This article is from the source 'washpo' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/global-opinions/bar-russia-from-the-rio-olympics/2016/07/18/fea42886-4d14-11e6-a7d8-13d06b37f256_story.html

The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 1 Version 2
Bar Russia from the Rio Olympics Bar Russia from the Rio Olympics
(about 2 hours later)
This editorial has been updated.This editorial has been updated.
AT THE Winter Olympics in Sochi in early 2014, no Russian athletes tested positive for doping, and to much celebration they took home 33 medals, more than any other nation. But behind the scenes, a system was in place that concealed the use of performance-enhancing drugs by the Russian athletes. Moreover, doping and coverups have been carried out by Russia across a range of international competitions from late 2011 to 2015, according to the report made public Monday by the World Anti-Doping Agency and led by Canadian law professor Richard H. McLaren. The International Olympic Committee said Tuesday it is studying the legal options for a collective ban of Russia from the 2016 Rio Games and taking other measures. In fact, the cheating exposed by Mr. McLaren more than justifies barring Russia from the Games.AT THE Winter Olympics in Sochi in early 2014, no Russian athletes tested positive for doping, and to much celebration they took home 33 medals, more than any other nation. But behind the scenes, a system was in place that concealed the use of performance-enhancing drugs by the Russian athletes. Moreover, doping and coverups have been carried out by Russia across a range of international competitions from late 2011 to 2015, according to the report made public Monday by the World Anti-Doping Agency and led by Canadian law professor Richard H. McLaren. The International Olympic Committee said Tuesday it is studying the legal options for a collective ban of Russia from the 2016 Rio Games and taking other measures. In fact, the cheating exposed by Mr. McLaren more than justifies barring Russia from the Games.
An earlier investigation of Russia by WADA uncovered doping in track and field, primarily directed by senior coaching officials. Then, the New York Times and CBS’s “60 Minutes” reported in May that doping had also gone on at Sochi. The probe by Mr. McLaren, based on interviews, forensic investigation and thousands of pages of documents, goes far deeper and established Russian doping and coverups before and after Sochi and “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Mr. McLaren concluded it was the Russian government that oversaw and directed the “entirety” of the falsification of test results. Moreover, the report describes how this “systematic scheme” of cheating — in which positive results were made to “disappear” — was modified to remain secret at Sochi. An earlier investigation of Russia by WADA uncovered doping in track and field, primarily directed by senior coaching officials. Then, the New York Times and CBS’s “60 Minutes” reported in May that doping had also gone on at Sochi. The probe by Mr. McLaren, based on interviews, forensic investigation and thousands of pages of documents, went far deeper and established Russian doping and coverups before and after Sochi and “beyond a reasonable doubt.” Mr. McLaren concluded it was the Russian government that oversaw and directed the “entirety” of the falsification of test results. Moreover, the report describes how this “systematic scheme” of cheating — in which positive results were made to “disappear” — was modified to remain secret at Sochi.
The Federal Security Service, or FSB, a successor to the Soviet KGB, employed “magicians” who attempted to “surreptitiously open” tamper-proof lids of urine test bottles; FSB people were inserted into the test labs; and the FSB participated in a urine-swapping arrangement at Sochi, sneaking samples through a “mouse hole” secretly cut in a laboratory wall. The Russian laboratory director, Grigory Rodchenkov, who later exposed the system to the Times, was required to sign a paper making him an FSB agent, code name “Kuts,” the report says. Mr. McLaren found cheating was “a State imposed and rigorously controlled program,” directed by the Ministry of Sport, and said it was “inconceivable” that the minister, Vitaly Mutko, was not aware of it. Over the years, the coverup orders came from the deputy minister of sport, who favored promising athletes by issuing the code word “Save” and punished those performing poorly with “Quarantine.”The Federal Security Service, or FSB, a successor to the Soviet KGB, employed “magicians” who attempted to “surreptitiously open” tamper-proof lids of urine test bottles; FSB people were inserted into the test labs; and the FSB participated in a urine-swapping arrangement at Sochi, sneaking samples through a “mouse hole” secretly cut in a laboratory wall. The Russian laboratory director, Grigory Rodchenkov, who later exposed the system to the Times, was required to sign a paper making him an FSB agent, code name “Kuts,” the report says. Mr. McLaren found cheating was “a State imposed and rigorously controlled program,” directed by the Ministry of Sport, and said it was “inconceivable” that the minister, Vitaly Mutko, was not aware of it. Over the years, the coverup orders came from the deputy minister of sport, who favored promising athletes by issuing the code word “Save” and punished those performing poorly with “Quarantine.”
Throwing Russia out of the Olympics may sound harsh, but so is the fact that Russia’s government has been cheating with drugs for years and covering it up. At one point in late 2014, some 8,000 urine samples were destroyed to prevent detection of forbidden drugs. President Vladimir Putin, who promoted Sochi as a symbol of Russia’s revival, was in fact boss of a rule-breaking machine. Mr. Putin, the one-time KGB officer and later FSB director, shows little respect for a rules-based international order; the drugged athletes and falsified test results are just the latest examples of his subterfuge and corrosive behavior. The world’s response ought to be unwavering: This is not acceptable. Throwing Russia out of the Olympics may sound harsh, but so is the fact that Russia’s government has been cheating with drugs for years and covering it up. At one point in late 2014, some 8,000 urine samples were destroyed to prevent detection of forbidden drugs. President Vladimir Putin, who promoted Sochi as a symbol of Russia’s revival, was in fact boss of a rule-breaking machine. Mr. Putin, the onetime KGB officer and later FSB director, shows little respect for a rules-based international order; the drugged athletes and falsified test results are just the latest examples of his subterfuge and corrosive behavior. The world’s response ought to be unwavering: This is not acceptable.
Read more about this topic:Read more about this topic:
The Post’s View: Russia’s doping game gets exposedThe Post’s View: Russia’s doping game gets exposed
Charles Lane: Stop the OlympicsCharles Lane: Stop the Olympics
The Post’s View: Russia’s reported doping is a subversion of the Olympic idealThe Post’s View: Russia’s reported doping is a subversion of the Olympic ideal