Bush's Olympic Doctrine

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Posted July 6, 2008 | 04:48 PM (EST)



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Earlier today in a pre-G8 press conference in Japan, President Bush defended his decision to attend the opening ceremonies of the Beijing Olympics. "The Chinese people are watching very carefully about the decisions by world leaders and I happen to believe that not going to the opening ceremony for the games would be an affront to the Chinese people, which may make it more difficult to be able to speak frankly with the Chinese leadership," the president said as he outlined the official justification for what might be termed Bush's Olympic Doctrine.

Although I don't want to say it, Bush's reasoning and explanation are right on target. Unlike other G8 leaders such as German Chancellor Merkel, British PM Brown, and, possibly, French President Sarkozy (he seems to be still waiting to find out if more Carrefour Hypermarkets will be targeted by Chinese protesters), Bush appears to understand that a key part of Olympics diplomacy is attending the opening ceremonies and keeping the locals happy.

Despite the best intentions of the mostly Western activists who've tried to highlight China's human rights abuses and the country's links to genocide in Africa, the issues have not resonated with Beijingers or the Chinese. In fact, as we saw this spring, the unfortunate and accidental blurring of pro-human rights messaging with racist and fearful anti-China messaging backfired so monumentally that people of Chinese descent around the world joined together to condemn the protests. And yet, months later we continue to hear repetitive and, by this point, tired condemnations of the Beijing Games and tepid calls for boycotts by minor or as-yet unelected political figures who are either gleeful to use the Games to put a spotlight on their own careers or who are happy to leave the hard decisions to the folks in charge right now.

Perhaps the biggest disappointment of this post-Torch/pre-August period is that the major proponents of the Beijing '08 human rights movements have yet to recognize the importance of crafting messages that might speak to the average Chinese citizen or, at the very least, win the support and trust of members of the global Chinese diaspora. Instead, the messaging of the major human rights players has been stuck on repeat since April, playing over and over to those listeners who committed to the causes long ago.

The continuing modus operandi of the human rights groups is to shame the Chinese leadership. It isn't working. As April Rabkin wrote in the New York Times last week, "what the committee [IOC] and the rest of the world don't realize is how little China cares what they think. Here in Beijing, the Olympic Games are primarily for domestic consumption, justifying the government's new global power to its own people." The key to changing China's domestic and international human rights policy, then, may be to find out how to engage the average Chinese person and encourage them to ask whether their government's actions are justified.

Of course, creating messaging that engages the average Chinese citizen and delivering such a message are two very different things. The Great Firewall of China and the press censoring and manipulating techniques of the Chinese government certainly impede and pervert news and commentaries that are perceived to have an anti-Chinese government policy slant. But, to declare the battle for the hearts and minds of the Chinese people lost before it has begun, as has been implied by the lack of attention that human rights activists have paid to the Chinese people, is defeatist and convenient. It ignores the many weaknesses of the creaky firewall technology, a robust Chinese blogging environment, and the "black/gray market" trade in ideas and news that defines much of the country. As opposed to marching in the streets and allowing the pro-Tibet rights movement or the Save Darfur movement to be engulfed in a larger anti-China movement, activists should be signing up for Mandarin classes, reading Chinese blogs (and not just dissident ones!), reading Chinese accounts of history and globalization, and loudly asserting their differences from anti-China groups, all in an effort to know and engage with their most important audience... you know, the billion or so that haven't yet been converted.

Bush's statement earlier today indicates that he appears to understand the connection between maintaining or building friendly relations and mutual understanding with the Chinese people in order to have leverage with the Chinese government. Now, of course, as many critics have asserted, he may be attending the Opening Ceremonies primarily because the economic consequences of snubbing Beijing are just too frightening to consider. Even if this is the case, we shouldn't dismiss his official justification as meaningless window dressing (don't ignore the message just because of the messenger). Instead, we ought to consider the strategic logic behind such a justification and we ought to explore how to build on it.

The alternative is to ignore or downplay the aspirations of hundreds of millions of people and risk creating a shame-based hate of the West that could last for generations. I, for one, think it is frightening when the West's most progressive groups are willing to risk creating new global divisions and animosities because they have not adequately considered the ideas and hopes of the average Chinese men and women for whom they believe they're fighting. And, it is even scarier when the source of a more reasoned and pacific option is President George W. Bush. Given Bush's apparent Olympic Doctrine, one would only wish that Tehran was hosting the 2008 Games...



Read more HuffPost coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games

 
 

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- edtastic See Profile I'm a Fan of edtastic

Well I am happy my concerns have been echoed by a huffington post blogger at last. I have been saying this all along in my comments in regard to articles attacking China. The fact is it is creating a nationalistic anti western atmosphere and that is the logical response chinese people would have to such assaults. You never see anyone even speak to chinese people or ask their opinion about their goverment in the western media. They assume all kinds of absurd things about a relativily open country. Chinese dont live in fear of their goverment to the extent Americans do. America is number one in the world for prison populatoin and prisoners per capitia, obviously we are more likely to be arrested or incarcerated for being on the wrong side of our goverments policies. America the democracy elected George Bush twice, acheieved the contempt of the world, and still has at best a 50/50 chance of correcting itself this november. America needs regime change a hell of a lot more than China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:26 PM on 07/07/2008
- blaqntelligence See Profile I'm a Fan of blaqntelligence

His first mistake was calling himself a world leader......

