From the Los Angeles Times
Don't blame China for Myanmar
Neither China nor any other nation has much
sway over the ruling junta.
By Kerry Howley
October 6, 2007
These are supposed to be humbling times for foreign policy analysts --
chaos in Iraq having made it harder to cast the United States as
omnipotent, omniscient and self-actualizing. But judging by the
reactions to the recent protests in Myanmar, also known as Burma, the
commentariat hasn't stopped ascribing otherworldly powers to ambitious
governments. It's just that they're choosing different governments.
The
"shame and misery of the Burmese junta," claimed Christopher Hitchens
in Slate, will endure just "as long as the embrace of China persists."
Hitchens isn't the only pundit casting China as puppeteer to the junta.
"China must use its 'special relationship' with the junta," explained
Nobel Peace Prize winner Jody Williams in the Wall Street Journal, "to
arrange the release of Ms. [Aung San] Suu Kyi and hundreds -- if not
thousands -- of other political prisoners." Sen. John Kerry (D-Mass.)
has expressed similar sentiments, and various human rights groups are
calling for the United States and Europe to boycott the Summer Olympics
in Beijing.
But how much sway do Chinese leaders actually hold over Myanmar's
famously intransigent, xenophobic military?
"They actually have very limited leverage, as all foreigners do," said
William Overholt, who advised the pro-democracy coalition of 21 tribal
groups that created the Provisional Revolutionary Government in Burma
in 1989 and is now director of Rand's Center for Asia Pacific Policy.
"The whole theory of this government is to cut itself off from the
world so no one can influence it."
That certainly comes
through in the propaganda, which I saw much of during the year and a
half I spent living and working in Yangon. Under Burmese law, all
printed material must contain a government statement of Burmese
nationalist principles under the heading "people's desire." Principle
No. 1? "Oppose those relying on external elements, acting as stooges,
holding negative views." That message applies to China too: Stooges
come in many stripes.
John H. Badgley, a retired Cornell
University professor who has studied Myanmar for 50 years, says its
rulers are best understood as a nationalist party not easily influenced
or bought off. "The notion that some external group can come bludgeon
them into behavior modification is just false," he said.
The
truth is that no one really understands what makes Myanmar tick. It is
an information vacuum, characterized by a surreptitious, paranoid
political culture suspicious of all things foreign. The world is
watching footage of Myanmar's protests in a way that would have been
impossible in 1988, but it's not as if C-SPAN can set up shop in the
Ministry of Home Affairs. The generals' decision-making process remains
a mystery, and pundits fill the void with their a priori commitments.
Exiles push sanctions; isolationists advocate restraint; China hawks
blame China.
But China is not the cause of Myanmar's
backwardness. It may not even be much of an accomplice. In the late
1960s, China began openly supporting the Communist Party of Burma,
contributing to a long and bloody civil war. "Burmese generals remember
the bitter civil war, with China on the other side, and China doesn't
really trust those erratic guys," said Bertil Lintner, a former
correspondent for the Far Eastern Economic Review and a Myanmar expert
who has been blacklisted by the government. "They are new allies."
Despite,
or maybe because of, this fragile alliance, China has stood by Myanmar
recently, vetoing a U.N. Security Council resolution in January (as did
Russia). But although it makes sense to pressure Beijing in areas in
which it clearly has control, such as its own veto power, most of the
anti-China arguments are not political but economic. Here China hawks
have lost a clear sense of how much influence Beijing really has.
China
is not Myanmar's biggest trading partner; Thailand is. "You keep seeing
these references to Chinese oil and gas assets in Burma," Overholt
said. "The reality is that they're trivial. China's attitude toward
Burmese gas is that the Thais have already signed up for most of it and
the Indians want the rest." China is building an oil and gas pipeline
-- but the gas it will carry will flow to the Middle East. This is weak
stuff to hang a boycott on; Overholt calls the idea "nutty."
So
why all the focus on Beijing? The West has been repeatedly frustrated
in its attempts to influence a small group of secretive generals; a
decade of sanctions has not brought Myanmar closer to democracy. It may
be that leaning on China -- a country we expect to respond rationally
to incentives -- channels the need to "do something" in the same way
embassy protests, candlelight vigils and online petitions do. It may
also be that China is a locus of negativity already, ripe for
scapegoating. Western companies with valuable oil holdings in Myanmar
have attracted less attention than has China.
The point isn't
that wealthy nations have no role to play in coaxing Myanmar forward,
or that applying pressure is futile. But casting the world in terms of
all-powerful actors and weak client states is no more likely to lead to
smart policymaking than casting it in terms of good and evil. A smart
assessment of Myanmar starts with acknowledging how little we know, and
how powerless we -- and even China -- may well be.
Kerry Howley is a senior editor at Reason magazine who spent 18 months
working at the Myanmar Times.
Copyright 2007 Los Angeles Times