By
Bertil Lintner | Asia Times Online
BANGKOK - Myanmar is
winning more foreign friends while international
criticism of the current and previous government's
abysmal human rights records has all but ceased.
Old adversaries in the United States and European
Union have scrapped - or are planning to scrap -
economic sanctions against the regime, and
big-time multinational companies are preparing to
lunge into what many seems to believe is Asia's
last investment frontier.
A nearly
unanimous Western world has heaped praise on
President Thein Sein's supposed moves towards
"democratic reform" and "national reconciliation".
But what has actually changed and what's behind
the hype?
In near unison, the
international community condemned the Myanmar
regime for its brutal repression of Buddhist
monk-led pro-democracy protests in 2007, its
initial callous response to the Cyclone Nargis disaster
in 2008 - when a widely condemned sham referendum
on a new constitution was held in the killer
storm's wake - and a blatantly rigged general
election swept by military-backed candidates in
November 2010.
One theory goes that the
administration is locked in a power struggle
between military "hardliners" and "reformers", and
that the latter, at least for now, have the upper
hand. Several Western countries have apparently
taken the policy decision that every effort should
therefore be made to support the "reformers" and
recent reform signals to ensure that Myanmar
doesn't return to its old repressive ways.
The EU and US have expressed public views
to that effect. On January 31, EU president Herman
Van Rompuy said in a statement after a summit in
Brussels: "I welcome the important changes taking
place in Burma/Myanmar and encourage its
government to maintain its determination to
continue on the path of reform." The US State
Department said the day before that it was
"encouraged " by Myanmar's recent reforms,
"including its decision to allow opposition leader
Aung San Suu Kyi to run in upcoming elections".
Others, however, suspect that the signs
emerging from Myanmar's leadership reflects a
well-orchestrated "good cop, bad-cop" routine to
neutralize domestic opposition and win new foreign
allies, especially among former critics in the
West. Either way, Thein Sein's regime has so far
skillfully played its cards in a way that few,
probably even among themselves, could have
foreseen. "Those in power are military men, not
representatives of a democratic government. This
is how they work," says a Myanmar national who has
followed political developments for decades.
Well laid plans
In order to
understand Myanmar's policy shift - and why the
West has been so supportive - it is instructive to
look back to the early 2000s. Then condemned and
pressured by the international community, the
ruling military junta announced in August 2003 a
seven-step "Roadmap to Discipline-Flourishing
Democracy." That plan called for the drafting of a
new constitution, general elections, and
convention of a new parliament which would "elect
state leaders" charged with building "a modern,
developed and democratic nation".
The
"roadmap" was made public, but at the same time a
confidential "master plan" which outlined ways and
means to deal with both the international
community, especially the US, and domestic
opposition was also drawn up. The authors of that
plan are not known but an internal military
document written by Lt Col Aung Kyaw Hla, who is
identified as a researcher at the country's
prestigious Defense Services Academy, was
completed and circulated in 2004.
The
Burmese-language document, received and reviewed
by this writer, outlines the thinking and strategy
behind the master plan. It is, however, unclear
whether "Aung Kyaw Hla" is a particular person, or
a codename used by a military think-tank.
Anecdotal evidence suggests the latter.
Entitled "A Study of Myanmar-US
Relations", the main thesis of the 346-page
dossier is that Myanmar's recent reliance on China
as a diplomatic ally and economic patron has
created a "national emergency" which threatens the
country's independence.
According to the
dossier, Myanmar must normalize relations with the
West after implementing the roadmap and electing a
government so that the regime can deal with the
outside world on more acceptable terms. Evidently
the internal thinking was that normalization with
the West would not be possible as long as Myanmar
was ruled by military juntas.
Aung Kyaw
Hla goes on to argue in the master plan that
although human rights are a concern in the West,
the US would be willing to modify its policy to
suit "strategic interests". Although the author
does not specify those interests, it is clear from
the thesis that he is thinking of common ground
with the US vis-a-vis China. The author cites
Vietnam and Indonesia under former dictator
Suharto as examples of US foreign policy
flexibility in weighing strategic interests
against democratization.
