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COMMENTARY
Releasing the Tiger’s Tail
By YENI Wednesday, August 26, 2009


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The International Crisis Group (ICG), a Brussels-based think tank, has recently released a new report on next year’s elections in Burma. The report concludes that although the elections are not likely to be free or fair, they could set the stage for the current leadership of the ruling junta to step down, potentially creating the conditions for genuine change. Therefore, the report says, “all stakeholders should be alert to opportunities that may arise to push the new government toward reform and reconciliation.”

The Burmese generals have vowed to hold the election in 2010, and are now doing everything in their almost absolute power to ensure that it goes according to plan. It has just extended the house arrest of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi for a further 18 months, and continues to hold around 2,100 other political activists behind bars. It is also trying to tame restive ethnic armies, forcing thousands of civilians to flee to neighboring countries. None of this bodes well for the junta’s hopes of using the election as a means of winning international legitimacy.

Another problem for the generals is the deeply flawed constitution, which was loosely modeled on the Indonesian dwifungsi, or dual function, system that gives the military a key role in the political arena. Approved in a sham referendum last year, the constitution is widely seen as a means of continuing military rule in another guise. Although Snr-Gen Than Shwe, the regime’s reclusive leader, claimed in an Armed Forces Day speech last year that he had a “sincere aim of developing the country without any craving for power,” no one doubts that he will continue to wield considerable influence after the election.

But both the constitution and his advancing age mean that Than Shwe cannot remain in his current position forever. This is why the ICG reports suggests that both he and his second in command, Vice Snr-Gen Maung Aye, may soon step down or move to ceremonial roles, making way for a younger generation of military leaders. However, even such a move is fraught with risks. Although Than Shwe fears that a full transition to democracy could lead to war-crimes trials or even lynch mobs, he also knows that even a modest devolution of his powers could make him vulnerable.

The retribution Than Shwe fears most is from within the military. He is haunted by the memory of his predecessor, Ne Win, who ruled Burma for nearly three decades. Ne Win ran the country into the ground through a combination of brutal suppression, a crude socialist ideology and superstition, but continued to enjoy senior statesman status for more than a decade after stepping down from power. But this ended in 2002, when he was arrested and placed under house arrest after his son-in-law and three grandsons were found guilty of plotting to overthrow the regime with the aid of renegade officers and black magic.

“He knows very well about the tradition of the armed forces,” said a Burmese political analyst. “If he is not in uniform, he can’t control the armed forces anymore.”

This is why ICG rightly concludes that even assuming that the intention of the regime is to consolidate military rule rather than begin a transition away from it, such processes often lead in unexpected directions. Than Shwe might know that his policies are misguided and ineffective, but as Ne Win’s fate proved, “It was like having caught hold of a tiger’s tail… there was nothing else to do but hang on to it.”



COMMENTS (9)
 
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Saw Dennis Wrote:
05/09/2009
I have no doubt that the ICG is a hired gun for the multi-national corporations. Its job is to produce seemingly scholarly papers and reports, based on a mixture of facts and fiction, to justify the multi-nationals' exploitative operations in countries under oppressive regimes, like Burma. As a result, its reports on Burma almost always promote pessimistic and defeatist views and ideas. The clever ones of the Burmese opposition forces must see the defeatist views and ideas spread by the ICG as dangerous. The way to counter the ICG is to fight wrong ideas with correct ideas, to fight falsehood with truth.

Moe Aung Wrote:
04/09/2009
plan B,

'Is "Accepting the status quo", less morally or intellectually bankrupt, or not at all?'

Evidently it has never occurred to you that accepting the status quo of military domination in Burma in one form or another is beyond morally and intellectually bankrupt. Spinelessness knows no remedy.

'If they were to fall going from crisis to crisis what has that prediction has to do with the plight of the people'

For the people, the only way is up. QED.

plan B Wrote:
03/09/2009
Ko Moe Aung

Is "Accepting the status quo", less morally or intellectually bankrupt, or not at all?
If they were to fall going from crisis to crisis what has that prediction has to do with the plight of the people brought on by all these fallacious advocacies.
Let them get fatter faster may be that will hasten their falls.

Moe Aung Wrote:
02/09/2009
plan B,

This recurring theme of 'any change at this point is a step forward' is so morally and intellectually bankrupt, it defies credulity to hear it again, even from you. And change it will, the way your generals want, by the look of things. Only they will go on from one crisis to the next until their eventual and most likely a very ugly downfall.

They've made their bed and they'll sleep in it. Just as Maha Wizaya Pagoda or Ne Win's folly, built for his atonement and karma, will not make him RIP, the same destiny of Avici Hell as well as the dustbin of history awaits them.

plan B Wrote:
31/08/2009
Ko Moe Aung
Their fate at best will be Pinochet like at worst Pol Pot like.
No matter how you cut it is still not fair.

However any change at this point is a step forward even instigated by this idiot Yettaw.

We all know Ne WIn "did not" die a good death.
His temple next to Shwe Dagon will forever be a reminder of his legacy or lack of it.
May his next millions cycles of life be of ones that bear the indescribable sorrows of all victims of Nargis have to endure.

Moe Aung Wrote:
29/08/2009
Ne Win himself was supposed to have said at one point that seizing the reins of power was like grabbing hold of the tiger's tail, and he lived (perhaps too long for most of us) to prove it too.

A reforming government is said to be at the greatest risk of losing control. In this instance it's certainly control of the army which is crucial, as Khin Nyunt, erstwhile chief of intelligence but without fighting men under his command, has learnt to his own cost.

aid worker on the border Wrote:
27/08/2009
My problem isn't so much with what ICG has published in this report, but more with their silence during the past few months. Aung San Suu Kyi's show trial and the junta's renewed attacks on civilians in Karen and Shan states were clearly significant in terms of the protracted conflict in Burma. Yet the ICG chose to ignore these events, with not a single reference in their weekly updates, nor their monthly crisis watch reports, nor even a media release. For the world's foremost think-tank on conflict mitigation, the ICG continues to fail miserably in letting ideology get in the way of facts in relation to Burma. With its recent change of leadership, let's hope the ICG scribes in faraway lands are called to account, with evidence-based analysis in the future.

pLan B Wrote:
27/08/2009
A truly laudable commentary with good insight. Assuring Than Shwe that letting go of the Tiger this time might not result in his predecessor fate is a must. Otherwise the vicious cycle of present will continue.

The attempt by the government-in-exile of giving an exit strategy to the SPDC should not be overshadowed by the justifiable hatred.

Anonymous Wrote:
27/08/2009
Hmm -- I still cannot understand why the UN and others seemingly go along with the junta's charade.

Post 2010 "election" SPDC leaders will just change "pants to longyis" and call themselves U Than Shwe etc. We've seen this magic trick before.

The military always has a "permanent purge" a term first used by Zbigniew Brzezinski.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zbigniew_Brzezinski

That's how they purged M.I. Khin Nyunt (then no longer in Military Intelligence) in 2004. They always have to watch each other.

Khin Nyunt may or may not have been "moderate."

They purged him because he allegedly had deals with the Wa and drug cartels in N. Burma.






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bullet Five Days in Burma

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bullet With Suu Kyi On Board, Is Burma Finally Moving Toward Real Change?

bullet The ‘Rule of Law’ in Burma

bullet New Doors are Opening in Burma

bullet A Good Beginning to the New Year






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