"We are in close consultation with the Americans about security regarding their team. The U.S. have their own advice as well and take their own precautions so the security around that match will be a combination of their security and our security," Boultbee said.
Concern over security at the upcoming World Cup after The Sunday Times, a newspaper in Johannesburg, reported that the event would be a target for terrorist acts.
The article said the U.S. Congress had been briefed on threats from Pakistani and Somali extremists, including al-Qaida and its Somalian off-shoot Al-Shabaab. Both are suspected of operating training camps in Mozambique, which borders South Africa to the northeast.
The newspaper also said that South African security authorities have been monitoring around 40 suspects already in South Africa. The government has deployed more than 44,000 specially trained security personnel to operate in the 10 host stadiums in nine cities including Johannesburg, Cape Town and Pretoria.