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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: jlallen who wrote (158992)7/8/2001 11:57:57 AM
From: gao seng  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
That is a disgrace that the IOC holds a symbolic significance.

Senate Panel Lashes IOC

By Larry Siddons
AP Sports Writer
Wednesday, April 14, 1999; 3:45 p.m. EDT

WASHINGTON (AP) -- A Senate committee tore into Olympic leaders
Wednesday over the Salt Lake bribery scandal and took quick action to
place the IOC under the same law that deals with corrupt governments.

With two members calling for International Olympic Committee president Juan
Antonio Samaranch to resign and a general skepticism that the IOC was ready
to clean up its act, the Senate Commerce Committee repeatedly criticized a
``culture of corruption'' that left the rings tarnished and the games
defamed.

``A pattern of payoffs, palace intrigue and padded budgets has clouded
over the integrity of the Olympics,'' Sen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore., said.

Despite some senators' urging that immediate financial action be taken,
commerce panel chairman Sen. John McCain said he wanted to go slow
on legislation that would make the Olympics a less-attractive product for
sponsors and direct billion-dollar TV rights fees to the U.S. Olympic
Committee instead of the IOC.

Such legislation could wind up hurting athletes training for next year's
games in Sydney and the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake, the
powerful Arizona Republican said.

But McCain, who held two IOC members to an excruciating 45 minutes
of questioning on Olympic finances and reform intentions, said he would
immediately introduce a bill to place the international panel under the
Federal Corrupt Practices Act, which forbids bribery of foreign officials.

``We'll do it today,'' he said.

The White House, meanwhile, said it hoped to have an answer soon on a
USOC request to make the IOC a public body under international
anti-corruption statutes.

After the three-hour session, McCain said he would consider a second
hearing as IOC efforts to bounce back from the worst corruption case in
its 105 years became clearer, well before the end of the year.

``I had hoped we would come away from this hearing will a better feeling
and understanding of the IOC's intentions on reform,'' he said.

McCain was upset by the lack of support from Anita DeFrantz and James
Easton, the two U.S. IOC members, for the main portions of an Olympic
reform report by former Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell, another
witness.

DeFrantz, an IOC vice president hand-picked to testify by Samaranch,
and Easton categorically endorsed just one of the report's four main
recommendations, on term limits for IOC members who now are
essentially elected for life.

``That's very interesting,'' McCain said with a raised eyebrow during the
hearing. He later said he was ``very concerned about their lack of
enthusiasm for the Mitchell commission recommendations,'' and that the
IOC should carry the ``burden of proof'' if it fails to adopt them.

McCain spent large amounts of time trying to pin down the IOC members
on financial matters, asking DeFrantz three times how much money the
Olympic committee spent on direct support of athletes. DeFrantz finally
said she did not know.

Similarly, McCain repeatedly asked how much the Lausanne,
Switzerland-based IOC made each year. DeFrantz said the committee's
budget was $40 million but did not know annual income figures, and finally
had to ask for time to produce a written report, again being chastised by
the chairman.

``We certainly did not get a `go get 'em guys' type of encouragement,''
said DeFrantz, a lawyer who was testifying before Congress for the sixth
time. ``But maybe the skepticism will help us.''

News that the IOC kept the minutes of its general assemblies secret for
10 years, and those of executive board sessions locked up for 20 years,
brought expressions of disbelief from McCain.

``Sixty percent of the IOC's income is from American corporations and
donations and the American people deserve to know what happens in
those meetings,'' he told DeFrantz.

But McCain seemed most perturbed about the absence of the
73-year-old Samaranch, who snubbed his invitation to testify, citing
schedule conflicts.

``I don't mean to be discourteous, but I think the committee would have
benefited from Mr. Samaranch's appearance,'' McCain said. ``He would
have the information. Ms. DeFrantz and Mr. Easton did not, nor would I
expect them to.''

The senator noted that, when his committee holds hearings on
telecommunications legislation, ``we have CEOs come and testify.''

Others, however, wanted to make Samaranch's absence permanent.
Democrats Ernest Hollings of South Carolina and Richard Bryan of
Nevada said the IOC president should resign.

``I believe this problem starts at the very top,'' Bryan said. Any reforms
the IOC enacts, he said, ``would lack credibility unless he (Samaranch)
takes the honorable action to step down.''

Hollings said he saw no reason for the former Spanish diplomat to stay in
power.

``What are you all waiting on?'' he asked Mitchell, who has repeatedly
said that changes in the IOC's structure are more important than change in
leadership. ``We have to clean up Lausanne. Why not get rid of
Samaranch? Let's apply some pressure.''

