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Introduction: The Politics of the Olympics
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14879 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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10 / 1988 |
719 Words |
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With South Korea about to achieve international acclamation, will the communist North Korean regime change its policies? How will the prospects for reunification of the Korean peninsula be affected by a successful Olympics in Seoul? This Special Report presents the opinions of Asian specialists from three continents.
As thousands of athletes from around the world--East and West, North and South--gather in Seoul for the 24th Olympiad, it is reasonable to wonder, Why look at the politics of the event? Isn't this a sports festival?
Yet, as with the past three Olympiads and others, politics has overshadowed these Games--from the moment they were awarded to Seoul by the International Olympic Committee. The Korean peninsula has been bitterly divided since 1948, and the South and North have been engaged in a protracted competition to win international recognition and legitimacy at each other's expense. The 1988 Olympics will mark a turning point in that struggle, with the South about to achieve international acclamation and the North virtually isolated even from its chief communist allies, the Soviet Union and China.
Those athletes and officials of the Soviet Union, China, and Eastern Europe, as well as of the Third World, who attend the Olympics will observe a vibrant, dynamic society that is playing a major role in the world's economy--not the stereotypical "victim of imperialist exploitation". They will experience the warmth, openness, and drive of the Korean people. The present alignments of allies are likely to undergo, if not dramatic, overnight shifts, then certainly gradual ones. The leaders of both China and the Soviet Union are
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