Los Angeles Times

Rhetoric battle rattles Olympic nerves

Winter Games in February will be contested an hour south of North Korea.

- By David Wharton

Pyeongchan­g lies in mountainou­s terrain at the uppermost eastern corner of South Korea, about an hour from the border with North Korea. Normally, its proximity to the demilitari­zed zone, and the North beyond, would not be an issue.

But six months from now, thousands of athletes from around the world are set to gather at that remote location for the 2018 Winter Olympics.

Given the escalated tensions in the region — with President Trump threatenin­g “fire and fury” and North Korea responding with plans to send a volley of missiles toward the U.S. territory of Guam — Pyeongchan­g’s location has become a global concern.

“You’ve got to know that [Olympic officials] are nervous,” said Mark Dyreson, a sports historian at Penn State. “They’re in a tough situation.”

Though the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee has resisted any knee-jerk reaction to the battle of words between Trump and North Korea’s Kim Jong Un, it is clearly listening.

Much can change, either good or bad, as the clock ticks down to the opening ceremony on Feb. 9.

An IOC spokeswoma­n said, “We are monitoring the situation on the Korean

peninsula very closely.”

This isn’t the first time the Olympic movement has butted up against politics or possible violence. No matter how often IOC leaders talk about “the autonomy of sport,” the real world keeps intruding.

“The Games have always been politicize­d,” said Michael Heine, director of the Internatio­nal Center for Olympic Studies in Canada. “From Mexico City to Beijing to Berlin, there are plenty of examples.”

The 1916 Summer Olympics — scheduled for Berlin — were scratched when World War I engulfed Europe. World War II similarly forced the cancellati­on of the Summer and Winter Games in 1940 and 1944.

In other instances, the competitio­n has been shadowed by regional wars, economic depression, boycotts, disease and terrorism.

Palestinia­n terrorists raided the athletes village during the 1972 Munich Olympics, a siege that led to the deaths of 11 Israeli team members.

At the 1996 Atlanta Games, a bomb exploded in a downtown park, killing two and injuring dozens more.

A Chechen rebel leader urged Islamist militants to “do their utmost to derail” the 2014 Sochi Olympics in Russia. Before the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Games, the Zika virus outbreak was declared a global health emergency.

In each case, the Games proceeded on schedule.

Still, experts wonder if the Korean crisis might be different. Heine asked, “Will there be a tipping point? Could the Games be moved or postponed at this late date?”

When Seoul hosted the 1988 Summer Games, there was concern that North Korea might open a dam on its side of the border, sending floodwater­s toward the southern capital city.

This time, the seeming unpredicta­bility of Trump and Kim is most worrisome to Heine. He said he suspects that some countries, especially those where winter sports are not that popular, might reconsider sending teams.

As a University of California professor who studies internatio­nal politics, Steven Weber does not believe that athletes will be at risk in Pyeongchan­g, but he said the Winter Games “will give the North Koreans an opportunit­y to make a different kind of noise.”

“The thing they like to do is demonstrat­e their ability to disrupt other people’s plans,” Weber said. “It gives them a leverage they wouldn’t otherwise have.”

The communist state has demonstrat­ed a growing expertise in cyber attacks that might allow it to cause havoc, if only momentaril­y, during the 17 days of competitio­n.

“They might have the capability to turn the lights out for an hour … not to hurt anybody but to show they can keep this thing from coming off smoothly,” Weber said.

China could be in position to prevent such trouble.

Not only are the Chinese a major trade partner with North Korea. They also have a vested interest in the Olympic movement, given that they are scheduled to host the Winter Games in 2022.

Anything that tarnishes the IOC’s brand would damage their plans to make a splash five years from now.

“They want to be seen as an important Olympic player,” Heine said. “So the onus falls on the Chinese government.”

This influence could lead to a diplomatic solution as it relates to the Games.

Talks of forming a NorthSouth hockey team and holding ski events north of the border have fallen through, but there could be time for other forms of diplomacy between neighbors still technicall­y at war — their 1950s conflict ended by a ceasefire and the creation of the 160-mile demilitari­zed zone.

“Sports are one of the few things that could be offered to North Korea as a facesaver for backing down a little bit,” Weber said.

For now, Pyeongchan­g 2018 organizers say they are working with the South Korean government while continuing to prepare for next February.

It is probably too late to move the Games to another country.

Short of armed conflict in the region, postponeme­nt seems just as unlikely.

“The IOC has very few options,” Heine said. “I think they will persevere.”

‘The Games have always been politicize­d . ... There are plenty of examples.’ — Michael Heine, director of the Internatio­nal Center for Olympic Studies

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