Italy has expressed strong opposition to the planned deployment of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents for security operations during the upcoming Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics, creating diplomatic friction between the two NATO allies. The controversy stems from recent incidents in Minneapolis where ICE officers were involved in fatal shootings, generating widespread alarm in Italy after images of the events circulated nationally.
ICE confirmed through an official statement that its Homeland Security Investigations unit would support the US Department of State’s Diplomatic Security Service in vetting and mitigating risks from transnational criminal organizations during the Games, which run from February 6-22. The agency emphasized that its personnel would ‘obviously not conduct immigration enforcement operations outside the US’ and that all security operations would remain under Italian authority.
The announcement triggered immediate backlash from Italian officials. Milan Mayor Beppe Sala denounced the decision on Italian radio, stating, ‘This is a militia that kills… of course they’re not welcome in Milan.’ He further asserted that ICE agents ‘don’t guarantee they conform to our democratic way of ensuring security.’
Italian Interior Minister Matteo Pantedosi initially appeared unaware of the deployment plans but later took a firm stance, maintaining that ‘ICE will certainly not operate on Italian national territory.’ He emphasized that security remained exclusively under Italian jurisdiction and that the US had not formally communicated a list of security personnel.
The tension escalated following reports that ICE officials in Minneapolis had threatened journalists from Italy’s public broadcaster RAI, warning them that their car window would be smashed if they continued filming federal agents. This incident, coupled with the fatal shootings in Minneapolis, intensified Italian concerns about the potential presence of these agents on their streets.
Regional officials attempted to defuse the situation, with Lombardy Governor Attilio Fontana suggesting ICE agents would primarily protect US Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. However, opposition politicians criticized Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni’s government for what they characterized as subservience to the Trump administration, highlighting the complex political dimensions of this international security dispute.