He is an international joke and source of embarrassment. Not to mention a criminal.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:08 PM on 07/07/2008
- peterg76 See Profile I'm a Fan of peterg76

The Olympics is not a suitable venue for these sorts of political statements. People should be paying attention to the underlying problem that the Olympic protests are highlighting - that in the so-called democracies (actually consumerism theocracies), people don't have better outlets for their political views.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- pixy242a See Profile I'm a Fan of pixy242a

Even a broken clock shows the right time twice a day!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 07/07/2008
- UltraClassic See Profile I'm a Fan of UltraClassic

Everyone knows that Jimmy Carter made a fool out of himself in 1980 when he himself decided to boycott the games. The only people Jimmy Carter hurt were the U.S. athletes, of which my brother was one of. We also had the national highschool record holder in the shotput out of our state. That record still stands today.

Bush understands that the Olympics is about people and athletes, not about politics which is something Peanut Head never got. Good for Bush to show at the games and honor the Chinese people.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 07/07/2008
- drblack See Profile I'm a Fan of drblack

I will pay absolutely no attention to the Olympics,most imporatantly I will give no money to any sponsors or advertisers of the games.
The Chinese people are FAR from monolithic in their opinions . Any group which has been unable to access and disseminate information freely is brainwashed.
What I find truly disturbing is American companies helping the tyrannical Chinese government prevent Freedom.
The Olympics ARE political :everything is political.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 07/07/2008
- JimR See Profile I'm a Fan of JimR

Good for you. While you are paying no attention to the Olympics, take a good look around your home and count how many items you find that are made in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 PM on 07/07/2008
- JimR See Profile I'm a Fan of JimR

Good for you. While you are paying no attention to the lyrics, take a look around your home and count how many items you own that are made in China.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:07 PM on 07/07/2008
- JimR See Profile I'm a Fan of JimR

I think Bush is the worst president in the history of the United States.

But I agree with him on this.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:08 AM on 07/07/2008
- SiberianRat See Profile I'm a Fan of SiberianRat

"The alternative is to ignore or downplay the aspirations of hundreds of millions of people and risk creating a shame-based hate of the West that could last for generations. I, for one, think it is frightening when the West's most progressive groups are willing to risk creating new global divisions and animosities because they have not adequately considered the ideas and hopes of the average Chinese men and women for whom they believe they're fighting."

Ugh, you're right--unfortunately, you're right. VERY unfortunately, Bush is right, although I think this was lucky cover-up for avoiding financial consequences...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:13 AM on 07/07/2008
- watchingthings See Profile I'm a Fan of watchingthings

Why not stay home and protest the Iraq war and the drummed up reasons for going there?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 AM on 07/07/2008
- watchingthings See Profile I'm a Fan of watchingthings

Why do these self-proclaimed know-it-alls keep protesting "on behalf of Chinese people" when the Chinese people don't want them to? It seems the Chinese would rather see them keep their opinions to themselves. Leave the opympics to those participating and to those who come there to watch with no alterior motives.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 AM on 07/07/2008
- shanghaislim See Profile I'm a Fan of shanghaislim

I leave for Beijing in 20 days. Acclamation and training. Let us compete free of politics.

Sport brings us closer together. If only for a moment in time. But we have to start somewhere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 AM on 07/07/2008
- Boadicea See Profile I'm a Fan of Boadicea

I really enjoyed reading this blog. Thanks for writing it. Definitely one of my faves for this year. I agree, sometimes Americans with good intentions can make things worse.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:24 PM on 07/06/2008
- benjaminblue See Profile I'm a Fan of benjaminblue

If Mr. Bush is so intent on making the locals happy, why doesn't he resign and volunteer for lifetime incarceration as partial payback for his various crimes? His resignation would certainly make this native happy.

The fact is, by staying on a few extra days to attend some ceremony, Mr. Bush can pretend that he is relevant, hearing people applaud him and apply phony sentiments to their public comments about him, and he can avoid going back to Washington, where he might, accidentally, have to do some work as he pretends he is competent enough to meet the demands of the office he usurped.

His attendance at the Olympics event, like his presence at the birthday party for Mr. McSame as New Orleans drowned, show his true character. His motivations continue to be greedy glee and slothfulness, not anything nobler.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 PM on 07/06/2008
- Rockwell See Profile I'm a Fan of Rockwell

Help me understand why bush is sensitive to Chinese public opinion when he's always been so contemptuous of US public opinion. Maybe he sees himself as a guest of China but Emperor of America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:56 PM on 07/06/2008
- vippy See Profile I'm a Fan of vippy

He simply has to or the Chinese won't give him any more loans! Chinese can't help it when we
elect someone like Bush or McSame.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:37 PM on 07/06/2008
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