With the Winter Olympics set to open in Beijing in two months, the IOC was best positioned to take on the Chinese.
But Bach wasn't about to mess with his billion-dollar boondoggle, so
he's gladly played along with a pair of government-arranged video calls to Peng that were supposed to assuage the international outcry but instead make her sound more like a hostage.
Longtime IOC member Dick Pound weighed in as well, though he might as well have been auditioning to become a Chinese government spokesman when he said everyone in the organization believes Peng is "fine."
"These are people who have dealt with athletes and dealt with pressure,"
Pound told CNN in an interview. "They can tell whether somebody is behaving under duress or not.
"Their unanimous conclusion was that she was fine. And she just asked that her privacy be respected for the time being."
Of course, Bach and the IOC are merely mimicking the blueprint laid out by the NBA, which faced a backlash from China — its biggest foreign market — after
former Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey sent out a tweet in 2019 supporting anti-government protesters in Hong Kong.
A leader in the fight for social justice in America, the NBA treaded far more cautiously with the Chinese.
The league called the uproar over Morey's tweet "regrettable" and spent the past two years trying to patch up a financial hit that Silver estimated at hundreds of million of dollars.
The WTA doesn't have nearly the financial clout of the IOC or the NBA, but it still chose to confront the Chinese over Peng's whereabouts.
The governing body says it will not back down until it gets to speak with Peng directly and the government agrees to a full and impartial investigation of her assault allegations.