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: Burma
Why the propaganda campaign for international intervention
in Burma?
By Peter Symonds
10 May 2008
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The catastrophe wrought by Cyclone Nargis on the Burmese people
has provoked an extraordinary campaign by the US and allied powers,
and in the international media, demanding that the military junta
open its borders to aid and aid officials as well as to American
military aircraft, troops and warships. Once again an attempt
is being made to stampede public opinion with heartrending images
of desperate survivors and devastated towns, accompanied by an
incessant drumbeat condemning the Burmese regime for its inadequate
aid efforts, its insularity, and its failure to accept international,
especially American, aid.
One should immediately pause and recall the outcome of similar
humanitarian exercises. In 1999, the plight of Kosovan
refugees was exploited by the US and its allies to wage war against
Serbia and transform the province into a NATO protectorate largely
cleansed of its Serbian minority. In the same year,
Australia, with the backing of the US, used the violence of Indonesian-backed
militias to justify a military intervention into East Timor to
install a regime sympathetic to Canberras economic and strategic
interests. After nearly a decade the local populations in both
countries continue to live in appalling conditions, with none
of their fundamental needs having been met.
Undoubtedly a huge social tragedy has taken place over the
past week. Official Burmese figures put the number of dead and
missing at more than 60,000. UN officials estimate the death toll
at 100,000 and the number of people severely affected by the cyclone
at nearly 2 million. Much of the huge Irrawaddy delta has been
devastated by the storm surges whipped up by Cyclone Nargis, which
swamped the low-lying land. Entire towns and villages have been
washed away, leaving scenes that recall the destruction produced
by the December 2004 tsunami along the coasts of Indonesia, Sri
Lanka, India and Thailand.
It is also true that the Burmese junta is a brutal regime that
has repeatedly gunned down anti-government protesters in order
to maintain its own power and privileges. Its rescue efforts are
certainly hampered not only by the economic backwardness of the
country, but also by the regimes callous indifference to
the plight of the Burmese people. Given the current media campaign,
one should approach all press reports with considerable caution.
But there is little doubt that many cyclone victims are being
left to fend for themselvesas indeed were the survivors
of the 2004 tsunami by governments of the worst hit countries.
No one, however, should place any credibility in the protestations
of concern from the Bush administration and its allies. US Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice insisted on Wednesday that Washingtons
cyclone assistance was not a matter of politics but
rather a matter of a humanitarian crisis. What
remains is for the Burmese government to allow the international
community to help its people, Rice declared.
In reality, all American assistance comes with political strings
attached. The Bush administration has offered a paltry $3.5 million
in financial aid and is pushing for the entry of US officials,
aid workers and military personnel to handle emergency relief
operations rather than allow Burmese authorities to carry them
out. At the same time, the US and its European allies continue
to maintain sanctions against the Burmese regime that have compounded
the countrys economic difficulties. In the week prior to
the cyclone, the Bush administration strengthened its bans on
trade and investment and the freezing of assets, all of which
remain in place except for a slight easing of restrictions on
financial aid.
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner suggested on Wednesday
that the UN Security Council be convened to invoke its responsibility
to protect to override Burmese national sovereignty and
deliver international aid, with or without the juntas approval.
The responsibility to protect resolution, which has
a history dating back to the 1999 NATO war on Yugoslavia, was
passed in 2006 as an instrument for the major powers to justify
military aggression on the grounds of preventing genocide,
war, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. Kouchners
suggestion would extent the scope for such interventions to natural
disasters such as Cyclone Nargis.
Kouchners comments have yet to be publicly supported
by Washington, but the suggestion is clearly being discussed within
the administration. The US ambassador to the UN, Zalmay Khalilzad,
declared that most governments were outraged by the
slowness of the Burmese regime to accept international aid. Alluding
to the UN Security Council powers, he added: A government
has responsibility to protect its own people, to provide for its
people.... It should be a no-brainer to accept the offer made
by the international community.
Director of the US Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance, Ky
Luu, was more explicit. He indicated that unilateral air drops
by US military aircraft was one of the options being considered
if the junta continued to refuse to accept American aid. Four
US warships are already heading towards Burma and Navy helicopters
and Air Force cargo planes have been stationed in neighbouring
Thailand. US Defence Secretary Robert Gates commented that he
could not imagine a military intervention without Burmese permission.
Defence Department spokesman Bryan Whitman noted: If youre
not asked and its not requested, its considered an
invasion. Nevertheless, it is clear that the military option
and its political ramifications are being actively discussed.
The Asian tsunami
As part of the campaign to pressure the Burmese junta, a new
mythology is being created to paint the international response
to the Asian tsunami as a model of rapid, efficient and compassionate
aid delivery by all involved. Contrasts are increasingly being
made between the Burmese regime today and its democratic
counterparts in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India and Thailand in 2004.
Any objective examination of the 2004 tragedy, however, reveals
a very different picture. The huge tsunami waves engulfed impoverished
villages around the Bay of Bengal on December 26. For days, as
the death toll quickly mounted into the tens of thousands, US
President Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and other world
leaders failed to make any statement on the disaster. When they
finally broke their vacations, their collective contempt for the
fate of the victims was revealed in their perfunctory comments
and pathetic offers of aid. It was only after an outpouring of
sympathy and donations from working people around the world, aghast
at the enormity of the disaster, that the US and major powers
began to act.
