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- Policy paper: Will America ever wake up to the Burmese Clarion Call?
Policy paper: Will America ever wake up to the Burmese Clarion Call?
- By The Kanbawza .
- Published 08/11/2008
- News Analysis
- Unrated
The Kanbawza .
The Kanbawza is an online freelance or a free contributing media and distributing news, commentary and information from individuals, professional and non-professional journalists. The issue does not focus on one particular group people or region, anyone is free to join and work with TK as a voluntary or a free writer. TK believes in unity in diversity which all human being can work together for their common interests. Please send your article to thekanbawza@ http://gmail.com.
View all articles by The Kanbawza .
The
21 hour stop in
Despite numerous organizations and
activists pushing for the President to make a political statement out of the
Games, specifically referencing China's continued economic and political
support for the Burmese regime, Bush remains adamant that he will not
politicize the Beijing Games missing the fact that an aesthetic of political
memorization, reflected in the host government's declared aim that China should
win more gold medals than any country; the world will once again be made to
witness a triumph of the totalitarian will, because of its superb dictatorial
communist system. We know that there is little more that the
Burmese people can hope in Bush administration' s last Hurrah!
Will the torch of President Bush's
statement at the Map room of the White House "to let the people of
Thank You
Admittedly
in his eight years of unstinting support, which even the most sceptical Burmese
like myself, have had to acknowledge as a major contribution to our cause and
we thank President Bush when he uttered
August 8
is not only a day to recognize China's achievements,
but also an occasion to recall
the unfulfilled aspirations of the Burmese people
We know that the
In 2003, the
Last year, following the crackdown
on the September uprising, he blasted the regime and tightened sanctions
against the generals and their cronies. As a further sign of support, the US
Congress awarded its highest civilian honour, the Congressional Gold Medal, to
Daw Aung San Suu Kyi last December. And just this week, Bush signed into law
the Burma Jade Act, which restricts the import of precious stones from
Bush is not a visionary and his
tendency to see complex issues in black and white, just like any self style
Burmese foreign experts who tend to equate with any other country and refused
to see that
We warmly acknowledge that both Bush
and his wife, Laura, who has been a real driving force in keeping
In May of this year, it became
evident just how much the bull dog face General Than Shwe has staked on the
ultimate success of this deeply flawed political process, which promises only a
continuation of military rule under another guise. But one week before a planned
referendum on a military-drafted constitution when the country was hit by its
worst natural disaster in living memory, the American response to this disaster
was markedly different from that of the rulers in Naypyidaw. The
The Realization
We are but halfway through 2008 yet
it has already been witness to a sizeable shift in global power. The default
Western mindset remains that the Western writ rules. That is hardly surprising;
it has been true for so long there has been little reason for anyone to
question it, least of all the West. The thinking of the Americans has changed
that they live in the greatest country on earth and construe that they have the
right to disregard the opinions of other countries and can impose our values on
everyone else - after all, why should anyone complain about having greatness
thrust upon them? But lamentably the estimate of their worth far outstrips its
real-world value. They now see that the Vietnam Syndrome will soon be replaced
by the Iraq Syndrome. It's not just that the world is fed up with
The assumption is that might and right are
invariably on its side, that it always knows best and that if necessary it will
enforce its political wisdom and moral rectitude on others. There is, however,
a hitch: the authority of the self-appointed global sheriff is remorselessly
eroding. There have been two outstanding examples so far this year and the
first was Burma. The question facing the rest of the world in the aftermath of
the cyclone, however, was how to assist the millions of victims of a
humanitarian disaster. China, India and ASEAN — who largely make up the region
— were opposed to the use of military force and President Bush bow down to
them. If he had followed this instinct in Iraq and use the unilateral action
with the whole West backing up President Bush the result would be much rosier.
US leaders were living in a time warp: the knee-jerk responses of old,
freshened up by the short-lived era of liberal interventionism, have become a
stock response. It was not long before the bellicose talk subsided and the West
was obliged to channel its aid via ASEAN.
The fact that the West could not
understand the geopolitical realities of Asia, now the largest economic region
in the world — and adapt its policies accordingly, revealed that old
assumptions and attitudes run very deep indeed. Burma has demonstrated
was the limits of Western power, the need for the West to understand those
limits. The second example is Zimbabwe. This episode has revealed British — and
Western — impotence in its starkest form. After much grandstanding at the G8
summit, the Anglo-American attempt to toughen sanctions foundered in the UN
Security Council, where it was vetoed by Russia and China and opposed by South
Africa and two others. Meanwhile, President Thabo Mbeki, whose efforts to
broker some kind of deal have been widely and patronizingly scorned, has scored
a major diplomatic triumph. The Southern Africa Development Community's
appointed mediator for Zimbabwe, Mbeki managed to bring both Robert Mugabe's
Zanu-PF and Morgan Tsvangirai's MDC to the negotiating table. All the Western
bluster and invective now look just that: the route to a possible solution has
been the work of South Africa, the SADC and the African Union alone. This is
yet a further illustration of a shift in global authority. The two big bullies
China and Russia which has just occupied Georgia seem to indicate that NATO (No
Action Talk Only) is just a lame duck.
Western power can no longer deliver in the
face of the growing power, competence and self-confidence of developing
countries. Instead of universal Western power, we are witnessing the rise of
regionalization and regional solutions. This reflects broader changes in the
global economy. BRIC economies (Brazil, Russia, India and China) and a growing
number of developing economies, now account for less than half of global GDP
and that share is steadily falling. Such economic shifts are the irresistible
prelude to parallel changes in political power. The two examples discussed are
classic instances of this process: Burma involved China and India, together
with the ASEAN countries, while Zimbabwe featured South Africa, with Russia
which has taken advantage of the Beijing Olympic to invade Georgia, and
especially China, emboldened in this instance to play a more assertive role on
the global stage. They illustrate what might be described as the growing
"Bricisation" of global politics.
