INTL Paris Summer Olympics, July 26- August 11, 2024 - Champions and Chaos

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane


With AI, jets and police squadrons, Paris is securing the Olympics — and worrying critics​



BY JOHN LEICESTER
Updated 12:21 PM EDT, July 21, 2024
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PARIS (AP) — A year ago, the head of the Paris Olympics boldly declared that France’s capital would be “ the safest place in the world " when the Games open this Friday. Tony Estanguet’s confident forecast looks less far-fetched now with squadrons of police patrolling Paris’ streets, fighter jets and soldiers primed to scramble, and imposing metal-fence security barriers erected like an iron curtain on both sides of the River Seine that will star in the opening show.

France’s vast police and military operation is in large part because the July 26-Aug. 11 Games face unprecedented security challenges. The city has repeatedly suffered deadly extremist attacks and international tensions are high because of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza.

Rather than build an Olympic park with venues grouped together outside of the city center, like Rio de Janeiro in 2016 or London in 2012, Paris has chosen to host many of the events in the heart of the bustling capital of 2 million inhabitants, with others dotted around suburbs that house millions more. Putting temporary sports arenas in public spaces and the unprecedented choice to stage a river-borne opening ceremony stretching for kilometers (miles) along the Seine, makes safeguarding them more complex.

Olympic organizers also have cyberattack concerns, while rights campaigners and Games critics are worried about Paris’ use of AI-equipped surveillance technology and the broad scope and scale of Olympic security.

Paris, in short, has a lot riding on keeping 10,500 athletes and millions of visitors safe. Here’s how it aims to do it.

The security operation, by the numbers​

A Games-time force of up to 45,000 police and gendarmes is also backed up by a 10,000-strong contingent of soldiers that has set up the largest military camp in Paris since World War II, from which soldiers should be able to reach any of the city’s Olympic venues within 30 minutes.


Armed military patrols aboard vehicles and on foot have become common in crowded places in France since gunmen and suicide bombers acting in the names of al-Qaida and the Islamic State group repeatedly struck Paris in 2015. They don’t have police powers of arrest but can tackle attackers and restrain them until police arrive. For visitors from countries where armed street patrols aren’t the norm, the sight of soldiers with assault rifles might be jarring, just as it was initially for people in France.

“At the beginning, it was very strange for them to see us and they were always avoiding our presence, making a detour,” said Gen. Éric Chasboeuf, deputy commander of the counter-terror military force, called Sentinelle.

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A police officer walks past a Paris olympics canvas at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Saturday, July 20, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Thomas Padilla)


Now, it’s in the landscape,” he said.

Rafale fighter jets, airspace-monitoring AWACS surveillance flights, Reaper surveillance drones, helicopters that can carry sharpshooters, and equipment to disable drones will police Paris skies, which will be closed during the opening ceremony by a no-fly zone extending for 150 kilometers (93 miles) around the capital. Cameras twinned with artificial intelligence software — authorized by a law that expands the state’s surveillance powers for the Games — will flag potential security risks, such as abandoned packages or crowd surges,

France is also getting help from more than 40 countries that, together, have sent at least 1,900 police reinforcements.

Trump assassination attempt highlights Olympic risks​

Attacks by lone individuals are major concern, a risk driven home most recently to French officials by the assassination attempt against Donald Trump.

Some involved in the Olympic security operation were stunned that the gunman armed with an AR-style rifle got within range of the former U.S. president.

“No one can guarantee that there won’t be mistakes. There, however, it was quite glaring,” said Gen. Philippe Pourqué, who oversaw the construction of a temporary camp in southeast Paris housing 4,500 soldiers from the Sentinelle force.

In France, in the last 13 months alone, men acting alone have carried out knife attacks that targeted tourists in Paris, and children in a park in an Alpine town, among others. A man who stabbed a teacher to death at his former high school in northern France in October had been under surveillance by French security services for suspected Islamic radicalization.

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Soldiers demonstrate operational technics for close combat in a training class at a military camp set up for the Paris Olympic games Friday, July 19, 2024,

With long and bitter experience of deadly extremist attacks, France has armed itself with a dense network of police units, intelligence services and investigators who specialize in fighting terrorism, and suspects in terrorism cases can be held longer for questioning.

Hundreds of thousands of background checks have scrutinized Olympic ticket-holders, workers and others involved in the Games and applicants for passes to enter Paris’ most tightly controlled security zone, along the Seine’s banks. The checks blocked more than 3,900 people from attending, Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said. He said some were flagged for suspected Islamic radicalization, left- or right-wing political extremism, significant criminal records and other security concerns.

