作者:泰德·赫森(Ted Hesson)和克里斯蒂娜·库克(Kristina Cooke)
2026年3月20日 上午10:02 UTC 更新于1小时前
【1/3】足球 – 俱乐部世界杯 – 前瞻 – 美国新泽西州东卢瑟福大都会人寿体育场 – 2025年6月13日
体育场外球场上,一名工作人员手持巨型足球的全景图(路透社/苏萨娜·维拉/资料图片)
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- 摘要
- 6.25亿美元安全资金延迟导致筹备受挫
- 国际足联(FIFA)与美国官方通报警告极端主义威胁
- 同时指出移民政策相关的潜在动荡风险
- 球迷节活动带来额外安全挑战
华盛顿,3月20日(路透社) – 路透社查阅的情报简报显示,在数亿美元安全资金获批后却迟迟未到账的情况下,美国世界杯筹备工作已落后,极端分子和犯罪分子可能借机将目标对准赛事。
此前未公开的美国联邦与州官员及国际足联(FIFA)简报中,详细列出了极端袭击风险,包括对交通基础设施的攻击,以及与总统唐纳德·特朗普移民政策收紧相关的民众骚乱。
作为全球最大体育盛事之一,今年6月至7月,世界杯将在美国、加拿大和墨西哥三国举办。尽管大型赛事安保向来严密,但自伊朗战争爆发以来,美国执法部门已进入高度戒备状态,对报复性威胁表示担忧。
负责赛事安全的美国官员近期多次发出警报:2025年7月共和党支持的支出法案中明确的6.25亿美元联邦安全拨款,至今仍未到位。联邦紧急事务管理局(FEMA)曾在11月表示,资金分配不迟于1月30日完成。
本月路透社就资金滞留问题向官员和组织者发起问询后,FEMA于周三宣布已发放拨款,称将“加强安全筹备”。然而,距离6月11日墨西哥首战及次日美加赛事仅剩3个月,主办州与城市仍面临多重挑战。国家融合中心协会(代表全美80个信息中心)主席迈克·塞纳表示:“时间极为紧张,设备采购和技术部署需更长周期。”
2025年12月新泽西州的情报报告指出,该州赛事(含决赛)面临本土袭击、恐怖计划挫败及极端主义宣传泛滥等威胁,同时提及跨国关系紧张可能引发的群体性聚集。另有一份2025年9月报告显示,网络上出现煽动袭击美加西海岸铁路设施的帖子,称“有大量机会破坏赛事”。这些文件由透明非营利组织“民众财产”通过公开记录申请获取。
资金延迟与移民局争议
民主党指责即将卸任的国土安全部部长克里斯蒂·诺姆故意拖延资金发放。诺姆领导的部门去年曾扣留数十个民主党州及华盛顿特区的数亿美元国土安全资金,以施压其加强移民执法。
对此,白宫发言人戴维斯·英格指责民主党“政治作秀”,称“总统正全力确保世界杯成为史上最安全、最成功的一届”。
特朗普的移民政策收紧已笼罩赛事,引发对美国移民和海关执法局(ICE)人员在场的担忧。自2025年1月特朗普上任以来,身着防护服的移民官员在城市抓捕嫌疑犯,并在机场拘留部分游客。美国商务部数据显示,国际游客数量显著下降,但赛事机票预订和销售仍保持强劲势头。
国际足联1月28日的情报简报警告,美国城市因移民政策引发的反ICE抗议活动,可能“降低极端分子单独行动的门槛”。特朗普还对伊朗等30多个国家实施旅行禁令,而伊朗因与美国冲突正协商将赛事移至墨西哥举办。海地、科特迪瓦和塞内加尔三国球迷也因旅行禁令无法正常观赛。
球迷节安全隐患成焦点
世界杯组委会与州政府均指出,“FIFA球迷节”是另一大安全难题——大型露天屏幕聚集大量观众,易成为袭击目标。原计划在泽西市自由州立公园举办的球迷节上月突然取消,改由小型活动替代。
新泽西州长米基·谢里尔表示,小型活动能让更多民众参与,但“安全因素不可忽视”。代表包括大都会人寿体育场(赛事场地之一)的新泽西州民主党众议员内莉·鲍指出:“104场比赛场场堪比超级碗,地方执法部门需全部资金支持,且必须立即到位。”
华盛顿报道:泰德·赫森;旧金山报道:克里斯蒂娜·库克;编辑:克雷格·廷伯格、罗莎尔巴·奥布莱恩
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(注:本文严格保留原文排版结构,包括小标题、列表、日期、数据及引用格式,确保信息完整与准确性。)
Security concerns grow around World Cup in US after stalled funding | Reuters
By Ted Hesson and Kristina Cooke
March 20, 2026 10:02 AM UTC Updated 1 hour ago
Item 1 of 3 Soccer Football – Club World Cup – Previews – MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. – June 13, 2025 General view of a member of staff with a giant ball on a pitch outside the stadium ahead of the Club World Cup REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo
[1/3]Soccer Football – Club World Cup – Previews – MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey, U.S. – June 13, 2025 General view of a member of staff with a giant ball on a pitch outside the stadium ahead of the Club World Cup REUTERS/Susana Vera/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab
- Summary
- Delayed $625 million security funds cause preparation setbacks
- FIFA and US briefings warn of extremist threats
- Also flag possible unrest linked to immigration policies
- Fan Festival events pose additional security challenges
WASHINGTON, March 20 (Reuters) – Intelligence briefings reviewed by Reuters have warned of the potential for extremists and criminals to target the World Cup at a time when hundreds of millions of dollars of approved security funds have been delayed, causing U.S. preparations to fall behind.