In the worst affected countries, emergency relief efforts were
hamstrung by red tape and political agendas, of both the local
regimes and the donor countries. The Indonesian and Sri Lankan
governments had been waging brutal long-running wars against separatist
movements and were extremely reluctant to allow aid organisations,
let alone foreign militaries, into the disaster zones. Far from
helping the victims, the Indonesian military seized the opportunity
to intensify its operations against Acehnese rebels. In Sri Lanka,
attempts to establish a joint aid body with the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) under the auspices of the 2002 ceasefire
collapsed, amid bitter communal recriminations over any official
recognition of the separatists.
The Indian government insisted that it would control its own
relief operations and dismissed any suggestion that foreign militaries
should be involved. The Indian military was particularly sensitive
to the presence of international aid workers in the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands, which were among the worst hit areas, because
of the presence of strategic navy and air force bases there. More
than three years later, thousands of tsunami victims on the islands,
as well as in other parts of India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka, are
still living in squalid conditions in temporary accommodation.
No one in ruling circles in the US or Europe suggested at the
time that a military operation should be mounted to override Indian
sovereignty or to make unilateral air drops over the Andaman and
Nicobar Islands. In the case of Sri Lanka and Indonesia, the governments
eventually permitted the US military to assist in aid operations
on their territories. In both cases, Washingtons overriding
purpose was politicalto forge closer working relations with
the militaries of the two countries as well as to set a precedent,
which is now being invoked to exert pressure on the Burmese junta.
US Secretary of State Rice bluntly told the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee in January 2005 that the tsunami constituted
a wonderful opportunity to show not just the US government,
but the heart of the American people... And I think it has paid
great dividends for us. Rice now declares that US aid offers
to Burma are not a matter of politics, but the Bush
administration is intent on transforming this latest disaster
into a new political opportunity to advance its strategic
and economic interests in the region.
Strategic interests
The decision of the Burmese junta to selectively accept aid
from sympathetic countries such as China, India and Thailand,
and not the US, is hardly surprising. The Bush administration
has made little secret of the fact that it favours regime
change in Burmathe removal of the military regime
and its replacement by a government, headed by opposition leader
Aung San Suu Kyi, more amenable to Washingtons interests
and to opening up the country to foreign investors.
The US targetting of the junta has nothing to do with concern
for the democratic rights or the welfare of the Burmese people.
Washingtons hostility towards the Burmese regime is driven
above all by the latters close association with China, regarded
by the US as its main potential rival. Over the past eight years,
the Bush administration has pursued a strategy of strengthening
military ties and establishing bases in a string of countries
around Chinafrom South Korea and Japan to the Philippines,
Australia and Indonesia and around to India, Pakistan, Afghanistan
and the Central Asia republics.
Burma is a significant hole in US efforts to contain
China. The country sits next to the strategic Strait of Malaccathe
major sea-lane linking North East Asia, including China, with
the energy resources of the Middle East and Africa. Control of
such choke points has long been central to American
naval plans. China has assisted Burma in building various naval
facilities and counts on access to Burmese ports as part of its
efforts to protect shipping lanes that are vital for its own economy.
The international media is already making criticisms of China
for failing to exert more pressure on its ally to open up to international
aid. US Secretary of State Rice phoned her counterpart in Beijing
this week to push the Chinese government to exert more pressure
on Burma. If the Bush administration did decide to press for a
UN resolution to intervene, Beijing would quickly become a more
direct target of vilification. China has opposed any move to raise
the cyclone disaster in the UN Security Council.
There is also a broader economic agenda behind Washingtons
hostility to the Burmese junta. For decades, it has maintained
a largely shut-in, isolated economy in which military-run enterprises
still dominate the key sectors. For American corporations, the
country is a new potential source of cheap labour as well as critical
resources, including oil and gas. The US administration has quietly
allowed the Chevron oil corporation to proceed with its multi-million
dollar investments in Burma, but such operations are hindered
by bad relations between the two countries.
The Bush administration is no more motivated by humanitarian
concerns in Burma than it is in Iraq or Afghanistan. In rejecting
the latest lies and hypocrisy from the White House, it is necessary
to consider the fundamental issues involved. Why do such catastrophes
repeatedly hit the most vulnerable layers of the worlds
population? Why do disease, hunger and poverty continue to ravage
the masses of Asia, Africa and Latin America?
The resources exist to abolish suffering and want, as well
as to minimise the impact of natural disasters such as Cyclone
Nargis. Over the past three decades, the globalisation of production
has vastly expanded mankinds economic capacity, establishing
the basis for the rational planning and deployment of resources
on a world scale to ensure a decent standard of living for people
in every part of the globe. Under capitalism, however, this huge
economic and scientific capacity is exploited to provide profits
for the wealthy few, while the vast majority, including in the
major industrialised countries, struggle to survive from day to
day.
Poverty and unemployment are no aberration. The vast layers
of the worlds urban and rural poor are an essential feature
of global capitalism. They form a vast reserve army of labour
that is used as a constant downward pressure on the wages and
conditions of the working class internationally. The only means
for abolishing the immense and deepening chasm between rich and
poor is through the revolutionary restructuring of society along
socialist lines, so that the burning needs of the overwhelming
majority of humanity take precedence over the profit requirements
of the few.
See Also:
Death toll in Burma rises, as major powers
press to intervene
[8 May 2008]
A new Asian disaster: Cyclone kills tens
of thousands in Burma
[7 May 2008]
Bush administration moves to exploit
Burma cyclone disaster
[7 May 2008]
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