After the late April anti-Carrefour/anti-French protests that broke out across China, the French government tried to rebuild its public image in China via a number of diplomatic interventions. Of the various interventions, Sarkozy’s apology letter, hand-delivered by Chistian Poncelet to Jin Jing, the disabled Chinese torchbearer who was attacked by a pro-Tibet protester in Paris, made for the best photo-op:
Before
After
And yet, it did not stop a cynical global public from asking whether such an apology would have been forthcoming from the first Western leader to suggest boycotting the Beijing Games if French businesses who had set-up shop in China weren’t losing money. Indeed, it would seem that France is conforming to what Slavoj Zizek, in a fascinating letter to the London Review of Books, identifies as the West’s usual behaviour of ceding ethical and poltical values to economic pragmatism.
In my paper, “Towards the Future: The New Olympic Internationalism”, recently published in Owning the Olympics, I suggested that the IOC could not afford to not hold the Olympics in China. I suggested that the decision to allow Beijing to host the Games can read as a sign of a shifting geopolitics where traditional assumptions about the global hegemonic position of Western states can no longer be taken for granted. Today, China is an economic superpower in an interdependent world and the fortunes of France and other Western nation-states are, in a large part, dependent on the fortunes of China. Thus, the role of diplomatic vehicles such as the Olympic Games in building stronger relations between China and the West are increasingly important. Sarkozy’s post-Carrefour about face and his refusal to respond to international NGOs, such as Human Rights Watch, who have asked him to confirm a Beijing 08 boycott can be read as evidence of a growing recognition of this interdependence.
While France may have been apologetic for the attack on the torchbearer, Paris continued to provoke China. According to the Chinese Foreign Ministry, Paris’ decision to make the Dalai Lama an honorary citizen of Paris “can only be considered as another grave provocation of 1.3 billion Chinese people“. As Steven Erlanger, writing in the International Herald Tribune, suggests, the decision to make the Dali Lama an honorary Parisian may primarily be a career move for Bertrand Delanoe, the current mayor of Paris who hopes to become the leader of the French Socialist Party. As Erlanger writes, “the gesture by Paris allowed Delanoe to distinguish himself from Sarkozy, who has waffled about whether he will attend…” the Beijing Games. The Chinese response to Paris indicates that the diplomatic power and global voice of world cities may actually eclipse that of the nation-states in which they’re located. One can only assume that British Prime Minister Brown felt a surge of relief when Ken Livingstone lost the recent London Mayoral contest. Livingstone, known for his sour relations with New Labour and his “radical” views on many issues, was much better positioned than Delanoe to create a major controversy given the role that London, as the next Olympics host, is expected to play in Beijing’s closing ceremonies.
The post-Carrefour fallout has taught us that Olympics diplomacy requires heads of state to attend to two complex tasks: 1) addressing the concerns of other states; and 2) managing their own people. Sarkozy has thus far failed at the second task. In this, he is not alone. The CCP has so far failed to manage the intense nationalism that led to the anti-Carrefour protests and other anti-West and anti-French protests throughout the country. As the Economist reports, by April 20th, 2008, the Chinese government was urging Chinese citizens to respond calmly to what was percieved (correctly, in many cases) as anti-China propaganda in the West. On May 1st, 2008, despite continuing attempts to control the shamed-inflamed nationalism, the protests continued.
Two Birds with One Stone: CNN and Carrefour
The May 1st protests were considerably smaller. This may be attributed to either the government crackdown or to the ephemeral nature of nationalist outrage. At the moment, it isn’t clear. What is clear, however, is that the pro-Tibet/anti-Olympics protests in Paris, San Fransico, and other cities have had numerous effects:
- They’ve turned the Olympic Spotlight on the interdepdence of today’s nation-states.
- They’ve given voice to racist and xenophobic groups in both China and the West.
- In not trying to 1) directly communicate with, 2) measure the responses of, and 3) frame the issues for Chinese audiences, they have inadvertently shamed-inflamed an antagonistic form of Chinese nationalism.
- And, they may have helped the political career of a French mayor.
How any of this helps Tibetans, I don’t know. Perhaps this weekend’s talks between Chinese officials and envoys of the Dalai Lama will be productive and will, in the long run, be seen as resulting from the actions of Olympics protests in the West. However, that appears to be a farily optimistic prediction, especially in light of today’s news that despite these talks, China’s state press has ”accused the Dalai Lama of ‘monstrous crimes’“. In light of this news, the apparent goals of the majority of the Western protesters remain as elusive as ever, if not more so…



2 responses so far ↓
charlotte nunn // May 7, 2008 at 8:53 am
Superb reasoning! Plus, it strikes me that the Beijing Olympics is the exact global catalyst that the world needs right now, despite the world’s NOT being able to see this right now – esp. in the West!
Anne // May 9, 2008 at 5:06 pm
Christopher,
you raise an interesting issue concerning “a shifting geopolitics where traditional assumptions about the global hegemonic position of Western states can no longer be taken for granted.” You assume that the Olypmics in China hail (or acknowledge) the end of Western hegemony – I see your point when you argue from an economic view. China’s economy is influential enough by now for China to move things on the global stage, yes. On the other hand, I would argue that it depends on the intentions behind the decision of giving the Olympics to Beijing. I can just as well imagine a hegemon (or rather a group of powerful states, which is not exactly the same) that is forcing a potential threat to either get on board or drop out of the competition. As the protests show, China is under immense pressure regarding (not only) its politics in Tibet. So far, it seems that the Olympics have brought mostly trouble for the Chinese. Both government and people are constantly shamed by the Western media. The ideological and real-political differences between China and the West are paraded in front of the rich West. The shortcomings of the former are highlighted and even ridiculed, thus cementing the “superiority” of Western values on several global stages. An alternative interpretation to yours may be that the Olympics are a real good way to renew or reinforce the West’s dominance – after all, don’t we see and read all day how brutal those Chinese are? The growing political and public pressure might push China into a corner where it may have to tread much more lightly instead of proudly being the up-and-coming superpower.
Moreover, the concept of the Olympics is a Western one. Because the event is so prestigious, even non-Western countries want to be part – opening their doors wide to the hegemon to come and make a possibly lasting impression.
Now, of course I don’t know which interpretation is the right one. Probably, it’s a little of both, and a lot else. Still, I would caution against seeing the Beijing Olympics as a great promise for a new and more just global order – or even only as a friendly gesture of the West in the eastward direction.