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: Burma
Bush administration moves to exploit Burma cyclone disaster
By Joe Kay
7 May 2008
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The Bush administration lost no time in seeking to exploit
the devastating tragedy in Burma (Myanmar). It has seized upon
the cyclone that struck the country over the weekend, killed at
least 20,000 and likely many more, to aggressively push its foreign
policy agenda in Asia.
On Tuesday, Bush held a special ceremony at the White House
to sign a bill giving Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi
a Congressional Gold Medal. He used the occasion to place deliberately
provocative conditions on any disbursement of aid to the ravaged
country, beyond an initial token sum.
The United States has made an initial aid contribution,
but we want to do a lot more, Bush declared. Were
prepared to move US Navy assets to help find those whove
lost their lives, to help find the missing, to help stabilize
the situation. But in order to do so, the military junta must
allow our disaster assessment teams into the country.
So far, the US embassy has authorized the release of a paltry
$250,000less than half the cost of a single Tomahawk cruse
missile of the type used by the US Navy to kill a Somali rebel
last week. Later Tuesday, the administration pledged an additional
$3 million to be allocated by a USAID disaster response team.
The very fact that the US is making aid to Burma conditional
upon the satisfaction of certain demands is itself an outrage.
Bush did not say why it was necessary for the US to carry out
its own assessment in order to release more aid, nor did he elaborate
on what was meant by promises that the US military would help
stabilize the situation. US Navy ships are standing
by off the coast of Thailand to intervene.
These pledges are certainly not intended as selfless humanitarian
gestures. The Bush administration has been seeking to undermine
the Burmese military regime for years and seized on protests last
year by Buddhist monks to slap economic sanctions on the country
and its rulers. There is no doubt that the United States would
be happy to exploit the current tragedy to get a military foothold
in the country.
The World Socialist Web Site holds no brief for the
Burmese military junta, a brutal regime that has exercised dictatorial
control over a largely impoverished country. However, US and European
machinations, including the promotion of Suu Kyi, have nothing
to do with concern for the democratic rights or economic well-being
of the population. As always, the humanitarian pretensions of
the US government are carefully calibrated to coincide with the
interests of the American ruling class.
In the case of Burma, the US is interested in countering the
influence of China, which has closer ties with the military regime
and sees the country as a critical point of access into the Indian
Ocean. As far as the Bush administration is concerned, the population
of the country is only a bargaining chip in the pursuit of geo-strategic
objectives.
US energy giants, including the Chevron oil corporation, also
have interests in Burma. While the Bush administration has placed
economic sanctions on the country, these have not affected Chevrons
multibillion-dollar investments through its subsidiary Unocal.
Human rights groups have accused Chevron of complicity in abuses
in Burma intended to protect its pipeline routes.
The statements by the Bush administration must also be seen
in the context of its treatment of populations around the world,
including in the United States itself. On Monday, US First Lady
Laura Bush was the first from the White House to respond to the
cyclone, using the opportunity to chastise the government for
failing to warn the population and adequately prepare for the
consequences.
Although they were aware of the threat, she said,
Burmas state-run media failed to issue a timely warning
to citizens in the storms path. The response to the cyclone
is just the most recent example of the juntas failure to
meet its peoples basic needs.
The hypocrisy and cynicism of this statement are so glaring
that one wonders if it is not intentionally provocative. This
August 29 will mark the third anniversary of Hurricane Katrina,
the massive storm that struck Louisiana and Mississippi, killing
at least 1,800 people. The hurricane destroyed and flooded New
Orleans, a major American city.
The US and local governments had been aware for decades of
the potential for a deadly flood in New Orleans, but there was
no evacuation plan in place, and no plan to meet the needs of
those trapped or displaced. Tens of thousands remained trapped
for days in the Louisiana Superdome. Many thousands who lost their
homes were placed in temporary FEMA trailers, and in 2007 it was
revealed that these trailers contained extremely high levels of
formaldehyde, a toxic chemical.
The devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina was largely preventable,
but due to gross governmental indifference and negligence, the
levee systems of New Orleans were denied necessary investments
and allowed to decayonly one of many examples of the American
governments failure to meet its peoples basic
needs.
See Also:
A new Asian disaster: cyclone kills tens
of thousands in Burma
[7 May 2008]
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