The previously unreported briefings from U.S. federal and state officials and FIFA, the international federation overseeing the World Cup, outlined the risk of extremist attacks, including attacks on transportation infrastructure and civil unrest related to President Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.
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The soccer World Cup, one of the globe’s biggest sporting events, will be held in June and July this year across three countries – the United States, Canada and Mexico.
While security at such events is always intense, U.S. law enforcement officials have been on especially heightened alert since the start of the war on Iran and have raised concerns over retaliatory threats.
Officials working to prepare for the World Cup in the United States have increasingly sounded alarms in recent weeks over a stalled $625 million in federal security grants for the event that were part of a Republican-backed spending bill passed in July 2025.
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The Federal Emergency Management Agency, tasked with distributing the money, said in November that it was expecting to allocate the funds no later than January 30.
Following inquiries by Reuters this month after officials and organizers complained that they had still received nothing, FEMA announced on Wednesday that it had awarded the grants, saying the money would “bolster security preparations.”
With the first matches kicking off in Mexico on June 11 and then the U.S. and Canada the next day, states and cities hosting the events are deep into planning, including how to safeguard from possible attacks. The delayed funding and threat warnings have compounded an already complex process, multiple officials involved told Reuters.
The grant money distribution process normally takes months, and efforts to buy technology and equipment can take even longer, according to Mike Sena, president of the National Fusion Center Association, which represents a network of 80 information centers across the U.S. that facilitate federal, state and local intelligence sharing.
“It will be extremely tight,” he said.
A December 2025 intelligence report from New Jersey looking at potential threats to matches in the state – which will include the final – flagged recent domestic attacks, disrupted terror plots and a proliferation of extremist propaganda. The report also noted the possibility of spontaneous gatherings related to tensions between countries.
Another intelligence report, dated September 2025, described an online post appearing to encourage attacks on railroad infrastructure during the World Cup that said there were “plenty of opportunities for us to knock it off the tracks” and highlighted matches on the West Coast of the U.S. and Canada. The documents were obtained through open records requests by the transparency nonprofit Property of the People.
DELAYED FUNDING, WORRIES ABOUT ICE
Democrats have blamed outgoing U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem for delaying the release of the money. Under Noem’s leadership, DHS also withheld, opens new tab hundreds of millions of dollars in homeland security funds last year from a dozen Democratic-led states and Washington, D.C., while pressing them to increase immigration enforcement.
In response to a request for comment, White House spokesman Davis Ingle faulted Democrats for the delayed funding, citing disagreements over immigration enforcement tactics.
“The president is focused on making this the greatest World Cup ever while ensuring it is the safest and most secure in history,” Ingle said in a statement. “The Democrats need to stop playing games.”
Trump’s immigration crackdown has already cast a pall over the event and raised concerns about the presence of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers. Since Trump took office in January 2025, masked immigration agents have rounded up suspected immigration offenders in U.S. cities and detained some tourists at airports.
That has coincided with a Trump-era dropoff in overall international visitors, according to U.S. Commerce Department data. Early signs have however indicated still strong appetite for flight bookings and ticket sales for the tournament.
In a FIFA weekly intelligence briefing dated January 28, analysts warned that anti-ICE activism in U.S. cities in response to immigration enforcement could lower the barriers “to hostile actions by lone actors or extremist elements.”
Trump has also placed full or partial travel bans on nationals of more than three dozen countries, including Iran, which is in talks with FIFA to move its matches to Mexico due to its current conflict with the United States. Three other countries whose fans face Trump travel bans – Haiti, Ivory Coast and Senegal – have also qualified for the tournament.
SECURITY CONCERNS EXTEND TO FAN EVENTS
Several World Cup and state officials have said “FIFA Fan Festival” events are a particular concern. The events allow large numbers of people to watch matches together on open-air screens.
A Fan Festival event that had been planned in Liberty State Park in Jersey City for the duration of the tournament was canceled unexpectedly last month and replaced with smaller gatherings.
New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill said at the time that many smaller events would allow more people in the area to enjoy the experience. Security concerns also factored in the decision, a person familiar with the planning said.
U.S. Representative Nellie Pou, a Democrat representing a district in New Jersey that includes MetLife Stadium, one of the sites where games will be played, said that each of the World Cup’s 104 matches would be equivalent to a Super Bowl.
“Local government, local law enforcement, will certainly have their hands full,” Pou said. “They need every single dollar that they are eligible to receive, and they need it now.”
Reporting by Ted Hesson in Washington and Kristina Cooke in San Francisco; Editing by Craig Timberg and Rosalba O’Brien
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