Security measures
The Louvre museum and shops located near it took security measures, once the shouting sounds were heard.
Carrousel du Louvre shops closed their doors, leaving buyers inside. Some 1,600 museum visitors were asked to sit on the floor and remain calm. The evacuation of people was carried out by small groups and only after inspection.
The attack also caused the restriction of pedestrian and vehicular traffic in the nearby area, while Palais Royal Musee du Louvre metro station was closed to the public as a security measure.
Failed terrorist attack
Head of Paris police Michel Cadot, who quickly arrived to the attack scene, told reporters that considering the behavior of the attacker it could be concluded that he sought to commit a terrorist act.
Later in the day, country's Prime Minister Bernard Cazeneuve said that the attack on a French serviceman in central Paris was "of a terrorist nature."
French Defense Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian and Interior Minister Bruno Le Roux interrupted their trips to the country's regions and returned to Paris.
Praising servicemen courage
French President Francois Hollande expressed his admiration of the courage that the servicemen performing sentry duty demonstrated during the attack on an officer.
"I praise the courage and determination that the servicemen showed this morning near the Carrousel du Louvre," Hollande posted on his Twitter account.
"Support to our servicemen who are at the front line against the Islamist threat and barbarism," Le Pen posted on her Twitter account.
The same kind of message was posted by French Socialist Party’s candidate Benoit Hamon in his Twitter.
Tragic coincidence
The attack near Louvre occurred exactly two years after a similar incident in Nice on February 3, 2015, when a man attacked soldiers guarding a Jewish cultural center. As a result, one soldier got deep cuts on his cheek, the other was shot in the arm. The attacker was arrested on the spot.
France has been on high security alert since a string of gun and bomb attacks by Islamists killed 130 people in Paris on November 13, 2015. The state of emergency was prolonged until the end of January 2017, following a truck attack in the city of Nice, which claimed over 80 lives.