Revisiting further above, my fear is that things going well for the Beijing Olympics amounts to legitimization of how the Chinese government does business, which I can't condone for a moment. I'm far less worried about the Chinese people driving more cars than the Chinese government cracking more skulls, Tibetan and otherwise.
Just got done reading the recent
Economist about Tibet. By sheer coincidence their Beijing correspondent had finally gotten an approved visit to join a tightly controlled itinerary (both things the gov't never used to give Journalists
at all) and was in Lhasa from March 13-19. After the rioting began on the 14th he/she was surprisingly *not* forced to leave. So he/she had a unique street-level vantage point to what was going on and why.
Not condoning anything violent that anyone did to anybody, not taking away from the very real inequities the Tibetans face, but the death toll was almost all from Tibetans who killed Han Chinese by burning down their businesses with them inside (typically a 3-4 story building with living quarters upstairs). And by all accounts the gov't very purposefully *didn't* go in with guns blazing a la Tian An Men, for the precise reason that the Olympics are only 4 months away.
I hate totalitarian 1-party governments, & their tools of oppression. My only point (both above & here again) is that engaging such governments is better than ostracizing them (vis. Cuba, Myanmar or No. Korea...how much progress has decades of isolation encouraged in those states?). And as long as such governments are simultaneously pressured to open up (not the unconditional love everybody up through Reagan - except Carter - gave dictatorships in Latin America and the Middle East or the apartheid regime in South Africa). Things like Olympics or membership in the WTO are precisely the kinds of tools make such regimes
voluntarily opt into international scrutiny, and thus, eventually, lead to progress. The more the rest of the world can make it irresistable for China to stay engaged, the sooner and wider will be the reforms at all levels of Chinese society. To the extent that the rest of the world engenders their mistrust, the more quickly & completely they will crack down and derail such progress.