It is not often that one has occasion to applaud political
pronouncements coming out of Hollywood. It is usually enough to
turn your opinion in the opposite direction when you watch the
parade of Hollywood celebrities on Capitol Hill, brought in to
testify for no other reason than their talent in front of the
camera.
Of equal concern is the effect the entertainment culture has on
American society at large. A frequent traveler to Singapore
recently remarked that people there are afraid of the effect
American movies and television have on the stability of their
families - a concern shared with many American parents. "American
culture is known over there as a Brittany Spears culture," he said.
Shudder.
And yet, once in a while one of Hollywood's big names takes a
stand on principle, and that deserves recognition when it can make
a real difference.
Stephen Spielberg's announcement that he is withdrawing after two
years as an advisor to the 2008 Olympics in Beijing is one such
stand, and it is both responsible and heartwarming. The reason is
the Chinese government's failure to intervene with the government
of Sudan to stop the genocide being perpetrated in Darfur. Mr.
Spielberg and other Hollywood celebrities - like Mia Farrow, who
has been promoting the phrase "the genocide Olympics" - now ask
that Beijing be held up to the same standard as other major players
on the international scene: measured not just by their economic
progress but also by their respect for human dignity.
In a letter to the Independent of London, a group of Nobel
laureates and athletes echoed similar sentiments to the distress of
the British Olympic Association, which much like the Chinese
government would have preferred no controversial issues
raised.
China is Sudan's major trading partner, purchasing most of the
country's oil exports and purveying arms to the government in
Khartoum. It is therefore also the country with the greatest
leverage with the government in Khartoum. China has, however,
consistently refused to exert any kind of leverage to put an end to
the genocide in Darfur, which has cost an estimated 200,000 people
their lives.
Even more outrageously, China has until very recently blocked even
a U.N. peacekeeping mission in Darfur in order to protect its
Sudanese ally. The burned villages, the mass rapes, the population
displacement in the region is a situation that has become the
Rwanda or the Kosovo of this decade. In this, China has been
playing a low-key obstructionist game.
As China is aspiring to major-power status, the undesirable
publicity over the Olympics presents its leaders with a sticky
problem. China is increasingly becoming known as an alternative to
the United States as an international player - a great economic
power without the preachiness on values that sometimes drive U.S.
allies up the wall. With an abysmal human-rights record of its own,
Beijing has no desire to intervene in the affairs of other
countries. In fact, it precisely gains a tactical advantage from
this live-and-let-die attitude.
By contrast, the United States (and some European countries) keep
making demands on their partners, and sometimes threaten to
leverage foreign aid, trade privileges, etc. to seek improvements
in human rights and political openness.
Would the Chinese have cared when President Pervez Musharraf of
Pakistan suspended elections after the murder of his rival, Benazir
Bhutto, in December? Of course not. China does not have elections
at the national level. As an official told the Economist magazine,
democracy would slow down China's vast infrastructure
progress.
While the U.S. government does at least make an attempt to
pressure China on human rights, too many countries are inclined to
give it a pass in the interest of trade with this emerging vast
consumer society. And even Washington has its limitations.
Since China's accession to the World Trade Organization, it is no
longer possible to link trade sanctions with human rights. This was
possible when China's human-rights record was under annual review
by Congress before Most Favored Nation Trade status (as it was then
known) for China was renewed each year following the 1989 Tiananmen
massacre.
Today, we are limited often to symbolic actions. Which is where
Mr. Spielberg comes in. Symbols are what Hollywood is all about and
could be just what is needed to put the Chinese leaders on the
spot.
Helle Dale is director of the Douglas and Sarah Allison Center for Foreign Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in the Washington Times