Foreign Policy Blogs

International Relations and the Olympics

Athletes celebrate during the opening ceremony for the 2012 Olympics. Source: Getty

Athletes celebrate during the opening ceremony for the 2012 Olympics. Source: Getty

As the 2012 Olympics come to an end, we could list off the medals received, the records broken, and the athletic milestones reached. For the foreign policy enthusiasts among us, an Olympic recap inevitably includes another kind of list — a list of the geopolitical issues that the Games have highlighted. With more countries represented in the Olympics than in the United Nations, the Olympics shine a spotlight on global politics, both in terms of a country’s domestic issues and its interactions with the rest of the world. My brief and inevitably incomplete list of political issues on display at the Games includes the following:

Ultimately, though, what I love about the Olympics is that which “everything is political” and “it’s the economy” cannot fully explain. For the past two weeks, Olympians have performed athletic feats that seem almost superhuman — and people watching the Olympics around the world have soared through the air with the divers and scored goals on the Olympic soccer field with their countries’ teams. Here’s to London 2012.

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