Several senators said the IOC was dragging its feet on reforms. While he
has created a 24-member task force to restructure the IOC, Samaranch
has announced six members so far, they noted.

Hollings likened the situation to the fight against drugs imported from
Mexico.

``We continue to hear about Mexico making progress on drugs,'' he said.
``And look at us, we're all doped up.''
The USOC, which has escaped the worst of the blame for the scandal,
was commended for quick action on several changes Mitchell
recommended.

But committee president Bill Hybl was upbraided by McCain for failing to
turn over a secret USOC report on Salt Lake that the Commerce
Committee requested 30 days ago. Hybl said there were possible legal
problems but promised to forward the report quickly.

© Copyright 1999 The Associated Press



To: jlallen who wrote (158992)7/8/2001 12:57:43 PM
From: gao seng  Respond to of 769670
 
I think if the IOC wasn't corrupt, China would not get the Olympics. But I have to admit, being a part of the IOC is a dream job.

I don't know what Wang Dan's position is on the 2008 Olympics. I would like to know. He is the only leader that didn't flee the country after Tianneman.

Personally, I think it will be a wonderful opportunity for the world to discover Beijing. And the Chinese are very friendly people. The lies their government spoon feeds them every day will be exposed when the people see how friendly we really are!

Beijing 2008
The Olympics in the belly of the beast.

By Jay Nordlinger, NR managing editor
From the October 9, 2000, issue of National Review

Editor's note: The State Department announced on Monday that the U.S. will
remain neutral on Beijing's bid to host the 2008 Olympics. In the October 9,
2001, issue of National Review, NR's managing editor, Jay Nordlinger, made
the case against "Beijing 2008."

ere we go again: Beijing is trying to get the Olympic Games, this time for
2008. In the early 1990s, they made an all-out effort to win the Games for
2000, losing out by a hair to Sydney. Now they are the clear front-runner; a
decision is expected sometime next summer. The Chinese insist -
aggressively - that the 2008 Games are their due. Therefore, it is time to
consider, once more, whether the Games should be staged in a totalitarian
capital.

Back in '92 and '93, when the Chinese made their first attempt, Tiananmen
Square was a fairly fresh memory. (That massacre took place in 1989.) The
authorities needed a leg up with both the world and their own people. So
they craved the Olympics even more desperately than they do today. In a
breathtaking campaign, they earmarked billions of dollars for "Olympic
construction." They offered to pay transportation and room-and-board for the
many thousands of athletes and officials who would attend the Games. They
initiated a public-hygiene crusade: "Mobilize the Masses to Create a
Fly-Free City!" They enlisted the citizenry to scrub and festoon the
capital. They held contests in speaking English and other foreign languages,
with cold cash going to the winners. They forbade residents to burn coal (as
most of them did for their basic needs): The sky had to be blue! Every day,
it was put out more flags, brandish and recite more slogans.

And the deciders? They got the royal (Communist) treatment. Said one Beijing
official, "We look upon the International Olympic Committee as God. Their
wish is our command." The government ordered the air force to disperse the
clouds over the capital, lest it rain on the Committee's grandees. They took
the step of nominating Juan Antonio Samaranch, boss of the IOC, for the
Nobel Peace Prize. They provided each member of the Committee with all
manner of comforts, including a chauffeured black Mercedes. They pledged to
build a monument on the Great Wall bearing the names of all ninety IOC
members.

And, for a special treat, they stopped following around foreign reporters -
stopped putting tails on them, giving them a little more space.

Nevertheless, there were human-rights objections here and there. The U.S.
Congress adopted a resolution opposing the granting of the Olympics to
Beijing; the European Parliament did the same. This hardly pleased the IOC.
Samaranch grumbled that the United States was happy to trade with China but
not to give them the Olympics. Another Committee official said - poetically
if absurdly - "If we always picked a city wearing a halo, we wouldn't be
celebrating our hundredth anniversary."

The Chinese dissident community itself was split. Most were opposed to
letting the regime have the Games, but a few prominent spokesmen were not.
Wang Dan, a student leader in Tiananmen Square, was released in February
1993, about a half-year before the Committee's vote. Somewhat reluctantly,
he favored giving the Games to Beijing, hoping that this plum would
"accelerate China's opening to the rest of the world." Wei Jingsheng,
another widely admired dissident, felt the same. He was released a grand
total of nine days before the Committee voted, after being imprisoned for 14
and a half years. As a further sweetener, Beijing delayed the prosecution of
about twenty other democracy activists - men and women who were pawns in the
regime's Olympic game.

