Pope Francis' style of breaking
away from his security detail and diving toward the crowds means his
protectors have had to do a quick rewrite of strategy, sometimes on the
spot.
Concern and urgency were visibly etched on the face of the head of the
Vatican police, Domenico Giani, after the pope celebrated Mass in the
Vatican's Church of St. Anne March 17.
Giani swiftly shouted out fresh commands for undercover guards and
police to regroup as Pope Francis made a beeline toward a large cheering
crowd pressing against a barricade outside the entrance into Vatican
City. This came after the pope personally greeted, often hugging, each
of the approximately 200 members of the congregation right after Mass.
The pope has preferred to walk short distances within Vatican City
instead of taking a waiting sedan and has also eschewed a multi-car
security escort for longer trips, preferring just one vehicle to get him
to his destination. He had no qualms about stopping the open-air
popemobile midride March 20 to climb out, kiss and bless a disabled
adult in the throng.
The new papal approach "is perfectly fine; it's his way of doing things," Cpl. Urs Breitenmoser of the Swiss Guard.
"We are worried if there is more contact with people, because that means
there's a greater possibility something can happen," he said March 21.
But "we have to fully adapt ourselves" to what the pope wants, he said,
and security will in no way try to prevent or dissuade him from greeting
people.
The Vatican spokesman, Jesuit Father Federico Lombardi, told journalists
the pope's security detail is able to smoothly switch gears and follow
the pope's lead.
It is because of their "ability and intelligence" that the papal
guardians "know how to adapt and be flexible according to the pope's
manifest wishes and intentions," he said March 18.
The 110 Swiss Guards' main duties are protecting the pope and his
residence while the Vatican's own police force, the gendarme corps, is
responsible for crowd control, traffic within the Vatican and other
duties within the walls of Vatican City.
Together, the hundreds of people who guard the pope and the Vatican have
tried to strike a delicate balance between providing tight professional
security and a reasonable amount of access to the public.
Pope Pius XII began the practice of having "audiences outside" among the general public, Breitenmoser said.
Since then, the men guarding the pope, both in uniform and undercover,
have had to develop "a system that's worked for years" of being able to
provide discreet yet diligent protection, he said.
"It's wonderful to be able to experience up close" the pope meeting and
interacting with the people even though "it makes us a little nervous,
which is normal," he said.