The 2026 Winter Olympics open Friday, Feb. 6, with ceremonies at Milan’s San Siro stadium, as political tensions linked to the Trump administration and a dispute over U.S. immigration agency involvement in delegation security draw added scrutiny around the Games.
The 2026 Winter Olympics (Milano Cortina 2026) open on Friday, Feb. 6, with the Opening Ceremony scheduled for San Siro stadium in Milan.
The United States will be represented at the ceremony by Vice President J.D. Vance, who the White House has said will lead the U.S. presidential delegation. He is expected to be joined by Second Lady Usha Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio, and U.S. Ambassador to Italy Tilman Fertitta, among others.
A separate controversy has centered on U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and whether the agency will have any role in Olympic security in Italy. Italian officials and ICE have indicated that any ICE involvement would come through the agency’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) arm, providing analytical and investigative support to U.S. diplomatic security and cooperating with Italian authorities on threats such as transnational crime. Italian authorities have also stressed that overall security operations remain under Italy’s authority and that ICE would not conduct immigration enforcement in Italy.
The issue has nonetheless triggered political blowback in Italy. Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala has publicly criticized ICE and said the agency is not welcome in the city, comments that were widely reported as protests and opposition parties demanded clarification about the U.S. role.
Beyond security, this year’s Olympics arrive amid broader geopolitical strains that, in some cases, have spilled into the sports arena. In North America, tensions were visible during the NHL’s 4 Nations Face-Off in February 2025, when fans in Montreal booed the U.S. anthem at tournament games. After Canada beat the United States 3–2 in overtime in the championship, then–Prime Minister Justin Trudeau posted on X: “You can’t take our country — and you can’t take our game.”
The Games themselves run through Feb. 22 across multiple sites in northern Italy, with major ice events based in Milan and alpine events staged in mountain venues including Cortina d’Ampezzo.
Editor’s note for readers: Several assertions circulating in commentary about these Olympics—such as claims about specific countries treating competition against U.S. athletes as a “moral imperative,” a State Department memo describing a “Decade of Sport in America,” and quotations attributed to Canadian political figures about an international “rupture”—could not be independently verified from the available reporting reviewed for this rewrite.