CEO Scott Blackmun spoke yesterday after a board meeting, and a day after members of the Trump administration cast doubt over whether the U.S. would field a team at the Olympics in February.
Blackmun said comments from U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and White House spokeswoman Sarah Huckabee Sanders took the USOC leadership by surprise, but chalked it up to a miscommunication.
Shortly after Haley called U.S. participation an open question and Sanders followed up by saying "no official decision has been made," Sanders clarified in a tweet, saying the U.S. looks forward to participating in the games.
"I think there was just some miscommunication there rather than anything intended to be substantive or send a message. It got our attention, but all's well that ends well."
Tensions have been high in South Korea after a series of missile tests in North Korea and inflammatory rhetoric between its leader, Kim Jong Un, and President Donald Trump.
But Blackmun said the USOC hadn't received a single comment from an athlete or sponsor suggesting they don't want to go to the Olympics, which begin Feb. 9.
"We have the largest overseas U.S. military base in Seoul," Vonn said. " If something is going to happen, none of us can control it anyway."
Mancuso said she felt safe during a trip to South Korea last year.
"I think politics are politics and I would hope that the world isn't as evil as a place to attack something like the Olympics," she said.
Technically, the decision about whether to participate in the Olympics rests with the USOC and the individual athletes. The USOC has consistently said the tension in the Koreas won't stop it from fielding a full U.S. team.
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