Olympic Spotlight on Alysa Liu and Eileen Gu Ignites US-China Political Debate
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At the Milano-Cortina Winter Olympics this month, two U.S.-born athletes of Chinese descent—Alysa Liu representing the United States and Eileen Gu competing for China—have become the focus of an online political storm that extends far beyond sports.
At the time, Liu was 12, and Gu was 14. Years later, both have become elite athletes, but they now compete under different flags, and increasingly, in the eyes of some commentators, different political camps.
Controversy Among Team USA Athletes
The latest round of controversy was sparked not by Liu or Gu, but by American freestyle skier Hunter Hess. Hess said publicly on Feb. 6 that representing the United States at the Olympics was complicated for him because he disagrees with President Donald Trump’s immigration policies.Contrasting Careers
Gu was born in San Francisco, California, and competed for Team USA early in her career, winning a gold medal at a 2019 FIS Freestyle Ski World Cup event.Liu’s father, Arthur Liu, came to the United States in the 1990s after participating in the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in Beijing and later receiving political asylum. He had publicly revealed that Chinese authorities had approached the family with offers of funding and endorsement opportunities if his daughter would represent China—an offer they declined.
Some Chinese-American commentators have praised Liu’s decision as an embrace of American values.
“It’s about if you embrace American ideals—that we love this country,” she said, suggesting that Gu should live in China and see what it’s like over there.
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Accusations of Double Standards
Gu has faced criticism from some American commentators who accuse her of selectively speaking out.“She was born in America, raised in America, lives in America, and chose to compete against her own country for the worst human rights abuser on the planet, China. She built her fame in a free country, then chose to represent an authoritarian regime while cashing in on endorsements linked by watchdog groups to mass detention and forced labor camps,” he said.
“When human rights come up, she disappears. That’s not neutrality. That’s a choice.”
“If you criticize America but won’t say a word about the CCP, that says a lot about you,” he wrote.
Gu has previously said that balancing ties between the two countries can be challenging. After narrowly missing gold in Milan, she said she was “carrying the weight of two countries.”
Within China, public criticism of Gu has become increasingly restricted online. Posts on the Chinese microblogging platform Weibo questioning her nationality have been removed quickly, and discussions of her status are considered politically sensitive.
China does not recognize dual citizenship, and the Olympic Charter requires that athletes be nationals of the country they represent. There is no public indication that Gu has renounced her U.S. citizenship.
The debate surrounding Liu and Gu has evolved into something larger than sports performance. Online discussions frequently frame their stories as a reflection of loyalty, identity, and values amid the intensifying U.S.-China rivalry.
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