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Home >  Short Publications >  "Show of Power," Indeed
"Show of Power," Indeed
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By Anne Applebaum
Posted: Tuesday, August 26, 2008
ARTICLES
Washington Post  
Publication Date: August 26, 2008

 
Adjunct Fellow
 Anne Applebaum
 
"Closing ceremony of Beijing Olympics draws world attention, praise." That was how Xinhua, the Chinese press agency, described Sunday's final Olympic celebration, and for once it wasn't exaggerating. Just before they moved rapidly on to the next mass television event, in Denver, American headline writers did indeed pause to heap attention and praise on China's Olympics. The Post called the closing ceremony "China's Show of Power." These were "Truly Exceptional Games," trumpeted NBC's Olympic Web site (not exactly unexpectedly). The Los Angeles Times kept it simple: "Beijing's Olympic Triumph." But Americans were not unique: Xinhua quoted Mongolians, South Koreans, Pakistanis and Iraqis all saying more or less the same thing.

The only truly sour notes appeared in Britain, where, by contrast, every single member of the media, from the sleaziest tabloid hack to the snootiest highbrow columnist, is right now gearing up to criticize every conceivable aspect of the 2012 London Olympics. This time, the Daily Telegraph was first out of the starting gate, declaring the eight-minute handover ceremony--involving a red double-decker bus, umbrellas and soccer star David Beckham--a "British fiasco." In particular, their correspondent objected to the "raddled, sweat-drenched face of Led Zeppelin lead guitarist Jimmy Page," whose music resembled "a badly tuned transistor radio in a tin bucket."

In the run-up to the 2012 Games, Londoners will complain about the traffic; politicians will carp about the cost; critics will call the ceremonies tasteless; no one will use the phrase "Olympic triumph."

And when I read that sentence, I sighed with relief: Thank you, Britain, for giving the world the gift of nasty, negative, snarky journalism, along with the culture of free speech that sustains it. In fact, there isn't the slightest chance that the London Olympics will resemble the Beijing Olympics, not in choreography, not in pyrotechnics, not in quantities of identically dressed, super-coordinated dancers--and not in suppression of political dissidents either. For the truth is that the Beijing Olympics truly were--as was widely predicted-- an international triumph for Chinese authoritarianism, which is precisely what they were intended to be all along: When treated uncritically, propaganda works. What you saw on the screen was the triumph, the glory, Michael Phelps and fireworks. What you did not see, and what the Chinese public did not see, were the arrests, detentions and jail sentences, not to mention the threats and intimidation that the Chinese government thought necessary to make the Games run smoothly, though these were no secret.

In fact, Amnesty International has produced an excellent catalogue of the "continued deterioration" in the treatment of human rights advocates, journalists and lawyers in the run-up to the Games. Human Rights Watch went even further, calling the Olympics a "catalyst for human rights abuses" and declaring that the 2008 Games "have put an end--once and for all--to the notion that these Olympics are a 'force for good.'" Multiple media accounts have documented the massive forced evictions as well as the destruction, often without proper compensation, of houses and livelihoods in Beijing to make way for stadiums and other Olympic construction.

Though some human rights organizations and journalists did their jobs, most of the hundreds of politicians, statesmen and celebrities in attendance said nothing about any of that. Though the U.S. Embassy in Beijing did issue an irritable statement or two after the arrest of eight Americans who tried to protest Chinese treatment of Tibet, Labor Secretary Elaine Chao, the White House's representative at the closing ceremony, used the Embassy's Web site to declare the Olympics a "unique opportunity for the Chinese people to demonstrate the progress they have made and their sincere desire to engage with the world at every level." Thus did she help reinforce the Chinese regime's legitimacy among its own people, cover up its bad record and buff its image around the world--which was precisely what the Chinese regime had hoped people like her would do all along.

To his credit, the mayor of London, Boris Johnson, looked ill at ease during that eight-minute handover ceremony. But he cheered up afterward, giving a stirring speech touching on the origins of ping-pong ("invented on the dining tables of England"), and thus inspiring the crowd not to stand solemnly, in awe of the political significance of the coming national endeavor, but to laugh. And here's a prediction: In the run-up to the 2012 Games, Londoners will complain about the traffic; politicians will carp about the cost; critics will call the ceremonies tasteless; no one will use the phrase "Olympic triumph." But there won't be arrests or police intimidation, there won't be forced expropriation of property, there won't be stony-faced acrobats marching in formation--and in the end, the whole thing will be a lot less sinister, a lot less damaging and a lot more fun.

Anne Applebaum is an adjunct fellow at AEI.

Related Links
Related article on the Beijing Olympic preparations by Roger Bate
Related article the Chinese economy and the Olympics by David Frum
Beijing 2008: AEI Scholars on China and Its Olympic Moment


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