A Trusted Friend or Just a Strategic Piece of Land

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    A Trusted Friend Or Just A Strategic Piece of Land

    By Saneitha Nagani

    I have read somewhere that Senator Mitch McConnell has a long-time passion of bringing

    democracy to Burma. He has also been someone steering through the Senate a number (no fewerthan four) consecutive bills imposing economic sanctions on the military regime in Burma. Half a

    world away, Mitch McConnell, a junior Republican Senator just being re-elected to a second term

    said to have read about Daw Suu and he was drawn to her and her struggle for democratic change in

    Burma.

    Senator McConnell was so committed that he finds a way to influence events in Burma that for more

    than a decade he used the US Congress and international fora to shed a spotlight on the human

    rights violations committed by the then military regime. He even made his appearance with the

    former Genesis singer Peter Gabriel at the release of a secretly made film about people in eastern

    Burma who had to hide form the troops of the military government. Even though it was a fairlylonely crusade at first in the early 1990s, he later managed to draw attention on abuses in Burma to

    the point that he can get almost unanimous congressional support for economic sanctions on

    Burma. Legislation like Burma Freedom and Democratic Act of 2003 would not have been possible

    without Senators like Mitch McConnell.

    Now that sanctions are going to be lifted one like to know how such a figure like Senator McConnell

    might feel about it. Has he felt that Daw Suu and her colleagues in the National League for

    Democracy (NLD) has done enough of the lifting? As it was mentioned by him in one of the stories he

    told in his keynote address at the Free Burma Conference held at the Paul Nitze School for Advanced

    International Studies in early May 1996, to him the US role in Burma is a little like the farmers

    friend we may get the credit, but others do the heavy lifting. At the end of the day, it will be the

    Burmese people, led by Aung San Suu Kyi and the National League for Democracy (NLD) who will

    have laboured long under intolerable conditions bearing up to every hardship, breaking down walls

    of adversity to bring democracy, justice, peace and prosperity to Burma. At the same time they

    should notstruggle without the support of the United States. It is my view that Burmas liberty

    must be served by Americas leadership.

    People like us would wonder why all of a sudden this change of heart by the military regime in

    Burma and why such changes taking place now. With those changes some policy makers in the West

    have argued that after two decades of sanctions on the US and European investments, the regime inBurma should be readmitted into the international community as a normal state and gain access to

    Western investment and aid to shore up the countrys battered economy. However, in fact it is not

    as simple as it might suggest. Western sanctions did not deter foreign investment in Burma; they just

    prevent the businesses in the West to invest. Meanwhile countries with little or no moral conscience

    or compassion like China, South Korea, Thai and companies from India invested heavily. According to

    some reports investment in Burmas oil and gas sector alone provide the military regime with $20

    billion in 2010 and 2011 alone. These investments enriched the most senior generals but the people

    in Burma are yet to enjoy the benefits of those investments. If and when sanctions are to be lifted

    the $20 billion might be the price the people in Burma has to pay for their democratic reforms.

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    Daw Suu herself hails the effects of sanctions. She said that economic sanctions have pushed the

    government on the path to reform. She thanked Canada and other countries for maintaining

    sanctions on Burma saying that they aided in transitions to democracy. However, she urged the

    supporters to remain vigilant as the country negotiates a dramatic transition following the end of

    nearly half a century of peaceful democratic protest following years of house arrest. Daw Suu also

    cautioned for sceptics like us not to be too optimistic nor be too pessimistic but rather try and see

    things as they are and try to keep contact with the ordinary people.

    Daw Suu seems to have put her trust on President Thein Sein. In her victory speech at her party

    headquarters in Rangoon after her party claimed victory in the by-elections she was reported to

    have said that, We hope this will be the beginning of a new era. We hope that all parties that took

    part in the elections will be in a position to cooperate with us in order to create a genuinely

    democratic atmosphere in our nation. One distinguished Professor of Asian Studies writing in Asia

    Times Online mentioned that, Now, however, if Myanmar is to evolve into a state that begins to

    approach its political, social and economic potential, the delicate process begins the building of

    multiple levels and layers of trust between and among the various forces in the complex maze of

    societies that comprise Myanmar.

    We must not forget though that according to Robert D. Kaplan in his book Monsoon: The Indian

    Ocean and the Future of American Power, he identifies Burma and the waters of the Indian Ocean

    and the surrounding states as a key arena for the decisive geopolitical game of the early 21st

    century.

    According to Joseph Ball reviewing Kaplans book also mentioned that, Unfortunately, while the

    broader argument of Burmas place in regional politics and power is well articulated and intriguing,

    whether the reader agrees with the hypothesis or not, Burma is the only geographic area that Kaplan

    was unable to significantly explore on the ground. The authors firsthand exposure is instead limited

    to the now standard cross border forays into Burma from Thailand, an approach which dovetails well

    with Kaplans predilection to seek the voices of predominantly American, Christian ex-military

    personnel based in the vicinity of the Burma border and often espousing violent prescriptions for a

    resolution to Burmas political crisis.

    In his interview with Evan Walczak when asked his opinion on China planning to use Myanmars port

    in the Bay of Bengal to import Middle Eastern oil and gas to the Yunnan province, what can India do

    and how will China be able to maintain its leverage with both Myanmar and Bangladesh both of

    which mobilised their armed forces to confront one another over maritime boundary issues

    without losing the goodwill of both? His answer was that, China is the hub in a wheel of countries

    with which it maintains strong economic relations. Myanmar and Bangladesh may be at odds, but

    they both need China. All roads lead to Beijing. India has no choice but to engage Myanmar, a state

    on Indias eastern frontier where the Chinese will be the overwhelming force if the Burmese

    generals are not engaged by India. India requires its own pipeline strategies to compete with

    Chinas. Indias competition with China is a good in and of itself since it serves to put a brake on

    Chinese expansion, this helping to stabilise the global system.

    As for F. William Engdahl, author of the book A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the

    New World Order, the reason why the US government has such a keen interest in fostering regime

    change in Myanmar at this juncture is not because it has a genuine concern for democracy, justice,

    human rights for the oppressed population in Myanmar but rather because of the need for

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    geographical control. Ultimately the control of the strategic sea lanes from the Persian Gulf to the

    South China Sea becomes the goal of the US Administration. The coastline of Myanmar provides

    naval access in the proximity of one of the worlds most strategic water passages, the Straits of

    Malacca, the narrow ship passage between Malaysia and Indonesia.

    It will be interesting to see how the quasi-civilian government of President U Thein Sein and thedeliberately stacked Parliament would respond - when it was written into the Constitution not to

    permit the deployment of foreign troops on its territory when either China or the United States

    request to lease islands along the Tanintharyi coastline. It may be speculation at this stage but in

    politics and geopolitics the many questions of why may not have a satisfactory answer. END