A History of Politics
Today, Wei opposes Beijing 2008, for reasons that we will explore in a
moment. (Wang Dan - who now, like Wei, lives in the United States - was
unavailable for comment.) Wei brings up - as do many others - the specter of
Berlin '36. These were, of course, the Hitler Games. The standard American
view of these Games is that they blew up in Hitler's face thanks to the
historic performance of the (black) U.S. track-and-field star Jesse Owens.
This view is handed out to Americans in kindergarten along with crayons and
construction paper. But it is untrue: The opportunity to host the Olympics
was of great importance to Hitler and the furtherance of his regime, as
scholars of the period uniformly acknowledge.

Berlin got the '36 Games in 1931, two years before the Nazis rose to power.
Once Hitler was installed, however, a movement took shape to boycott the
Games. In 1933, the American Olympic committees voted to stay away from
Berlin if Hitler refused to allow Jewish athletes to participate on German
teams. The regime found two token Jews, both of them living in exile, and
this gesture satisfied the Americans. All hope of a boycott faded. Hitler
also relaxed - just for a bit - his general persecution of the Jews, a
period that became known as his "Olympic Pause."

In 1935, the American consul in Berlin, one George S. Messersmith, wrote the
following to secretary of state Cordell Hull: "To the [Nazi] Party and to
the youth of Germany, the holding of the Olympic Games in Berlin in 1936 has
become the symbol of the conquest of the world by National Socialist
doctrine. Should the Games not be held in Berlin, it would be one of the
most serious blows which National Socialist prestige could suffer." As Duff
Hart-Davis, author of Hitler's Games, relates, the Nazis ensured that Berlin
was nicely and benignly turned out, creating the mirage that the Führer's
Germany was "a perfectly normal place, in which life went on as pleasantly
as in any other European country." Freedom-suppressing governments - such as
China's - become expert at erecting Potemkin villages. Hart-Davis further
writes, "That the success of the eleventh Olympiad gave Hitler an enormous
boost, both moral and political, nobody could deny." The journalist William
Shirer recorded in 1984, "Hitler, we who covered the Games had to concede,
turned the Olympics into a dazzling propaganda success for his barbarian
regime."

Whether a boycott would have made a difference is a matter for speculation.
Germany, incidentally, was banned from the 1948 Games, held in a London that
still bore marks of the Blitz.

Political questions have never been divorced from the Games, and probably
never will be. The chance to host the Olympics is panted after by many
nations, for many reasons. By the end of 1972, the IOC had awarded the Games
to all three of the major aggressor powers in World War II: Italy (1960),
Japan (1964), and Germany (1972). This was a way of welcoming those
countries back into the family of nations, and of rewarding them for taking
the democratic road. For Cold War reasons - "balance" and all that - the
Committee felt it necessary to give the Games to the USSR in 1980. But in
December 1979, the Soviets invaded Afghanistan, and as former president
Richard Nixon put it so memorably, "You can't just go over there and
high-jump with them."

China, for its part, has always been an Olympic problem. For years, the
regime refused to participate in the Games if Taiwan were permitted to do
so. As it stands now, Taiwan is allowed to compete, but only under the
awkward name "Chinese Taipei."

One truly interesting case is that of the 1988 Games, held in Seoul. The
fact of the Olympics there is often credited with hastening the
democratization of that country. As Don Oberdorfer, former Washington Post
reporter and a Korea expert, explains, "The dictatorship in Seoul, which had
pledged free elections, faced huge protests in 1987," a year before the
torch was to be lit. Strongman Chun Doo Hwan "considered calling out the
military, but the prospect of the Olympics stayed his hand. President
Reagan, too, sent a letter warning him not to do it, but the coming of the
Olympics was the biggest factor." The rest, for South Korea, was smooth
sailing out of authoritarianism. Oberdorfer is one who hopes that Beijing
will get the Games for 2008, believing that this "would have a restraining
effect" on that regime.

A License for State Thuggery?
Wei Jingsheng thinks otherwise. In 1993, he notes, "I was used to enhance
the Party's effort to get a high score on its application for 2000." And
"there was a sudden improvement in human rights" - a Chinese "Olympic
Pause." In those days, he favored the Games in Beijing because "I thought
the Party would be able to hold on to power for a few more years in a very
stable form, and I thought having the Games would promote the opening of
people's minds." Yet the wheel has turned. "The regime is relatively
unstable, and by 2008 it might be in a state of great turmoil. The Games
would do the Chinese people no good, and the Olympic movement itself no
good."

