ICE at the Winter Olympics: Agents to support US security, stirring anger in Italy
Updated ,first published
Rome: US Immigration and Customs Enforcement personnel will help protect US delegations at next month’s Winter Olympics in Italy, causing a political uproar in the country.
ICE and Border Patrol agents have come under heavy criticism over their enforcement of President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown after they shot and killed two U.S. citizens in separate incidents this month in Minnesota.
ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations division will back up the US State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service at the February 6 to 22 Milano Cortina Olympics, the Department of Homeland Security said in a post on X.
The ICE agents’ role will be “to vet and mitigate risks from transnational criminal organisations,” the post added, noting “all security operations remain under Italian authority”.
“Obviously, ICE does not conduct immigration enforcement operations in foreign countries,” said DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin.
ICE has been present at major sport events in both the US and abroad in the past, including previous Olympic Games, as part of international partnerships related to human trafficking and drug trafficking, one former official said.
Despite assurances that there is nothing unusual about the HSI deployment, Italian politicians criticised the involvement of ICE in next month’s Games, highlighting how the image of the United States has been tarnished in recent months.
“It seems sheer idiocy to me,” Maurizio Lupi, leader of a small centrist party in Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s governing coalition, told la Repubblica daily.
Giuseppe Sala, the left-leaning mayor of Milan, one of the cities co-hosting the Olympics, called ICE “a militia that kills”. Speaking to RTL 102.5 radio, Sala said: “It’s clear that they’re not welcome in Milan, there’s no doubt about it.”
The Rome government sought to defuse the protests. The interior ministry said in a statement that ICE personnel would only work in U.S. diplomatic offices such as the Milan consulate, and “not on the ground” enforcing order.
Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi said he met with US Ambassador Tilman Fertitta. Piantedosi said he would address parliament on February 4. The US embassy in Italy declined to comment.
Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani called for a measured response. “We’re not talking about the (ICE people) who were out on the streets of Minneapolis... It’s not as if the (Nazi) SS are arriving,” he told reporters at a Holocaust memorial event.
A State Department spokesperson said that, as in past Olympics, multiple federal agencies would help with security, including ICE.
But Italia Viva, a centrist Italian opposition party led by former Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, said agents affiliated with ICE did not represent Italian values and should be barred entry.
The hard-left USB trade union said it would hold an “ICE OUT” rally in central Milan on February 6, to coincide with the Olympic opening ceremony.
Reuters
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