If bilateral
relations with the US were improved, the master
plan suggests, Myanmar would also get access to
badly needed funds from the World Bank, the
International Monetary Fund and other global
financial institutions. The country would then
emerge from "regionalism", where it currently
depends on the goodwill and trade of its immediate
neighbors, including China, and enter a new era of
"globalization".
The master plan is
acutely aware of the problems that must be
addressed before Myanmar can lessen its reliance
on China and become a trusted partner with the
West. The main issue at the time of writing was
the detention of pro-democracy icon Suu Kyi, who
Aung Kyaw Hla wrote was a key "focal point":
"Whenever she is under detention pressure
increases, but when she is not, there is less
pressure." While the report implies Suu Kyi's
release would improve ties with the West, the
plan's ultimate aim - which it spells out clearly
- is to "crush" the opposition.
At the
same time, the dossier identifies individuals,
mostly Western academics, known for their
opposition to the West's sanctions policy, and
somewhat curiously suggests that "friendly" Indian
diplomats could be helpful in providing background
information about influential US congressmen.
The dossier concludes that the regime
cannot compete with the media and non-governmental
organizations run by Myanmar exiles, but if US
politicians and lawmakers were invited to visit
the country they could help to sway international
opinion in the regime's favor. Over the years,
many Americans have visited Myanmar and often left
less critical of the regime than they were
previously. In the end, it seems that Myanmar has
successfully managed to engage the US rather than
vice versa.
Institutional
Sinophobia
Aung Kaw Hla's internal thesis
is the first clear sign of dissatisfaction with
the regime's close ties with China, which, in
part, were forged because the West downgraded its
relations with Myanmar after massacres of
pro-democracy demonstrators in 1988 and other
gross human-rights violations. More signs of a
worsening relationship could be discerned in
internal reports that began to circulate within
the military in 2010.
China, until then
praised as a dependable ally, was beginning to be
viewed increasingly as the root of Myanmar's many
ills, from the rape of the country's forests to
rampant drug trafficking. China's close ties with
the United Wa State Army, Myanmar's main
drug-trafficking militia, has not go unnoticed by
the authorities in Naypyidaw. Then, in September
2011, came Thein Sein's decision to suspend the
China-backed US$3.6 billion joint-venture Myitsone
dam project in the far north of the country.
Seen from a US perspective, encouraging
Myanmar to move away from China became a priority
when Naypyidaw showed that it was willing to
engage with the US. Washington was also eager to
undermine Myanmar's disturbing military ties with
North Korea. Not surprisingly, North Korea was
high on the agenda when US Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton visited Myanmar last December.
The last of several recorded attempts to ship
weaponry from North Korea to Myanmar took place in
May and June 2011, several months after the
supposedly "reformist" Thein Sein became president
and after government officials had claimed that
there was no military cooperation with North
Korea.
On May 26, the USS
McCampbell caught up with M/V Light, a
Myanmar-bound North Korean cargo vessel suspected
of carrying missile parts and possibly other
military equipment. The US destroyer approached
the ship and asked to board but the North Koreans
refused. The first encounter took place in the sea
south of Shanghai and a few days later closer to
Singapore. The M/V Light eventually stopped
and turned back to its home port in North Korea -
all the way tracked by US surveillance planes and
satellites.
After that incident - and
incentives from the US such as easing restrictions
on Naypyidaw's access to multilateral lending
institutions - there has been no known attempt by
North Korea to ship weapons to Myanmar. And the US
is no doubt taking full advantage of Myanmar's
drift away from China. "What the US is trying to
do is to send every signal of support to the
forces pushing for liberalization in Burma," said
Robert Fitts, a former US diplomat in the region
now attached to Thailand's Chulalongkorn
university.
The US will soon send a new
ambassador to Myanmar, representing an upgrade of
diplomatic relations. On February 7, the New York
Times quoted US officials as saying that the
director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA),
David Petraeus, may visit Myanmar later this year.