Then there is the key question of nationalism. "If China gets the Games,"
says Wei, "that would inflame extreme nationalism. It would play a harmful
role in the moral and spiritual lives of the people. The Party would promote
itself to anti-Western elements, and it might even be encouraged to attack
Taiwan." In this regard, "there is a clear parallel to Berlin - the regime
would be bolder." But if Beijing were again denied the Games, would that not
incite further nationalism and xenophobia? "Just the opposite," answers Wei.
"The regime would have gone unrewarded. When the bad boy is not behaving
himself, we should not encourage him, but find a way to tell him he is
wrong."

Justin Yu, a Chinese journalist working in New York, points out that the
regime uses sports to puff itself up before its own people, much as the
Eastern-bloc countries used to do. The Olympics, according to Yu, are
strictly "a tool for Beijing to use. The Games give them a reason to crush
Falun Gong, for example. [These are the meditators and slow-movement
exercisers who so vex the Party, and who are arrested, tortured, and killed
for their troubles.] The regime can say, 'So many foreigners are coming, we
have to show our good side. So let's chase out all the trouble-makers, hunt
them down to the very last one.' They will say to people, 'We have to show
the world that we are unified. You have no freedom, but we have the
Olympics. So sacrifice more, be patient, and accept more people in jail.'
And if people believe that having the Olympics will raise the prestige of
the PRC, they will go along with it."

What, though, of the argument that the Olympics would put the government "in
the spotlight"? Yu scoffs: "People are always talking about the 'spotlight':
The Asian Games in 1990, the International Women's Conference in 1995 -
these international events are supposed to put the regime 'in the
spotlight.' Actually, they just provide an excuse for the regime to cleanse
and purge the city. They make a Disney village - clean and nice. Where is
Mickey Mouse? They move out laborers from the country, who may not look so
good. Intellectuals, dissidents, certain important political prisoners held
in Beijing jails - all are moved out, transferred, because the government
doesn't want anyone to visit with them."

Concludes Yu, "The government's general line is: 'Whoever is against us
shows us no respect. You're either for us or against us. The Dalai Lama - he
is against us. Against China. We have an international event now, so let's
crack down on anyone who might embarrass us.'" In other words, "The
Communists create an atmosphere, a mood, in which they can do anything."

Su Xiaokang, the Princeton, N.J.-based editor of Democratic China, an online
magazine, puts it this way: "After Tiananmen Square, the government had no
authority. So they had to find another source of support - that was
nationalism. They made everything a matter of Chinese pride. They had lost
trust, and something like the Olympics is a way of getting it back. They
took Hong Kong back. They want to take Taiwan back. The Olympics would
strengthen them, make them look good. That's why they want them so badly."

Exactly the Wrong City
Do they ever. The authorities are back to their old tricks - having the
streets polished, insisting that bare-chested men put on shirts, offering
English lessons on buses. They even went so far as to withdraw 27 athletes
and 13 coaches on the eve of the Sydney Olympics. They had been "doping," of
course, and China was loath to see anything tarnish its Olympic image with
another vote coming up. More ominously, the mayor of Beijing, rallying the
troops, made so bold as to say that China must "battle and crush Falun Gong
and other cult organizations." With so much at stake, not an ounce of
deviation can be tolerated.

The regime is also playing very heavily the numbers card. The argument is:
We are almost a fifth of the earth's population, so how can you withhold the
Games from us? One official lectured, "The Olympic Games belong to the whole
world. The fact that the Games have not yet been held in China is a failure
of the Olympic movement." Pressed on human rights, the official said
huffily, "There is no excuse for denying the dreams of 1.3 billion people to
hold the Olympics in Beijing."

This line may prove hard to resist. But, again, the "international
community" confronts a question: Is holding the Games in a country like
China consonant with the ideals of what we used to call "Olympism"? And
should the Games be used as a political carrot, or stick? Those of us who -
even into adulthood, despite layers of scandal and commercialism and
cynicism - love the Olympics should choke on the idea of watching tyrants
and butcherers preside smilingly over the Games, just as Hitler did. (And,
ultimately, what one thinks of the Olympics in Beijing probably comes down
to what one thinks of the regime in Beijing.) Of all the cities in this
great, vast world, from Tipperary to Timbuktu, why the capital of Red China?

Here is a first principle, a simple criterion: The Games should not be held
in any country whose own people are not free to leave. That is just for
starters. Juan Antonio Samaranch and his boys have four other finalists for
2008: Paris, Toronto, Istanbul, and Osaka. Any of them would do - Beijing
would be a disgrace.