“We’re particularly attentive to Russian and Belorussian citizens,” Darmanin added, although he stopped short of linking exclusions to Russia’s war in Ukraine and Belarus’ role as an ally of Moscow.

Darmanin said 155 people considered to be “very dangerous” potential terror threats are also being kept away from the opening ceremony and the Games, with police searching their homes for weapons and computers in some cases.

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A security officer watches people taken photographs in front of the Eiffel Tower at the 2024 Summer Olympics, Saturday, July 20, 2024, in Paris, France. (AP Photo/Thomas Padilla)
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He said intelligence services haven’t identified any proven terror plots against the Games “but we are being extremely attentive.”

Critics fear intrusive Olympic security will stay after the Games​

Campaigners for digital rights worry that Olympic surveillance cameras and AI systems could erode privacy and other freedoms, and zero in on people without fixed homes who spend a lot of time in public spaces.

Saccage 2024, a group that has campaigned for months against the Paris Games, took aim at the scope of the Olympic security, describing it as a “repressive arsenal” in a statement to The Associated Press.

“And this is not a French exception, far from it, but a systematic occurrence in host countries,” it said. “Is it reasonable to offer one month of ‘festivities’ to the most well-off tourists at the cost of a long-term securitization legacy for all residents of the city and the country?”
 
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Meemur

Voice on the Prairie
You couldn't pay me any amount of money to go anywhere near that circus, and if I lived in the area, I'd go on an extended vacation.

It's just too big of a target, and I've been told that French security is bottom of the barrel.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

PARIS 2024 OLYMPICS: LEBRON JAMES 'SUPER HUMBLED' TO BEING NAMED AS TEAM USA’S MEN'S FLAGBEARER AT OPENING CEREMONY​

By Eleanor Lee2 min23 July 2024 08:16 GMT-4
GettyImages-150212848



Two-time Olympic gold medallist LeBron James told Team USA that he was “super humbled” to have been named as their men’s flagbearer for the Paris 2024 Opening Ceremony.

It was four-time NBA champion and USA basketball teammate Steph Curry who delivered the news to James before their 92-88 win over Germany on July 22.

“You get to wave the flag in Paris my man,” Curry told James as their fellow USA teammates shared support with a round of applause.

“It’s special in the fact that to get an opportunity to represent your country in another fashion,” the NBA's all-time leading scorer told Team USA.

“I understand how prestigious this moment is and for someone to be the flag bearer, and wave the flag not only for us as the men’s national team but for all the Olympian’s, I hold that with the most honour.”

On July 26, LeBron James will become Team USA’s first ever men’s basketball player to walk an Olympic Opening Ceremony as flagbearer.

It’s definitely something that my family and my community and my friends will [help] live on forever. I’m super appreciative and super humbled by it,” he explained.

Since his first Olympic Games back in 2004 where he took bronze, LeBron has deservedly earned himself the title of 'King James', being widely recognised as one of the all-time basketball greats throughout the world.

The now 39 year-old has been named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player four times and an All-Star a record number of twenty times.

There is no doubt as to why James has been chosen to bear the Stars and Stripes for the United States, having impacted millions of people across the country - and world - on and off the court.

From supporting his local community of Akron, Ohio through the LeBron James Family Foundation and using his voice in the face of injustice, to becoming the first Black man to front the cover of Vogue and actively supporting a number of global non-profit organisations, it’s clear that James has used his status as a force for good.

Despite expressing a desire to continue playing into his forties, Paris 2024 will likely mark James’ final Olympics, giving him one final opportunity to secure a third gold medal.
 

Dash

Veteran Member

Mzkitty

I give up.

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
If there are any actions taken by the usual suspects it will be against what isn't protected in such a way that it can't be ignored or explained away as an isolated incident.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
She's a quitter.
As Simone got off the plane in Tokyo the press was all over her about the sex abusing gymnastics doctor who was just found guilty of his crimes. She was the only one who was abused who was still competing.

The FBI covered up the abuse for years. And now they decided to bring it all back to her right before the biggest event of her career. You don't throw a star athlete off their stride that way.

Had she been in a team sport her teammates competing normally would have kept her timing in line. But in gymnastics you are on a team but your performance is as individual. All eyes are on you. There is a difference.
 

