Mark Farmaner
The only safe prediction about
For decades, analysts and diplomats have been wrong-footed by events in
Both sides of the debate can point to evidence to support their case. On the one hand, elections were held in
However, at the same time there has been a dramatic increase in conflict, with the newly elected government breaking three ceasefires with armed ethnic political parties. The Burmese army has deliberately targeted civilians, mortar bombing villages and gang-raping ethnic women and girls. Around 140,000 people were displaced by conflict in the past year, twice the usual annual number. At the same time, most political prisoners remain in jail, and continue to face torture and inhumane conditions. The irony is that at a time when there is unprecedented optimism that change is finally coming to
One question that is rarely being asked in the debate is why. Why are the reforms taking place, and why has conflict increased? What is the end game? Dictators in
It's the Constitution, Stupid
The most obvious place to try to understand the motivations and actions of the 'new' government of
With this triple locking of power and influence, the military and ex-military figures who still run the country have felt confident enough to make some significant changes. There has been, on the face of it at least, the 'civilianisation' of government. There is a new parliament where political debate is allowed, although the military has a veto on constitutional change thanks to its guaranteed 25 percent of seats in parliament. The parliament is starting to pass new laws, making some economic reforms, and also passing a bill that could allow trade unions to form.
One argument is that a fire sale of state assets sold off cheap to business cronies and relatives of the military just before the election secures the financial future of the military elite, and the veto options in parliament and the constitution secures their political future. Therefore, they are now ready to step aside, but also able to step back in should things go wrong.
Moderates or Myth?
The debate over hardliners versus moderates began in earnest over the former prime minister,
Those now arguing that
In his inaugural presidential speech to parliament in
An Internationalist Regime
What has long been misunderstood is that the military dictatorship that replaced the old dictator Ne Win in 1988 did not follow his isolationist approach. Still very much in charge, today's military leaders crave legitimacy, and look back to pre-colonial times when
The moderates within the government are those who look around the world and see that half of all governments take the form of dictatorship or authoritarian regimes. The vast majority of these have no sanctions imposed against them, and enjoy normal trade and diplomatic relations.
In the
The increasing human rights abuses, limited political prisoner releases and limited nature of reforms do not appear to be the actions of a genuine reformer. Rather,
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Available at Amazon.com:
Aftermath: Following the Bloodshed of America's Wars in the Muslim World
Displacement and Dispossession in the Modern Middle East (The Contemporary Middle East)
The End of History and the Last Man
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order
The Tragedy of Great Power Politics
Copyright 2011, The World Today, Published by Chatham House in London
