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COLUMNISTS
TODAY'S STORIES
13.02.2008
Spielberg and China

Yesterday, Steven Spielberg announced that he is withdrawing from his role as artistic advisor to the Beijing Olympics in order to protest China's link to the Darfur genocide. Spielberg is certainly correct that Beijing has supplied Khartoum with weapons, money, and diplomatic cover. And anything that embarrasses Beijing over this morally indefensible support for Sudan is a positive development. In that respect, good for Spielberg.

Yet Spielberg's statement announcing his decision bothered me--for reasons having nothing to do with Darfur. While condemning China for its actions in Sudan, Spielberg made no mention of China's actions anywhere else--as if Darfur were the only reason one might think twice about serving as a propagandist for the Beijing Olympics; as if, were it not for Darfur, he would be happy to continue working with a country that "has much to offer the world" and whose "international contributions will grow in the years ahead." This reminded me of a statement Spielberg's spokesman made last year, which had stuck in my mind. When the controversy over Spielberg's role as an artistic advisor to the Olympics first surfaced, his spokesman noted that it was "only recently that he became aware of China's involvement" in Darfur. Look, I suppose it's possible Spielberg was unaware of China's role in Darfur before early 2007. But was he also unaware of China's role in China? This is an authoritarian regime that has long repressed internal dissent--and, as Josh Kurlantzick writes in the new issue of TNR, is growing even more brutal as the Olympics approach. Surely, even if Spielberg knew little or nothing of China's actions in Sudan, he was aware that Chinese citizens lack basic rights that we in the west take for granted. Surely he knew that China is desperate to portray itself as a far more humane place than it really is. Surely he realized that promoting the Olympics meant playing a role in this ugly farce. Yet, even now, Spielberg implies that he is only troubled by China's link to Darfur. Well, that's a good thing to be troubled by, and, on the list of Beijing's sins, the destruction of Darfur certainly ranks high. But, not only have China's leaders betrayed the people of Darfur, they have also betrayed the people of China. It seems to me that, Darfur aside, anyone who cares even a little about human rights would have refused to work with China's government on a project meant to serve partially as a propaganda coup for the regime.

The point is broader than Steven Spielberg. The Olympics are fast approaching. Will western athletes, commentators, and corporations allow themselves to be made complicit in Beijing's abuse of human rights by delivering to China exactly what it wants--a controversy-free Olympic Games that serves to legitimize China's authoritarian government on the world stage? Or will they speak out about China's abuses--in Darfur, in Burma, elsewhere, and at home? Spielberg's approach--implying that Beijing is an essentially good government that is guilty of doing one bad thing--leaves a lot to be desired. Among other problems, it simply isn't true.

--Richard Just

Posted: Wednesday, February 13, 2008 11:02 AM with 10 comment(s)

Comments

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lymon1 said:

Richard, you're making this too much of a seemless web.  Darfur is the only declared genocide (by Congress and the US Holocaust Museum) -- as horrific as Burma, Tibet, intra-China is, there's a distinction. Genocide is supposedly the line in the sand that we draw -- it's one of just two cases where international law allows unilateral intervention (the other is slavery).  Comments like "but what about..." dilute the effect and make it easy not to have *any* ethical dimension to public or corporate policy.

February 13, 2008 11:21 AM

lymon1 said:

PS -- Mia Farrow deserves partial credit: but-for her Wall Street Journal editorial calling out Spielberg nothing would have happened. But major kudos to Spielberg for putting the issue back on the radar.  

Goodness knows the candidates can't run away from it faster.

February 13, 2008 11:23 AM

blackton said:

lymon, good point about the seamless web, but in the end it is only good for Spielbergs image in the US. It is a nice gesture but empty. As I said in another thread it will make zero difference to the Chinese, nor do I think the Chinese people will even know about it, and if they did it would only make Spielberg less popular in China. There are far better ways to get China to not support the Sudan, ways the Bush administration has no intention of doing. I am not talking about boycotts or negative sanctions, but positive actions, like guaranteeing the Chinese oil contracts in other areas of the Middle East, as well as jointly developing oil fields in the South China sea, which the Chinese don't have the technological know how and which make little economic sense for the US since the oil there will be soley for Chinese domestic use.

Mia Farrow and Spielberg have little understanding how to move the Chinese, the only way to appeal to their self-interest economically and positively. Negatively will only make them dig in their heels. Face is everything.

February 13, 2008 12:17 PM

asnevitt said:

I understand that face is everything in China. So, then, why did the Olympic committee reward them with such a huge opportunity for good face time when they don't deserve it. If we want to use carrots instead of sticks, fine. But what did they do for this carrot?

February 13, 2008 12:47 PM

blackton said:

asnevitt, agree or disagree with the Olympic ideal but the idea is to bring athletes and peoples together. China is in the top 3 Olympic powers, with Russia and the US. To punish the Chinese people for the actions of their government is too risky. The Chinese can easily revert to their traditional isolationistic and nationalist past idea of themselves. Besides, considering how both Nazi Germany, and the USSR have hosted the games it is hard to say that times are different now without appearing racist. I agree times have changed, but so have the Chinese. In the end, I think the games do restore Chinese pride in themselves as a people moreso than it will be a propaganda win for the regime. I think the games are a net gain for China's continuing evolution to a democratic state and a denial of them would have been a detriment.

February 13, 2008 1:32 PM

teplukhin2you said:

When GOOG and YHOO and MSFT and their ilk chastize China, it will really mean something. I'm not holding my breath.

February 13, 2008 2:03 PM

lymon1 said:

Well, I don't believe in sticks without carrots, but again, we drew our moral line in the sand at genocide -- if we can't even go through the motions of outrage (which would include some sort of stepback from the Olympics) we're damaging objective principles (as well as the rule of law depending on how you interpret the charter against genocide) above and beyond helping Darfur. Also, I'm wary of empowering China further -- they're already eating at our hegemony in South America (via foreign aid) and undermining our influence in Asia, while rapidly strengthening their naval forces.  The CIA put out a report titled 2020 which is worth reading on this.  

That said, with respect to Darfur I'd prefer a South-Africa like divestment movement.

Of course, first and foremost we need to get off oil, which would directly dis-empower many of the evildoers in the world today.  

February 13, 2008 2:15 PM

check said:

i understand  that the olympic participants have to sign a contract that they will not criticize china on various issues.  this is a travesty and the olympics should be stopped for that reason alone.  i will watch but i will not buy any merchandise.  good for spielberg.  if he will not support the boyscouts and the liberals praised him for that, isnit  this a bigger issue.  shame on the west for being so glib about this.  

February 13, 2008 4:43 PM

lymon1 said:

check -- I heard that about the UK -- not sure about US...

February 13, 2008 5:10 PM

blackton said:

check, I lived in China for 7 years, I never had to sign a contract where i would not criticize China. don't go overboard. what the athletes can't do is march in organized protests, but I doubt any would be interested in doing so, but certainly they can say what they want to foreign journalist and China will do nothing. The Chinese aren't that stupid.

lymon, please, the US armed Saddam against Iran while it was committing genocide against the Kurds. The Chinese aren't committing genocide, they are buying oil. Sell them the oil cheaper and they will drop Sudan like a hot rock in the desert.

February 13, 2008 6:25 PM