe Tensions
Since the murder of 11 Israeli hostages at the 1972 Munich Summer Olympics, security has been fundamental for games stakeholders.
The 2024 Paris games set new benchmarks for security at a mega-event, and now the presence of American security officials in Milan Cortina threatens to darken this year's Winter Olympics before they even start.
The scale of security at the games has magnified considerably since the 1970s.
For the 2024 Olympics, the French government mobilised an unprecedented 45,000 police officers from around the nation.
For the opening ceremony, these forces cordoned off six kilometres of the Seine River .
Advocates point to Paris as an example of security done correctly.
Milipol Paris - one of the world's largest annual conferences on policing and security - pointed to lower crime across the country during the games and a complete absence of any of the feared large security events. It stated :
However, critics complained the security measures infringed on civil liberties .
Ahead of the Milan Cortina games, which run from February 4-23, Italian officials promised they were " ready to meet the challenge of security ".
A newly established cybersecurity headquarters will include officials from around the globe, who will sift through intelligence reports and react to issues in real time.
As well as this, security will feature:
Some of the security officers working in the cybersecurity headquarters will come from the United States.
Traditionally the US diplomatic security service provides protection for US athletes and officials attending mega-events overseas. It has been involved in the games since 1976 .
Late last month, however, news broke that some of the officers will be from "a unit of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) ".
US and Italian officials were quick to differentiate between Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), which handles cross-border crime, and Enforcement and Removal Operations, the department responsible for the brutal crackdown on immigrant communities across the US.
The HSI has helped protect athletes at previous events and will be stationed at the US Consulate in Milan to provide support to the broader US security team at the games.
But the organisation's reputation precedes them, and Italians are wary.
In Milan, demonstrators expressed outrage. Left-wing Mayor Giuseppe Sala called ICE a " a militia that kills " while protests broke out in the host cities.
The presence of ICE has also illuminated fractures within Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni's governing coalition.
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani defended the inclusion of the US officers, saying " it's not like the SS are coming ", referring to the Nazis paramilitary force in Germany.
However, local officials, including those from Meloni's centre-right coalition, expressed concerns .
The tension inside Meloni's government reflects broader concerns on the continent about US-European relations.
US Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio will attend the opening ceremony in Milan, despite some Europeans viewing Vance as the mouthpiece for US President Donald Trump's imperial agenda.
Trump's desire to take over Greenland has undermined American and European support for trans-Atlantic amity and the NATO alliance.
Just ahead of the Olympics, Danish veterans marched outside the US Embassy after Trump disparaged NATO's contribution to US-led operations in Iraq and Afghanistan. These protests added to Danes' fears about Trump's Greenland ambition.
Tensions in Denmark remain high as the Americans and the Danes gear up to play ice hockey in the opening round robin of the men's competition .
Elsewhere, politicians in the US on both sides have raised concerns that Trump's bombastic rhetoric will make it harder for American athletes to compete and win.
Critics argue there is an American exception when it comes to global politics interfering in international sport.
Under Trump, the US has attacked Iran and Venezuela, called on Canada to become its 51st state, threatened to occupy Greenland and engaged in cross-border operations in Mexico.
Despite this, US competitors can still wear their nation's colours at the Olympics.
Compare this to Belarussian and Russian athletes, who are only eligible to compete as Individual Neutral Athletes after the Russian invasion of Ukraine, and only under the condition they have not been publicly supportive of the invasion. An International Olympic Committee (IOC) body assesses each competitor's eligibility.
Israeli athletes have also been under the spotlight amid geopolitical tensions in the region.
Following the Israeli invasion of Gaza in October 2023, a panel of independent experts at the United Nations urged soccer's governing body FIFA to ban Israeli athletes, stating :
But FIFA, and the IOC, have recently defended Israeli athletes' right to participate in international sport in the face of boycotts and protests.
Competitors from Israel can represent their country at the Winter Olympics.
The political developments which have caused ructions worldwide ironically come after the IOC's 2021 decision to update the Olympic motto to supposedly recognise the "unifying power of sport and the importance of solidarity".
The change was a simple one, adding the word "together" after the original three-word motto: "faster, higher, stronger".
It remains to be seen whether the Milan Cortina games live up to every aspect of the "faster, higher, stronger - together" motto, not just the first three words.
Keith Rathbone does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.
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