Biden says US considering diplomatic boycott of Beijing Olympics
The United States is considering a
diplomatic boycott of the Beijing Olympics, President Joe Biden confirmed on
Thursday (Nov 18), a move that would be aimed at protesting China's human
rights record, including what Washington says is genocide against minority
Muslims.
"Something we're considering,"
Biden said when asked if a diplomatic boycott was under consideration as he sat
down for a meeting with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
A diplomatic boycott would mean that US
officials would not attend the opening of the Beijing Winter Olympics in
February.
A US decision not to send diplomats would
be a rebuke of Chinese President Xi Jinping just days after Xi and Biden worked
to ease tensions in a virtual summit, their first extensive talks since Biden
took office in January.
Activists and members of Congress from both
parties have been pressing the Biden administration to diplomatically boycott
the event given that the US government accuses China of carrying out a genocide
against Muslim ethnic groups in its western Xinjiang region, something that
Beijing denies.
White House spokesperson Jen Psaki told a
regular briefing on Thursday that US consideration of a diplomatic boycott of
the Winter Olympics was driven by concerns about human rights practices in
Xinjiang province.
"There are areas that we do have
concerns: Human rights abuses," Psaki told reporters. "We have
serious concerns."
"Certainly there are a range of
factors as we look at what our presence would be," she said, while
declining to provide a timeline for a decision.
"I want to leave the president the
space to make decisions," she said.
Sources with knowledge of the
administration's thinking have told Reuters there was a growing consensus
within the White House that it should keep US officials away from the Games.
Last week, US Secretary of State Antony
Blinken said Washington was talking to countries around the world about
"how they're thinking about participation," but left a deadline for a
decision unclear.
A bipartisan group of US senators in
October proposed an amendment to an annual defense policy bill that would
prohibit the US State Department from spending federal funds to "support
or facilitate" the attendance of US government employees at the Games.
Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has
also called for a diplomatic boycott, saying global leaders who attend would
lose their moral authority.
Some Republican lawmakers have been calling
for a complete boycott of the Olympics.
Senator Tom Cotton of Arkansas told a news
conference on Thursday that a diplomatic boycott of what he called the
"genocide Olympics" would be "too little, too late" and
said no US athletes, officials, or US corporate sponsors should take part.
Nikki Haley, a Republican former US
ambassador to the United Nations, also had called for a complete boycott,
saying attending would send a message that America was willing to turn a blind
eye to genocide.
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