From the Los Angeles Times
George, go to the Olympics
Forget silly comparisons to 1936. Bush is
right in choosing to attend the Beijing Olympics.
March 8, 2008
President Bush is catching quite a few javelins for his decision to
attend the Olympic Games this summer in Beijing, with one Republican
congressman saying his presence would be akin to President Franklin D.
Roosevelt attending Adolf Hitler's Berlin Olympics in 1936. Setting
aside that we're all thoroughly sick of rhetorical references to
Hitler, Bush is, for a change, on solid diplomatic ground.
The
comments came from Rep. Frank R. Wolf of Virginia, who co-chairs a
congressional caucus on Sudan and is mad at China because its economic
and political ties to Khartoum are allowing the regime to flout
international efforts to halt mass killings in Darfur. Congress has
little power to stop the president from going to the Olympics if he
chooses, but Wolf is doing the next best thing by introducing
legislation that would prohibit diplomatic and other government
personnel from spending federal money to attend.
It hardly bears
pointing out, but we will anyway: China is not Nazi Germany. Its
conduct on domestic human rights is abysmal and its backing of rogue
regimes is reprehensible, but it is hardly a threat to world stability
and it isn't committing genocide on its own people. Director Steven
Spielberg's decision to withdraw as artistic director of the Beijing
Games because of China's stance on Darfur was a highly principled one,
and other Americans considering a trip to see the show in August should
consult their consciences. But the president is different.
When
the U.S. welcomed China into the World Trade Organization in 2001, it
was part of a profound shift in strategy that started with President
Nixon in 1972. By then, it was clear that isolating and ostracizing
China didn't work, and that the best way to open its society, free its
markets (as well as its people) and set it on the path to democracy was
through closer economic and diplomatic ties. There is every sign that
this approach is working, albeit slowly. And that's why Bush should go
to the Games.
Bush justified his decision to attend by saying it
would give him a chance to discuss human rights with Chinese President
Hu Jintao. We're glad he has come around to this way of thinking, even
if he's a bit late in recognizing the importance of engagement with
regimes he doesn't like. Now that he sees the value of diplomacy, we
have a modest proposal: Perhaps he could swing by North Korea, Iran and
Cuba on his way home from Beijing.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times