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FIREinvestigates allegations MIT canceled Mike Pompeo speech about China
In his new memoir, 鈥淣ever Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love,鈥 Mike Pompeo, secretary of state during the Trump administration, makes a troubling . Pompeo claims that in 2020, Massachusetts Institute of Technology鈥檚 then-president L. Rafael Reif canceled Pompeo鈥檚 planned speech at the campus because 鈥渢he risk of offending his Chinese students was too great.鈥
Today, FIREsent a letter to MIT president Sally Kornbluth to ask the university to account for the details of the alleged cancellation. FIREwrote:
If substantiated, the Pompeo speech cancelation would be the third high-profile censorship controversy at MIT in as many years: In October 2021, MIT canceled renowned climate scientist Dorian Abbot鈥檚 John Carlson Lecture over objections to his views on diversity initiatives. And in March of last year, MIT announced鈥攖hen quickly backtracked鈥攐n a policy barring students and faculty from asking others to wear masks.
As you know, MIT makes profound and important commitments to free expression for students and faculty, and 鈥渁ims to create an atmosphere of intellectual excitement, a climate of inquiry and innovation in which each student develops a consuming interest in understanding for its own sake.鈥 Censorship in response to threat of controversy, or in response to pressure by powerful outside interests鈥攊ncluding donors鈥攊s antithetical to this fundamental goal.
According to Pompeo鈥檚 memoir, his team asked MIT 鈥渋f it would welcome America鈥檚 secretary of state to speak about matters important to its students and our nation鈥檚 security.鈥 MIT agreed, Pompeo said, and confirmed a date for the event.
But then MIT reversed course. Pompeo wrote that his office 鈥渞eceived a call a couple weeks before my scheduled remarks. 鈥榃e鈥檙e sorry, but we will be unable to host the secretary on our campus,鈥 came the message. In the end, the president of MIT, Rafael Reif, made clear that the risk of offending his Chinese students was too great.鈥
Pompeo would instead go on to at the Georgia Institute of Technology, where he decried the role of the Chinese Communist Party on American campuses.
Pompeo鈥檚 allegations are concerning, especially because this is not the first time university officials have been accused of 鈥 or have admitted to 鈥 censoring criticism of the CCP because of the risk of offending the Chinese government or alienating students or donors from China.
FIRE is asking MIT to respond to Pompeo鈥檚 claims and account for what spurred the cancellation.
In 2015, a Harvard Law administrator ordered Chinese dissident and human rights lawyer Teng Biao to reschedule a campus event about human rights in China because it overlapped with then-Harvard president Drew Faust鈥檚 trip to Beijing and could have imperiled the university鈥檚 business there. In 2009, North Carolina State University an event with the Dalai Lama after the university鈥檚 Confucius Institute objected. The provost admitted China鈥檚 status as a 鈥渕ajor trading partner鈥 played a role. And last year, George Washington University temporarily students who posted artwork satirizing the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, putting the involved Chinese international students and their families at risk of facing legal consequences at home.
FIRE is asking MIT to respond to Pompeo鈥檚 claims and account for what spurred the cancellation. If, as Pompeo alleges, the offer was revoked to avoid 鈥渙ffending鈥 students from China and perhaps threatening or access to international students, MIT鈥檚 free speech reputation will yet again take another damaging hit.
This isn鈥檛 MIT鈥檚 first brush with controversy around expression and China. In 2006, an award-winning multimedia project on 鈥淰isualizing Cultures鈥 provoked controversy after a student posted online a section of the project titled 鈥淚llustration of the Decapitation of Violent Chinese Soldiers.鈥 The image detailed Japanese propaganda in the First Sino-Japanese War, but the resulting outrage missed the context of the work. The faculty members for the project 鈥渞eceived a flood of abusive emails, phone calls, and even death threats condemning them for their inclusion of the offensive woodprint.鈥
MIT鈥檚 Chinese FIREand Scholars Association involved itself in the matter, writing a to the professors, as well as MIT鈥檚 administration, addressing 鈥渢he emotional damage the inappropriate presentation had caused to thousands of Chinese people worldwide.鈥 And at a , 鈥渟tudents from the [鈥嬧婸eople鈥檚 Republic of China] circulated written demands that MIT shut down the VC website, cancel academic workshops related to the media project, revise the project鈥檚 text and images, and officially apologize to the offended 鈥楥hinese community.鈥欌 They succeeded, and the site for the project was taken down.
鈥淲e affirm in the strongest way possible our support for the work of these professors, and for the principles of academic freedom,鈥 then-MIT President Susan Hockfield a week later in announcing the relaunch of the project. 鈥淲hile some of the text and images on the web site are painful to see, the attacks on our colleagues and their work are antithetical to all that we stand for as a university dedicated to open inquiry and the free exchange of ideas. As scholars and educators, we have an obligation to explore complex and controversial ideas, and to do so in a manner that respects those with whom we may disagree.鈥
Hockfield was right to plainly state that academic freedom, open inquiry, and the free exchange of ideas are vital to MIT. We hope that President Kornbluth can use this opportunity in her new office at MIT to reaffirm these values once again, account for the details surrounding the cancellation of Pompeo鈥檚 speech and, if the facts are as alleged, confirm the university will ensure such a cancellation does not happen again.
FIRE stands ready to work with President Kornbluth to promote a flourishing culture of free expression on campus.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, . If you鈥檙e faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533). If you鈥檙e a college journalist facing censorship or a media law question, call the Student Press Freedom Initiative 24-hour hotline at 717-734-SPFI (7734).
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