Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Terror attacks against Israeli targets thwarted at Paris Olympics

Five people were arrested on suspicion of being involved in three planned attacks.

Landmarks Around Paris Ahead of Paris Summer Olympics
The Paris 2024 logo near the Eiffel Tower, June 17, 2024. Photo by Chesnot/Getty Images.

French authorities thwarted three terrorist attacks, including against Israeli targets, at the Paris Olympics this summer, the national counterterrorism prosecutor said on Wednesday.

Terrorists planned to attack “Israeli institutions or representatives of Israel in Paris” during the competition, which took place in the French capital and other cities from July 26 to Aug. 11, Olivier Christen said, adding that “the Israeli team itself was not specifically targeted.”

Five people, including a minor, were arrested on suspicion of being involved in the three thwarted attacks.

France was on high alert during the Games, which took place against the backdrop of the Israel-Hamas war and a related increase in hostility to the Jewish state and Jews in Europe. Israeli athletes received threats ahead of the competition.

The Paris 2024 organizing committee said before the event that 30,000 police and gendarmes would be deployed, reinforced by roughly 20,000 soldiers and between 17,000 and 22,000 private security agents expected for the Olympic sites and fan zones.

The Israel Security Agency (Shin Bet) also took part in the largest-ever security operation of its kind to safeguard Israeli athletes taking part in the Games.

“This fight is far from over. More to come this summer,” Mahmoud Khalil said.
The Israeli firm Gambit Security said that the cyber attack had the hallmarks of prior Iranian attacks.
District leaders ought to be “ashamed of themselves for giving such a dangerous group unfettered access to their schools and students,” Casey Ryan, of Defending Education, told JNS.
“No one stands alone in our city, when one community is targeted by hate, all of Chicago feels the impact,” stated Brandon Johnson, the city mayor.
The public university “inexplicably took no serious action whatsoever” as “Jewish and Israeli students risked physical assault” during the 2024 anti-Israel campus protests.
Police said the suspect repeatedly slapped the woman on her upper back from behind, though authorities are not investigating the incident as a hate crime.