Olympics and sport anti-diplomacy

For many govts, sport is used as an unconventional diplomatic tool because of its generally inoffensive nature

The writer takes interest in sport and politics. He can be reached at bilalsherani45@gmail.com

Sport is rarely what it pertains to be. For many, international sport is nothing but a parody of international relations, ‘war minus the shooting’ in Orwell’s famous 1947 remark. As such, nations, sportspeople and non-state sports actors exist in an anarchic, competitive realm and will often cross moral, ethical and legal lines. International politics is Janus-faced; it can be good and bad, brilliant and moral and amoral — all at the same time. The same logic applies to sport diplomacy: there is always a dark yin to the utopian yang.

For many governments, sport is used as an unconventional diplomatic tool because of its broader appeal and generally inoffensive nature. Sportspeople and sporting events are usually taken under the wings of diplomacy. They are exploited as diplomatic tools to bring the state’s international prestige into the limelight where the rest of the world can see. They improve a tainted image of a state and help to encourage acceptance on the world stage.

As an institution, diplomacy embodies civility and peace. Diplomats constantly attempt to mediate estrangement and minimise friction in the anarchic international relations through continuous dialogue, representation and good office. They are, however, one cog in a large, government machine and must serve the whims of the party, leader or head of the state. The ideal character of diplomacy and sport, in other words, is often tarnished by and subsumed under the great, ghastly political machine. Sport anti-diplomacy tears down rather than builds good relations, increases isolation and estrangement, and represents an anarchic, uncivilised type of behaviour.

Sport diplomacy is often considered a positive force in international relations. However, there is a long way to go before it can stop war, end decades of suspicion between, for instance, Pakistanis and Indians, or allow women to watch men’s sports in Persia. Where the Olympics, for example, bring separate people, nations and states together, sport anti-diplomacy pulls them apart. Let’s say, when the head of the state use certain sport to increase friction, or a terrorist organisation deliberately targets an international event because it is a symbol of globalisation, their behaviour can be described as sport anti-diplomacy because it goes against the ideal character of both sport and diplomacy. That’s the trouble with Nelson Mandela’s famous quote about “sport having the power to change the world”. It’s too idealistic; too far-fetched.

This aspect of sport has quite a long history. Sparta was banned from participating in the Olympics after it failed to keep its Olympic truce back in 420BC. It is recorded as the first boycott in international relations. Similarly, in recent history, the boycott of Moscow Olympics by the US in 1980, and of Los Angeles Olympics by the Soviet Union and 13 satellite states are examples of sport anti-diplomacy. The boycott of Moscow Olympics was to make clear to the Soviets that it cannot invade an independent country (Afghanistan) and at the same time do as usual business with the rest of the world. Likewise, the boycott of Los Angeles Olympics had the motives of countering an anti-Soviet hysteria that the US had been very keen on promoting.

Recently, on Dec 7, the Biden administration announced a diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Winter Olympics over human rights concerns. The boycott comes as the US attempts to thread the needle between stabilising difficult relations with Beijing and maintaining a tough stance on trade and political conflicts. The US has accused China of human rights abuses. Beijing, on the other hand, has warned the US that this action will undermine the dialogue and cooperation between the two states in a series of important areas and international issues. These exchanges between countries via sports are purely practical and are said to be low-risk, low-cost, and high profile. The established and emerging power are competing on many fronts for their supremacy, and the domain of sports would provide them another battleground to play their cards.

Published in The Express Tribune, December 15th, 2021.

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