Meemur

Voice on the Prairie
As Simone got off the plane in Tokyo the press was all over her about the sex abusing gymnastics doctor who was just found guilty of his crimes. She was the only one who was abused who was still competing.

The FBI covered up the abuse for years. And now they decided to bring it all back to her right before the biggest event of her career. You don't throw a star athlete off their stride that way.

Had she been in a team sport her teammates competing normally would have kept her timing in line. But in gymnastics you are on a team but your performance is as individual. All eyes are on you. There is a difference.

I hope she has several members of a security team watching out for her and her squad members. They are among the least able to defend themselves if anything happens.
 
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TBonz

Veteran Member
As Simone got off the plane in Tokyo the press was all over her about the sex abusing gymnastics doctor who was just found guilty of his crimes. She was the only one who was abused who was still competing.

The FBI covered up the abuse for years. And now they decided to bring it all back to her right before the biggest event of her career. You don't throw a star athlete off their stride that way.

Had she been in a team sport her teammates competing normally would have kept her timing in line. But in gymnastics you are on a team but your performance is as individual. All eyes are on you. There is a difference.

Maybe so, but being an Olympian means not only having the physical ability to be the top athlete, but the mental ability to handle it all. Fail.

Plus - she was all bragging about being the G.O.A.T. and I think when she slipped up early on (she's not so young anymore, gymnastics-wise), she played the "mental" card. Pride goeth before a fall.

Just my opinion. Yours may vary.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

French MP Sparks Uproar By Denouncing Israeli Presence Paris Olympics​


BY TYLER DURDEN
WEDNESDAY, JUL 24, 2024 - 05:00 AM
Via Middle East Eye
The participation of Israel in the Olympic Games that will begin next Friday in Paris has aroused heated controversy in France after a left-wing MP said the country should be shunned over its war in Gaza. At a pro-Gaza rally on Saturday, France Unbowed (LFI) MP Thomas Portes was filmed saying Israel’s Olympic delegation was “not welcome in Paris”, and that there should be protests against its taking part in the games.

“Israeli athletes are not welcome at the Olympic Games in Paris,” Portes said, calling for using “the deadline” of the event and “all the levers that we have to create mobilizations and denounce the presence of a state which today massacres [the Palestinian] people.”
Image: AP

Portes represents Seine-Saint-Denis, the department that hosts the Olympic Village and the Stade de France. Later, he clarified his comments, saying that he was not opposed to the presence of Israeli athletes but wanted “French diplomacy to put pressure on the IOC [International Olympic Committee] so that the Israeli flag and anthem are not allowed during these Olympic Games, as is done for Russia”.

Despite his follow-up comments, the MP’s remarks sparked an outcry, with many political figures on the right and left denouncing them. Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin expressed the “disgust” he felt at Portes’s remarks, which he said “smack of antisemitism”, adding that the MP was putting “a target on the backs of Israeli athletes”.

Darmanin announced that the Israeli athletes would receive 24-hour protection from the GIGN, French elite forces, during the competition.

Reacting to Portes’ statements, Foreign Minister Stephane Sejourne told a meeting of European Union counterparts in Brussels on Monday: “I want to say that on behalf of France, to the Israeli delegation, we welcome you to France for these Olympic Games.”

On the left, Carole Delga, the socialist president of the southeastern Occitanie region, denounced the comments as “irresponsible and unworthy”.

“No one has forgotten Munich 72. A few days before the opening of the Olympic Games, the hateful remarks of Thomas Portes contribute to threatening the security of the Israeli delegation and that of Paris 2024,” she posted on X, in reference to the 1972 hostage-taking by the Black September Palestinian organisation during which 11 Israeli athletes were killed.


The president of the far-right National Rally (RN) party Jordan Bardella also drew a parallel with the infamous event, saying that it was “the same uninhibited and blind hatred that killed Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1972”.

Yonathan Arfi, president of the Representative Council of Jewish Institutions of France (CRIF), a pro-Israel organisation, described Portes’ comments as “irresponsible”. “Since 7 October, Thomas Portes has legitimised Hamas. He now puts a target on the backs of Israeli athletes, already the most threatened in the Olympic Games,” he wrote on X.

Yet the Palestinian Olympic Committee on Monday accused Israel of breaching the Olympic truce, set from 19 July to mid-September, by conducting “bombings on Gaza resulting in civilian casualties” and killing hundreds of athletes and sportspeople.

