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SportsSeptember 16, 2001

SALT LAKE CITY -- Even before the smoke cleared from the terrorist attacks, Olympic organizers were busy working on ways to make the 2002 Winter Games safer. Some images that emerged from possible changes weren't pretty: Humvees mounted with machine guns guarding the Olympic Village, heavily armed soldiers patrolling the airport and long lines at security checkpoints outside venues...

By Tim Korte, The Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY -- Even before the smoke cleared from the terrorist attacks, Olympic organizers were busy working on ways to make the 2002 Winter Games safer.

Some images that emerged from possible changes weren't pretty: Humvees mounted with machine guns guarding the Olympic Village, heavily armed soldiers patrolling the airport and long lines at security checkpoints outside venues.

Chief organizer Mitt Romney, however, doesn't believe the revamped security plan for the Salt Lake Olympics will be that extreme.

"I don't think this place is going to be an armed camp," he said Friday. "You won't see changes of that nature because the plan in place is quite complete. It calls for plainclothes personnel of quite a substantial number."

Make no doubt, security measures are being re-evaluated. With the threat of terrorism heightened everywhere because of the attacks Tuesday, Romney said he'd prefer to see more than the 1,400 troops originally expected.

"We recognize that the Olympics have been targeted in the past, at Munich and Atlanta, and we have long recognized the need to have the Olympics entirely secure," he said.

Mayor Rocky Anderson agreed, saying areas like the public celebration plaza outside City Hall, for example, will need additional security. The area will be fenced and revelers must pass through metal detectors.

"I don't think we'll see tanks rolling up and down the streets, but there's no question you will see more security," Anderson said.

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A marked event

The Olympic movement is forever haunted by the image of hooded Palestinian gunmen parading blindfolded Israeli athletes at the 1972 Summer Games in Munich, Germany. The 11 hostages were later killed.

At the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, a bomb explosion in Centennial Park killed one person and wounded 111 others.

There were 15,000 troops on hand in Atlanta, but legislation signed by President Clinton after those games severely limited the military's role in high-profile national events.

In Salt Lake, Romney said additional troops will handle "functions not on the street but guarding venues in the mountains and maintaining perimeters, as they typically do at the Olympic Village and places of that nature."

In the hours after the attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon, Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt spoke of how life in the United States had changed. He said the events raised awareness of "evil people in the world who will do outrageous things."

From there, it didn't take long for Utah residents to make the link to possible terrorism during the Salt Lake Olympics.

Federal lawmakers, however, acted swiftly to help bolster the $200 million Salt Lake security plan. A $40 billion package unanimously approved Thursday by the Senate includes another $12.7 million for the Olympics.

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