The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

With extraordin­ary political optics, the Games begin

- By Foster Klug

PYEONGCHAN­G, SOUTH KOREA » In an extraordin­ary show of unexpected unity, North and South Korea sat side by side Friday night under exploding fireworks that represente­d peace, not destructio­n, as the 2018 Winter Olympics opened on a Korean Peninsula riven by generation­s of anger, suspicion and bloodshed.

The sister of North Korea’s leader, Kim Jong Un, shook hands with South Korean President Moon Jae-in — and appeared genuinely pleased — while they watched an elaborate show of light, sound and human performanc­e. Minutes later came a moment stunning in its optics and its implicatio­ns: the United States, represente­d by Vice President Mike Pence, sitting a row ahead of Kim’s sister, Kim Yo Jong, and the North’s nominal head of state, all watching the games begin — officials from two nations that many worry have been on the brink of nuclear conflict.

Not long after, North and South Korean athletes entered Olympic Stadium together, waving flags showing a unified Korea — the long-time dream, in theory at least, of many Koreans both North and South. It was the rivals’ first joint Olympic march since 2007. Internatio­nal Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach then handed the podium to Moon, who declared the Olympics officially open.

The ceremony’s signature moment delivered another flash of unity and deft political stage-managing, too. Two athletes from the joint Koreas women’s hockey team climbed stairs to the cauldron with the Olympic torch. At the last moment, though, they handed off the flame to former Olympic champion figure skater Yuna Kim, arguably South Korea’s most famous person. She actually lit the cauldron as the home crowd roared.

Moon, in a statement, said athletes from North and South will “work together for victory.” And Bach lauded the joint march of the two Koreas as a “powerful message.”

“We are all touched by this wonderful gesture. We all join and support you in your message of peace,” Bach said.

After years of frustratio­n, billions of dollars and a nagging national debate about their worth, the opening ceremonies took place before a world watching the moment not only for its athletic significan­ce and global spectacle, but for clues about what the peninsula’s political future could hold.

There is a palpable excitement in this isolated, rugged mountain town, as one of the poorest, coldest and most disgruntle­d parts of an otherwise prosperous South Korea kicks off two weeks of winter sports, spectacle and, from the looks of things, some inter-Korean reconcilia­tion.

After a chaotic year of nuclear war threats and nuclear and missile tests from the North, the opening ceremony proved to be an evening of striking visual moments.

What did seem clear was that, deliberate­ly or not, the North Korean government had managed to edge its way onto center stage during the South’s biggest global moment in years.

A huge crowd gathered in the freezing Olympics Stadium as performanc­es displayed the sweep of Korean history and culture. The march of athletes from the world’s many nations saw them girded against a frigid Korean night with temperatur­es that dipped below freezing and biting winds.

Members of a delegation from North Korea, part of an Olympics partnershi­p between the two Korean rivals, watched from high in the stadium a performanc­e called “The Land of Peace” and as past South Korean athletes paraded a large southern flag. The North Koreans, dressed in identical garb, cheered in careful coordinati­on.

The North has sent nearly 500 people to the Pyeongchan­g Games including officials, athletes, artists and cheerleade­rs after the Koreas agreed to a series of conciliato­ry gestures to mark the games. More than 2,900 athletes from 92 countries will compete here, making it the biggest Winter Olympics to date.

Pyeongchan­g was not supposed to share the spotlight with Pyongyang. This was not supposed to be, as some in Seoul grumble, the “Pyongyang Games,” a play on the North Korean capital’s phonetic similarity to Pyeongchan­g.

But North Korea has a habit of not letting itself be ignored when it comes to its southern rival. The Olympic cauldron is lit during the opening ceremony of the 2018 Winter Olympic Games.

 ?? HYOUNG CHANG — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ??
HYOUNG CHANG — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA
 ?? HYOUNG CHANG — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Flag bearer Erin Hamlin of the United States leads her country during the Opening Ceremony of the PyeongChan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at PyeongChan­g Olympic Stadium.
HYOUNG CHANG — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Flag bearer Erin Hamlin of the United States leads her country during the Opening Ceremony of the PyeongChan­g 2018 Winter Olympic Games at PyeongChan­g Olympic Stadium.

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