In an open letter addressed to the IOC chairman, the Palestinian Committee has formally requested “the immediate exclusion of Israel from the Paris 2024 Olympic Games”, saying that approximately 400 athletes had been killed since October and many sports facilities destroyed.

On social networks, Portes’ comments sparked an avalanche of criticism, as well as calls to prosecute the MP, who people accused of antisemitism. The hashtag #PortesAuTribunal (“Portes in the courthouse”) has been trending in France for several days.

Internet users notably re-shared a drawing by well-known cartoonist Plantu, where Portes is seen with a skull face, a green bandana around his head, crushing with his foot the decapitated head of an Israeli athlete lying nearby. The title reads: “Thomas-Portes-Ouvertes-A-l’Antisémitisme”, in a wordplay on the meaning in French of the MP's surname (“Thomas-Doors-Open-To-Antisemitism”).

Several organizations considered to be pro-Israel, such as Lawyers Without Borders and the European Jewish Organisation (EJO), said they would file a complaint against the MP, denouncing “dangerous calls to hatred”. Another organization, the International League Against Racism and Anti-Semitism (Licra), announced it would refer previous comments by Portes, calling for sanctions against “French-Israelis complicit in war crimes in the Gaza Strip”, to the prosecutor’s office.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane

Coco Gauff to be female flag bearer for US team at Olympic opening ceremony, joining LeBron James​

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FILE - Coco Gauff of the U.S. plays a shot against Poland’s Iga Swiatek during their semifinal match of the French Open tennis tournament at the Roland Garros stadium in Paris, Thursday, June 6, 2024. (AP Photo/Jean-Francois Badias, File)
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Updated 8:32 AM EDT, July 24, 2024

PARIS (AP) — Tennis star Coco Gauff will join LeBron James as a flag bearer for the U.S. Olympic team at Friday’s opening ceremony.

Gauff, the reigning U.S. Open champion, is set to make her Olympic debut at the Paris Games and will be the first tennis athlete to carry the U.S. flag. She and James were chosen by Team USA athletes.

“I mean, for me, the Olympics is a top priority. I would say equal to the Grand Slams. I wouldn’t put it above or below, just because I’ve never played before. This is my first time,” Gauff said earlier this year. “Obviously, I always want to do well, try to get a medal.”

Gauff and James, the 39-year-old leading scorer in NBA history, both compete in sports that are outside the traditional Olympic world and get attention year-round, not just every four years.

The 20-year-old Gauff made the American team for the Tokyo Games three years ago as a teenager but had to sit out those Olympics because she tested positive for COVID-19 right before she was supposed to fly to Japan.

Now Gauff, who is based in Florida, is a Grand Slam title winner in singles and doubles. She won her first major championship in New York in September, defeating Aryna Sabalenka in the singles final of the U.S. Open, then added her first Grand Slam doubles trophy at the French Open this June alongside Katerina Siniakova of the Czech Republic.

The same clay courts at Roland Garros used for the French Open will be where matches are going to be held for the Paris Olympics. The draw to set the brackets is Thursday, and play begins on Saturday.

Gauff is seeded No. 2 in singles, matching her current WTA ranking behind No. 1 Iga Swiatek of Poland, and will be among the medal favorites.

She and her usual doubles partner, Jessica Pegula, are seeded No. 1 in women’s doubles. It’s possible Gauff could also be entered in mixed doubles, but those pairings have not been announced yet.

“I’m not putting too much pressure on it, because I really want to fully indulge in the experience,” Gauff said about her Olympics debut. “Hopefully I can have the experience multiple times in my lifetime, (but) I’ll treat it as a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”
 

The Mountain

Here since the beginning
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In fairness, "Pakistan" was only Hindu because it used to be part of India. During the convulsion of Indian independence, they also partitioned off Pakistan because the Muslims wanted their own place. It was not the usual pattern of creating a no-go enclave that evolves into an Islamic territory. Pakistan as an independent entity has never been Hindu.
 

Mzkitty

I give up.
In fairness, "Pakistan" was only Hindu because it used to be part of India. During the convulsion of Indian independence, they also partitioned off Pakistan because the Muslims wanted their own place. It was not the usual pattern of creating a no-go enclave that evolves into an Islamic territory. Pakistan as an independent entity has never been Hindu.

I'm old enough to remember all the Hindus leaving Pakistan, and millions of muzzies leaving India. India to this day still has muzzies as far as I know.
 

summerthyme

Administrator
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