More Than 1,000 U.S. Spies Protecting Rio Olympics
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U.S. intelligence has assigned more than 1,000 spies to Olympic security as part of a highly classified effort to protect the Rio 2016 Summer Games and American athletes and staff, NBC News has learned.
Hundreds of analysts, law enforcement and
special operations personnel are already on the ground in Rio de
Janeiro, according to an exclusive NBC News review of a highly
classified report on U.S. intelligence efforts.
In addition, more than a dozen highly trained
Navy and Marine Corps commandos from the U.S. Special Operations Command
are in Brazil, working with the Brazilian Federal Police and the
Brazilian Navy, according to senior military officials.
The U.S. military, as expected, has placed
larger military units on call should a rescue or counterterrorism
operation be needed, the officials said.
Brazilian soldiers patrol around the Olympic Park in Rio de Janeiro on Thursday.
The classified report outlines an operation that
encompasses all 17 U.S. intelligence agencies, including those of the
armed services, and involves human intelligence, spy satellites,
electronic eavesdropping, and cyber and social media monitoring.
Areas of cooperation include vetting 10,000-plus
athletes and 35,000-plus security and police personnel and others;
monitoring terrorists' social media accounts; and offering U.S. help in
securing computer networks, the review shows.
"U.S. intelligence agencies are working closely
with Brazilian intelligence officials to support their efforts to
identify and disrupt potential threats to the Olympic Games in Rio,"
said Richard Kolko, a spokesman for National Intelligence Director James
Clapper.
The operation is being conducted with the full cooperation of the Brazilian government.
"U.S. intelligence cooperation with Brazil has
been excellent since 9/11," a senior intelligence official said, adding,
"We consider the Brazilians to be well-prepared and highly
professional." Related:Olympic Refugee Team Carries Dreams of Millions
There is no indication of any specific plot against the Games, which officially kick off with Friday's opening ceremonies.
But two weeks ago, Brazilian authorities detained a dozen Rio residents for alleged ties to the Islamic State and arrested
a Brazilian of Lebanese descent for alleged links to ISIS. Brazil's
justice minister described those arrested as "amateurs" but noted they
had discussed attacking the Olympics. U.S. intelligence documents from
March also identify Hezbollah activity in Brazil.
Fans watch the action during a Olympic
soccer match between Honduras and Algeria in Rio de Janeiro on
Thursday. Matthias Hangst / Getty Images
Another U.S. intelligence official told NBC News
that the U.S. has not seen "any threats" of an ISIS attack, contrasting
the Olympics with the EuroCup soccer championship last month in France,
"which was overlaid with the ISIS threat profile."
According to the intelligence review, the U.S.
put a 24/7 multi-agency "Olympic Watch" in place late last year,
involving all agencies of the intelligence and law enforcement
communities, including the CIA, the NSA, the Secret Service, the FBI. It
also included the National Reconnaissance Office, responsible for spy
satellites, and the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, in charge
of imagery interpretation.
The NSA, America's eavesdropping agency, is the
lead agency and played the "leading role for the [intelligence
community] in the Olympics since the 1984 Los Angeles games," the review
said. Officials told NBC News that the NSA has proven most able to
provide unique intelligence on the ground and real-time warnings that
the host nations can't provide themselves.
The U.S. is one of 51 countries supplying
intelligence to the Brazilian counter terrorism effort, but the American
effort is second only to the Brazilians' operation. According to senior
U.S. intelligence officials, 800 intelligence professionals, mostly
analysts operating in the U.S., have been assigned and another 350 are
on the ground supporting U.S., Brazilian and International Olympic
Committee efforts.
The official noted that the each of the U.S.
military services have athletes participating in the Olympics, including
shooting, men and women's boxing, and wrestling competitions. "We have
actual equities involved," said the official in explaining the breadth
and depth of the operation.
Source: http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/2016-rio-summer-olympics/more-1-000-u-s-spies-brazil-protecting-rio-olympics-n623186