The CIA is not exactly known for being a leading
proponent and promoter of liberal values in the
developing world; the agency has other priorities
such as Myanmar's strategic importance to the US.
But therein lies a danger, which Aung Kyaw
Hla outlined in his thesis of more than seven
years ago. If Myanmar does manage to improve
bilateral relations with the US, China could
counteract in a way that threatens Myanmar's
integrity and independence. A balanced approach is
therefore needed, Aung Kyaw Hla argued, but it was
not set out in the master plan how that balance
may be achieved.
Well-worn
routine
There are other reasons to doubt
that Myanmar's new policies will work over the
long term. While the international community
appears to fall for the latest incarnation of the
regime's well-worn good cop, bad cop routine,
local and exiled mainstream opposition groups are
less likely to be so gullible.
One of the
supposed "good cops" in Myanmar's current
nominally civilian leadership is former Maj Gen
Aung Min, currently the railway minister, who has
been tasked with shuttling back and forth between
Myanmar and Thailand to meet with influential
exiled dissidents. Some of those who have recently
met him are deeply suspicious of his motives and
the less conciliatory signals sent from the
regime's "bad cops".
They note that Aung
Min once served under Tin U, Myanmar's powerful
intelligence chief until he was ousted in 1983,
ostensibly for corrupt practices but more likely
because he had built up a state within a state
that threatened the leadership of former junta
leader Gen Ne Win.
Writing in the Far
Eastern Economic Review in 1983, British
journalist Rodney Tasker characterized Tin U and
his intelligence colleagues as "men of the world
compared with other more short-sighted, dogmatic
figures in the Burmese [Myanmar] leadership. They
were allowed to travel abroad, talk freely to
foreigners and generally look behind the rigid
confines of the current regime."
But they
were also known to be ruthless and extremely
skilled at manipulating their enemies and
adversaries. Tin U himself was trained by the CIA
on the US-held Pacific island of Saipan in 1957.
Aung Min somehow survived the 1983 purge and moved
to join Myanmar's Infantry Battalion 21 in
1992. He was with the 66th Light Infantry Division
in 2000, was elevated to Southern Commander of the
Myanmar Army in 2001, and became railway minister
in 2003 under the previous military junta led by
Gen Than Shwe.
In today's context, solving
the long-burning ethnic issue will be key to
realizing the master plan's ultimate vision of
keeping the military in power. One of the supposed
"bad cops" in the current power configuration is
Aung Thaung, another peace negotiator, who met
ethnic Kachin rebel leaders in Ruili in
southwestern China earlier this year. A former
heavy industry minister, he is believed by many to
have been one of the architects behind a 2003 mob
attack on Suu Kyi and her colleagues in Depayin
that left scores of her supporters dead and
wounded. "The good cop" Aung Min did not attend
the talks in Ruili but some analysts suggest may
later step in to "rescue" the talks with a softer
approach.
Whether Myanmar's many
rebellious ethnic minorities will accept these
well-known personalities and well-worn negotiating
tactics remains to be seen. The fact that the
government has consistently refused to even
consider a federal structure does not bode well
for reaching lasting agreements with armed groups.
The 2008 constitution lays down the fundamentals
for a centralized state structure where the
military is a main, if not dominant, player.
Thus the recent euphoria over recent
"reforms" in Myanmar may therefore be short-lived.
Unless the present constitution is scrapped or
widely amended, which is extremely unlikely due to
the military's de facto veto power in parliament,
Myanmar's ethnic issue will likely remain
unsolved. And if the country becomes an arena of
competition between the US and China, there will
certainly be more trouble ahead - as Aung Kyaw Hla
warned in his master plan now being put into
practice.
Bertil Lintner is a
former correspondent with the Far Eastern Economic
Review and author of several books on
Burma/Myanmar, including Aung San Suu Kyi and
Burma's Struggle for Democracy (Published in
2011). He is currently a writer with Asia-Pacific
Media Services.
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