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From:
Fye samateh <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
The Gambia and Related Issues Mailing List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Thu, 24 Nov 2011 15:46:13 +0100
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Obama’s move on Burma By John Roberts and Peter Symonds
24 November 2011

The announcement last week that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton would
travel to Burma (Myanmar) in early December indicates a further shift by
the Burmese junta away from its longstanding ally China toward closer
relations with the US. The two-day visit is part of a broad diplomatic
offensive being waged by Obama administration throughout Asia to undermine
China’s growing influence.

 Clinton’s trip follows visits in recent months by Assistant Secretary of
State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Kurt Campbell, Obama’s special
envoy for Burma Derek Mitchell, and Assistant Secretary of State for
Democracy, Human Rights and Labour Michael Posner. In September, the US
waived a travel ban on Burmese officials to allow Foreign Minister Wunna
Maung Lwin to visit Washington for talks.

 Announcing Clinton’s visit at the East Asia Summit in Bali, President
Barack Obama declared that she would “explore whether the United States can
empower a positive transition in Burma and begin a new chapter between our
countries.” Clinton will meet President Thein Sein, opposition leader Aung
San Suu Kyi and senior officials.

 Obama is dressing up the still tentative rapprochement with the Burmese
junta in the language of democratic reform. “After years of darkness, we’ve
seen flickers of progress,” he declared. Obama is no more concerned about
democratic rights in Burma than in Libya, Afghanistan or Iraq where the US
has imposed client regimes through military force.

 Whether Washington brands a regime as autocratic or “travelling down the
road to democratic reform” is determined solely by its willingness to
further American strategic and economic interests. On this score, the
Burmese generals have shown “flickers of progress”—most significantly by
suspending a huge Chinese-financed dam project in late September.

 While Clinton has been at pains to deny her visit was aimed at curbing the
influence of China, the *Financial Times* noted, “A senior administration
official said that one of the encouraging recent signs from the government
had been its decision to stop the construction in the north of the
country.” Burma has been heavily dependent economically on China as a
result of hefty sanctions imposed by the US and its European allies.

 The junta’s “democratic reforms” are nothing but scanty window dressing,
aimed primarily at reaching a political accommodation with opposition
leader Suu Kyi and her National League for Democracy (NLD). The regime held
tightly-controlled elections last November under a new constitution that
leaves the military with extensive powers. In March, it formally handed
power to the new president Thein Sein, a former general.

 Suu Kyi, who was released from house arrest last year, met with Thein Sein
in August and gave a widely reported interview to Agence France Press in
September that lent legitimacy to the new government. She warned against
any “Arab-style” uprising, and called for “change through peaceful means,
through negotiation.”

 Following recent constitutional and legal changes to allow NLD to
participate in elections, Suu Kyi announced last Friday that the NLD would
end its opposition to the current constitution and field candidates in
upcoming by-elections. She indicated that she would stand for one of the
seats.

 By running in the elections, Suu Kyi and the NLD give their stamp of
approval to the constitutional framework concocted by the generals, who
retain much of their power. For decades, the US and its allies have
promoted Suu Kyi as a “champion of democracy.” In reality, she and the NLD
represent sections of the Burmese bourgeoisie that resent the military’s
political and economic dominance and seek to open up the country as a cheap
labour platform for Western investors.

 The US is pushing for Suu Kyi’s inclusion in the political process as a
reliable representative of American interests. Significantly, Obama phoned
Suu Kyi before announcing Clinton’s visit. He told the media in Bali that
Suu Kyi “supports American engagement to move this process forward.”

 Suu Kyi defended the decision to take part in elections, declaring: “Some
people are worried that taking part could harm my dignity. Frankly, if you
do politics, you should not be thinking about your dignity. I stand for the
re-registration of the NLD party. I would like to work effectively towards
amending the constitution. So we have to do what we need to do.”

 Clinton’s visit will mark a sea change in US relations with Burma. The
trip will be the first by a US Secretary of State since John Foster Dulles
visited Burma in 1955, during the Eisenhower administration. US relations
with Burma deteriorated markedly after the military seized power in 1962.
Following the junta’s savage repression of mass strikes and protests in
1988, the US and European powers imposed sanctions, which were further
tightened after a second crackdown on protesters in 2007.

 After taking office in 2009, Obama made a sharp change in US policy toward
Burma, which under President George W. Bush had amounted to a series of
ultimatums and tougher sanctions. Following extensive policy review, the
Obama administration announced a significant shift to what it termed “a
carrot and stick approach”—maintaining sanctions, but offering step-by-step
improvements if the junta made concessions.

 The junta’s decision to move cautiously toward a rapprochement with
Washington has been driven by several factors. The sanctions have limited
access to Western investment and markets and impacted on the Burmese
economy, despite Chinese aid and investment, mainly in infrastructure and
resource projects. This lop-sided economic development has fuelled
inflation, unemployment and the threat of further social unrest.

 The Burmese regime has been following events in the Middle East closely.
In an interview with Reuters in Bali, Ko Ko Hliang, chief political advisor
to President Thein Sein, explained: “As you can see in the Arab states and
also in Syria, there is some turmoil. Even in Egypt. There were mobs. So
what our leaders would like to see is a stable and smooth transition to
democracy.”

 No doubt the junta also watched the NATO bombing of Libya and the ousting
of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi with a degree of trepidation. While there
have been no signs of any plans for US military intervention in Burma, the
generals are determined not to become the next target for regime-change as
Obama turns his focus to the Indo-Pacific region.

 The Obama administration and the US political establishment regard the
opening in Burma as something of a diplomatic coup against China. While
urging caution, an editorial in the *Wall Street Journal* on Sunday,
declared: “Now President Obama has an opportunity to press for greater
liberalisation in Burma, bring it more into a pro-American orbit, and add
its weight as a counterbalance to an encroaching China.”

 China has invested considerable money and effort in Burma, not only as a
source of raw materials but as part of Beijing’s strategic calculations.
Chinese military strategists have been especially concerned that key
shipping routes for imports of energy and raw materials from the Middle
East and Africa pass through the Malacca Strait, which is effectively under
US naval hegemony. Construction began in 2009 on oil and gas pipelines from
the Burmese deep-water port of Sittwe to southern China that would provide
an alternative energy supply route. If Burma shifted decisively into the US
camp, these plans would be jeopardised.

 For the Obama administration, its diplomatic machinations with Burma are
only one aspect of a sweeping scheme to challenge China throughout the
region. While the refocussing of American foreign policy has been underway
since 2009, Obama used his trip through Asia last week to make the new
agenda explicit.

 Every leg of Obama’s trip was aimed at strengthening the US position in
Asia at China’s expense. At the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in
Honolulu, Obama unveiled a new trade deal designed to dictate US terms,
especially to China. In Canberra, he announced the stationing of US Marines
in northern Australia and the greater use of Australia naval and air bases.
In Bali, despite China’s opposition, the US forced a discussion on the
South China Sea—a strategically sensitive area close to China that is
subject to competing territorial claims.

 For China, the announcement of Clinton’s visit to Burma will have
confirmed that a decade of careful diplomatic effort backed by significant
economic investment is now in danger of being undone by Washington.
Whatever the immediate response by Beijing, Obama’s aggressive thrust into
Asia marks a serious escalation of tensions between the world’s two largest
economies that can only lead to further confrontation.

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