Olympic Diplomacy on the Korean Peninsula

Republic of Korea

February 9, 2018

Today, North and South Korean Olympic athletes marched in the Opening Ceremony’s Parade of Nations together. Their joint flag depicts the Korean Peninsula, with no borders, showing the unity that the Olympics Games hope to foster through sport. These calmer relations come on the heels of several tense months as North Korea tested nuclear weapons and intercontinental ballistic missiles, stoking fears in the region and the United States.

As the Olympics approached, worry about North Korean antics grew, and the South Koreans believed that, by working with them, the North wouldn’t try to disrupt the games as they have in the past. The last time South Korea hosted the Olympics (Seoul, 1988) North Korea brought down a South Korean commercial jet. So South Korea has tried to calm tensions through the Olympics, a geopolitical actor in and of itself.

On January 9, North and South Korea held direct talks about the upcoming Winter Olympics, the first time the two states held direct talks in over two years. The two countries agreed to have North Korean athletes, as well as an official North Korean delegation, present in PyeongChang, South Korea.

The Olympics can be used as a vessel for propaganda or for public diplomacy and can act as a host to other forms of political speech.

On January 15, the two countries agreed to send a joint women’s hockey team to the Games, and this will be the first time ever that the two Koreas compete together in the Olympics on a unified team. The athletes will—of course—compete, but the Olympic venue will be the host site for military-to-military talks.

And on January 25, the North Korean women’s hockey players crossed the heavily-guarded De-Militarized Zone into South Korea to begin their training. As the Olympics have begun, so have the opportunities for North Korean athletes to interact with athletes from other countries

However, this is far from the first time that politics have taken place because of the Olympics. The Olympics have been a place for political speech, a time to show off political reforms, and a reason to host discussions like these between the two Koreas.

Think John Carlos and Tommie Smith’s raised fists (Mexico City, 1968); the U.S. boycott of the Soviet-hosted Games (Moscow, 1980); the boycott by the Soviets of the U.S.-hosted Games (Los Angeles, 1984); Chinese boycotts from 1956 through 1992 over recognition of Taiwan; the Nazi propaganda that Hitler used to legitimize his country’s direction (Berlin, 1936); and the banishment of South Africa and the racist apartheid regime in 1970, finally allowed to compete in the 1992 Olympic Games when apartheid fell. Each time the Olympics are held, they can be used as a vessel for propaganda or for public diplomacy and can act as a host to other forms of political speech.

This century has seen three other instances of the Olympics sparking diplomatic action between the two Koreas:

  • 2000, Sydney: The two Korean delegations marched together under a flag depicting Korean Unification (though competed as two separate teams).
  • 2004, Athens: Marched under the flag of Korean Unification.
  • 2006, Turin: Again, marched under the flag of Korean Unification.

Additionally, major political activity typically takes place between the two Koreas during international sporting events other than the Olympics:

  • 2002, World Cup (South Korea; Japan): A naval skirmish between the two Koreas took place, leaving six South Korean sailors dead. Outside analysts view this as a response to an earlier sea battle, but also as a distraction to South Korean success in the World Cup as both participants and hosts.
  • 2014, Asian Games (Incheon, South Korea): North Korea attends the sporting events, and a surprise political delegation joins the athletes.

International sporting events have been a trigger for diplomatic talks between the two Koreas, and this trend has continued.

South Korea is engaging in direct talks with North Korea because they want these games to go smoothly. The Olympics are used as a tool to show political stability and progress for other nations, and the South Koreans are presumably looking to use these Games to prove that. Though North Korea has developed a missile presumably capable of delivering a nuclear warhead to the United States and is in a war of words with U.S. President Donald Trump, South Korea is still a stable member of the world order and is looking to prove that it is deserving of international respect and admiration.

Hitler and the Nazi Reich used the 1936 Games in Berlin to gain support and legitimacy for their movement; the Spanish used the 1992 Games in Barcelona to show that they had progressed past dictator Francisco Franco and into a member of Europe and the West; and the Chinese used the 2008 Games in Beijing to show that they are a capable nation ready to handle global challenges.

Though it is forbidden under the Olympic charter, the Games are a political and diplomatic actor, and it is natural for both North and South Korea to use this opportunity to thaw tensions on the Peninsula. The Games can be used as a symbolic gesture of goodwill and peace, a place to lay down arms, and a catalyst for this dialogue.

The Olympics as an event should be viewed as a geopolitical actor for this very reason. We should be proud of the two Koreas for coming together and engaging in dialogue in the run-up to these Games. Most importantly, we should be aware of the symbolic gesture that hosting diplomatic talks before the Olympics shows. As such, world leaders and diplomats should continue to use pre-Olympic discussions as a strategy for ending conflict and lowering tensions in present and future iterations of the Games.

Just as the Olympics are a stage for these talks to take place, they could be used as a stage for other forms of political action by the North Korean regime.

This is Olympic diplomacy in action. Because so much is at stake whenever the Olympics are held, the Games can be a catalyst for diplomatic or other political action. These look to be huge steps for peace on the Korean Peninsula, but we cannot be certain about anything. Just as the Olympics are a stage for these talks to take place, they could be used as a stage for other forms of political action by the regime. Keep an eye out for weapons tests, cyber-attacks, or a side deal made with another power, possibly Russia.

But we should not always be so cynical. This Korean women’s hockey team is a huge symbolic gesture toward peace and stability between the two states, as this has never happened before. Both countries seem eager to cooperate, and this shows their seriousness about working together across the border. By all means, this is a huge step toward further direct talks and de-escalation. Additionally, the North Korean athletes' exposure to South Koreans is exposure to people who have grown up in an open democracy with information, technology, and freedom, in stark contrast to the closed propaganda that the oppressive hermit state in the North has given its athletes.

We should look to how this Olympic diplomacy will affect Kim Jong-un's legitimacy. Will it legitimize his rule, showing that he is willing to work with his neighbors? Or will it expose North Koreans to information, technology, and a better way of life, disrupting North Korean citizens' willingness to follow him?

Either way, we must understand that the Olympics are the political actor that brought the two states together, and that these talks or any changes to occur on the Korean Peninsula are the direct result of Olympic diplomacy.

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Robert Dunbar is a Spring 2018 Junior Fellow in the Pacific Council’s Communications Department.

This article originally appeared in The State of Nations blog.

The views and opinions expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of the Pacific Council.

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