Exclusive: From cyber unit to troops, South Korea adds extra layer
of Olympics security amid tensions
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[September 28, 2017]
By Jane Chung and Hyunjoo Jin
SEOUL (Reuters) - Rattled by rising
tensions with North Korea, South Korea is taking extra measures to
try to ensure the safety of the 2018 Winter Games, including setting
up a crack cyber defense team and doubling the number of troops,
according to officials and documents reviewed by Reuters.
The Games take place next February in the mountainous resort town of
Pyeongchang, just 80 km (50 miles) from the heavily fortified border
with North Korea.
They come after a series of missile and nuclear tests show the North
making rapid advances in its weapons program and as inflammatory
rhetoric between Pyongyang and Washington stirs up concerns about
another conflict on the Korean peninsula.
South Korea's Defense Ministry will deploy some 5,000 armed forces
personnel at the Games, double the 2,400 on duty during the 2002
World Cup, which South Korea co-hosted with Japan, according to
government officials and documents reviewed by Reuters.
Pyeongchang's organizing committee for the 2018 Games (POCOG) is
also selecting a private cyber security company to guard against a
hacking attack from the North, tender documents show.
The committee is seeking to fast-track the selection as tensions
rise in the wake of South Korea's controversial deployment of the
U.S. THAAD anti-missile system, and as North Korean leader Kim Jong
Un tests weapons at an unprecedented rate.
"Cyber threats have increased due to external factors such as the
THAAD deployment and recent North Korean missile launches," the
committee said in the document.
The committee will make all-out efforts to ensure the Pyeongchang
Olympics are the safest ever, it said.
"We strongly believe we can host the Olympics successfully as we
have invested a lot and prepared well for cyber security," it said
in a statement in response to queries from Reuters.
South Korea has blamed the North for a series of hacking attempts in
the last few years, including a 2013 cyber attack against South
Korean banks and broadcasters that froze computer systems for more
than a week. Pyongyang denied any responsibility.
THREATS INCREASE
While South Korea faces unique challenges with its hostile and
nuclear-armed neighbor, the level of threats and security to counter
them have escalated globally since South Korea last hosted a major
international sporting event.
The POCOG is hiring a private security contractor, stipulating the
firm should be capable of running around 500 personnel to operate
X-ray screening each day during the event, a separate document seen
by Reuters shows.
It has earmarked 20 billion won ($17.6 million) for the screening
security measures and another 1.3 billion won for the cyber security
protection, according to the documents.
An official from the National Intelligence Service, South Korea's
spy agency, is in charge of security operations, working with the
government’s anti-terrorism center, the organizing committee's
spokeswoman told Reuters.
South Korea has also created a new Special Weapons and Tactics team
to guard against terrorism around the Games, Asia's first Winter
Olympics outside Japan.
“We will search Olympic venues to check for bombs, protect athletes
and visitors, and guard against any attempts to assassinate key
figures," Jin Jeong-hyeon, a police inspector from the SWAT team,
told Reuters.
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An ice sculpture of the Olympic rings is illuminated during the
Pyeongchang Winter Festival, near the venue for the opening and
closing ceremony of the PyeongChang 2018 Winter Olympic Games in
Pyeongchang, South Korea, February 10, 2017. REUTERS/Kim
Hong-Ji/File Photo
In late August, the POCOG held a two-day briefing with major Olympic
sponsors including McDonald's Corp and Coca-Cola Co to talk about
the measures being put in place, according to a government
statement. It gave them a look at emergency evacuation facilities
during the briefing, though further details were not disclosed.
PAST AGGRESSIONS
While some observers view Pyongyang's threats as bluster, others
point to instances of North Korean aggression during the 2002 World
Cup and ahead of the 1988 Seoul Olympics as reasons to be concerned.
In June 2002, as South Korea prepared to play Turkey in the playoff
for third place at the World Cup, North Korean patrol boats crossed
the disputed maritime border and exchanged fire with South Korean
vessels, killing six South Korean sailors.
In November 1987, just nine months before South Korea was set to
host the Summer Games in Seoul, North Korean agents detonated a bomb
on Korean Air Flight 858, killing all 104 passengers and 11 crew.
One of the agents later told investigators the order had come from
North Korean leader Kim Jong Il and one of the aims had been to
frighten international athletes and visitors from attending the
Seoul Olympics.
Other Olympics have also been affected by violence, most notably the
killing of 11 Israeli athletes by Palestinian militants at the 1972
Munich Games. Mexican police and military killed hundreds of
civilians during a protest just days before the Mexico City Olympics
in 1968.
South Korea's sports minister Do Jong-whan said this week Seoul was
"very concerned about aggressive remarks" traded between Pyongyang
and Washington but did not believe Kim would risk a war against
countries participating at the Olympics.
The International Olympics Committee is encouraging the
participation of North Koreans as athletes, judges or "wild cards"
to help ensure the safety of the Olympics, Do added.
Chang Ung, North Korea's IOC member, said earlier this month that
the Pyeongchang Olympics will not be affected by the escalating
crisis on the peninsula and North Korea will hopefully be able to
send athletes. Figure skating, short track speed skating and Nordic
skiing could potentially feature North Korean athletes, he said.
Despite the heightened security measures, there isn't a lot South
Korea can do to reassure participants, said Lee Soo-hyuck, a former
foreign affairs presidential secretary.
"This issue is more about whether North Korea would decide to carry
out hostile actions or not.”
(Additional reporting by Haejin Choi and Yuna Park; Editing by Peter
Rutherford, Soyoung Kim and Lincoln Feast)
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