They also underline the comprehensive
failure of Anglo-American foreign policy. At the time of the invasion of Iraq,
no thought was given to the idea that Western economic power was on the wane.
Never underestimate the ability of political leaders to misread history on a
monumental scale. The invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan have both served to
hasten Western decline: they have both failed to achieve their objectives and
in the process demonstrated an underlying Western impotence. In contrast, those
other "rogue" states, namely North Korea, Zimbabwe, and perhaps even
Iran, show strong signs of responding in a positive manner to a very different
kind of treatment. Liberal interventionism has failed. But as yet the West
shows no sign of either understanding the new world or being able to live
according to its terms. The West has refused to recognize the diminution in its
own authority and, as a result, seemingly incapable of adapting to the new
circumstances and coming up with an innovative response especially in terms of
economics.
United Nations
Currently,
U.N. Special Envoy Ibrahim Gambari is scheduled to return to
Foreign
investment in
The
Junta has also brazenly used the cyclone to its further advantage. The United
Nations recently reported that aid groups have lost some 20% of the money they
have brought in to
What
ever the diplomatic pressure is on,
Synchronizing the Foreign and Domestic policy
In deciphering the
future policy of
The moral approach of
the West particularly
A Burmese intelligentsia will not be
fooled by clever Public Relations stance of the
Coup de Grace
Every Burmese know that the
regime is mortally wounded. It is difficult to overstate the outrage
felt by almost all Burmese Buddhists at the brutalization of the monks. Monks
are integrated into all levels of Burmese society. Monks give babies their
names; they provide astrological charts for the newborn; in the almost complete
absence of medical care in rural
I often quoted that we don't need a
drop of American blood or anybody's blood to shed for
The ethnic armies even though badly
bruised, is still capable of fighting, if properly armed and with the entire
supported of the Burmese people and the international community could easily
knocked out the Junta's forces. What more the ENC has already draw up a rough
Federal Constitution not to mention the several declarations made by the
Burmese ethnic forces that what they want is autonomy in the genuine Union of
Burma and not separatism. This action alone proves the ridiculous claim of the
Junta that they alone can keep the country together and prevent Balkanization.
Remember the crux of the Burmese problem is ethnicity; there won't be any
military coup, if the civilian government can handle the ethnic problem in
1962. And if there is no military coup there is no need for the struggle of
democracy. Democratic struggle and ethnic problems are two sides of a coin.
Yet, when President Bush met the Burmese dissidents there are only two ethnic
representatives while the rest are democracy advocates with their megaphone
diplomacy. America needs to change its advisers on Burma especially who stay
hands in glove with the Arr Loo (literally translated potatoes) leaders
and help solve the Burmese problems from its roots if the Union of Burma were
not to repeat the mistakes prior to 1962.
Candidly also that among the ethnic
leaders there are several racists who would never lift a finger for the
prevalence of democracy and human rights and narrow on its ethnic right and
federalism. The extremists from both sides, the Mahar Bama who
construe that all Burmese ethnics should follow their lead and the racist
ethnic leaders who opted for Balkanization still needs to be weeded out
once and for all. Now the start has made with the coming of the Bushes, it need
a snowball effect which we are quite positive will solve the Burmese problems
once and for all.
The ethnics believe in Daw Aung San
Suu Kyi like her daddy is the only person whom the ethnic leaders trust.
She is manifestly more intelligent and better educated than they are, a better
speaker, and beautiful: She is also the daughter of Burma's national hero, Aung
San, who created the very army that now keeps her under house arrest. Her
beauty and charm combined with her birth, her gentleness stand out against the
stupidity and sheer brutishness of the Burmese Generals. There is a general
belief that she speaks for the whole country and that no one else does so or
even could do so. She has offered compromises to the regime. The army can keep
some sort of political role if it goes back to the barracks. The top generals
can even leave the country taking their loot with them. There is absolutely
nothing that an intelligent, patriotically minded military has to fear from
her. But the regime construes her as a nymph that comes to haunt them.
On
the other hand the Burmese army better known as Tatamadaw has become a Mudane
Thatmadaw (translated rapist not satisfied with killing). The whole
strategy of the Burmese army is to divide and rule and turn one group against
another. There is no claim to legitimacy, no program, no ideology, nothing
except the immeasurable fear that it will lose its power and material gains.
Add to that that many Burmese see it as handing over the country to its Chinese
protectors (and
Than
Shwe is an object of ridicule and contempt. He inherits the paranoia and
weirdness of the Ne Win regime but not its measure of credibility. The regime
has cocooned itself away from public opinion, and appears to have given up
politics completely in favor of simple military rule. The regime's lack of
response to the typhoon, its actual obstruction of both foreign and domestic
aid, its determination to go ahead with a bogus referendum designed to
legitimize its power in the midst of the emergency have produced exactly the
mix of ingredients which can cause a regime to fall. The regime's 450,000
soldiers have families of their own, many of whom will have suffered, and are
themselves (apart from the officers) not well paid. It is a proven fact that
the commanding officer in
Ed. A Burmese Academic Activist
from the Simon Fraser University, School of International Studies,
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Harbour Campus is one of the founders of
the only Burmese University in Diaspora, AEIOU, in Chiang Mai contributed this
policy paper.

