The
Geopolitical Stakes of the Saffron Revolution
By F. William Engdahl, 15 October, 2007
There are facts and then there are facts. Take the
case of the recent mass protests in Burma or Myanmar depending on which name
you prefer to call the former British colony.
First it’s a fact which few will argue that the
present military dictatorship of the reclusive General Than Shwe is right up
there when it comes to world-class tyrannies. It’s also a fact that Burma
enjoys one of the world’s lowest general living standards. Partly as a result
of the ill-conceived 100% to 500% price hikes in gasoline and other fuels in
August, inflation, the nominal trigger for the mass protests led by
Saffron-robed Buddhist monks, is unofficially estimated to have risen by 35%. Ironically
the demand to establish “market” energy prices came from the IMF and World
Bank.
The UN estimates the population of some 50 million
inhabitants spends up to 70% of their monthly income on food alone. The recent
fuel price hike makes matters unbearable for tens of millions.
Myanmar is also deeply involved in the world
narcotics trade, ranking only behind Hamid Karzai’s Afghanistan as a source for
heroin. As well, it is said to be Southeast Asia’s largest producer of
methamphetamines.
This is all understandable powder to unleash a
social explosion of protest against the regime.
It is also a fact that the Myanmar military junta
is on the Hit List of Condi Rice and the Bush Administration for its repressive
ways. Has the Bush leopard suddenly changed his spots? Or is there a more
opaque agenda behind Washington’s calls to impose severe economic and political
sanctions on the regime? Here some not-so-publicized facts help.
Behind the recent CNN news pictures of streams of
saffron-robed Buddhist Monks marching in the streets of the former capital city Rangoon (Yangon) in
Myanmar—the US government still prefers to call it by the British colonial
name, Burma—calling for more democracy, is a battle of major geopolitical
consequence.
The tragedy of Burma, whose land area is about the
size of George W. Bush’s Texas, is that its population is being used as a human
stage prop in a drama which has been scripted in Washington by the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED), the George Soros Open Society Institute, Freedom
House and Gene Sharp’s Albert Einstein Institution, a US intelligence asset
used to spark “non-violent” regime change around the world on behalf of the US
strategic agenda.
Burma’s “Saffron Revolution,” like the Ukraine
“Orange Revolution” or the Georgia “Rose Revolution” and the various Color
Revolutions instigated in recent years against strategic states surrounding
Russia, is a well-orchestrated exercise in Washington-run regime change, down
to the details of “hit-and-run” protests with “swarming” mobs of Buddhists in
saffron, internet blogs, mobile SMS links between protest groups,
well-organized protest cells which disperse and reform. CNN made the blunder
during a September broadcast of mentioning the active presence of the NED
behind the protests in Myanmar.
In fact the US State Department admits to
supporting the activities of the NED in Myanmar. The NED is a US
Government-funded “private” entity whose activities are designed to support US
foreign policy objectives, doing today what the CIA did during the Cold War. As
well the NED funds Soros’ Open Society Institute in fostering regime change in
Myanmar. In an October 30 2003 Press Release the State Department admitted,
“The United States also supports organizations such as the National Endowment
for Democracy, the Open Society Institute and Internews, working inside and
outside the region on a broad range of democracy promotion activities.” It all
sounds very self-effacing and noble of the State Department. Is it though?
In reality the US State Department has recruited
and trained key opposition leaders from numerous anti-government organizations.
It has poured the relatively huge sum (for Myanmar) of more than $2.5 million
annually into NED activities in promoting regime change in Myanmar since at
least 2003. The US regime change, its Saffron Revolution, is being largely run
according to informed reports, out of the US Consulate General in bordering
Chaing Mai, Thailand. There activists are recruited and trained, in some cases
directly in the USA, before being sent back to organize inside Myanmar. The
USA’s NED admits to funding key opposition media including the New Era Journal, Irrawaddy and the Democratic
Voice of Burma radio.
The concert-master of the tactics of Saffron
monk-led non-violence regime change is Gene Sharp, founder of the
deceptively-named Albert Einstein Institution in Cambridge Massachusetts, a
group funded by an arm of the NED to foster US-friendly regime change in key
spots around the world. Sharp’s institute has been active in Burma since 1989,
just after the regime massacred some 3000 protestors to silence the opposition.
CIA special operative and former US Military Attache in Rangoon, Col. Robert
Helvey, an expert in clandestine operations, introduced Sharp to Burma in 1989
to train the opposition there in non-violent strategy. Interestingly, Sharp was
also in China two weeks before the dramatic events at Tiananmen Square.
Why Myanmar now?
A relevant question is why the US Government has such
a keen interest in fostering regime change in Myanmar at this juncture. We can
dismiss rather quickly the idea that it has genuine concern for democracy,
justice, human rights for the oppressed population there. Iraq and Afghanistan
are sufficient testimony to the fact Washington’s paean to Democacy is
propaganda cover for another agenda.
The question is what would lead to such engagement
in such a remote place as Myanmar?
Geopolitical control seems to be the answer.
Control ultimately of the strategic sea lanes from the Persian Gulf to the
South China Sea. The coastline of Myanmar provides naval access in the
proximity of one of the world’s most strategic water passages, the Strait of
Malacca, the narrow ship passage between Malaysia and Indonesia.
The Pentagon has been trying to militarize the
region since September 11, 2001 on the argument of defending against possible
terrorist attack. The US has managed to gain an airbase on Banda Aceh, the
Sultan Iskandar Muda Air Force Base, on the northernmost tip of Indonesia. The
governments of the region, including Myanmar, however, have adamantly refused
US efforts to militarize the region. A glance at a map will confirm the
strategic importance of Myanmar.
The Strait of Malacca, linking the Indian and Pacific
Oceans, is the shortest sea route between the Persian Gulf and China. It is the
key chokepoint in Asia. More than 80% of all China’s oil imports are shipped by
tankers passing the Malacca Strait. The narrowest point is the Phillips Channel
in the Singapore Strait, only 1.5 miles wide at its narrowest. Daily more than
12 million barrels in oil supertankers pass through this narrow passage, most
en route to the world’s fastest-growing energy market, China or to Japan.
If the strait were closed, nearly half of the
world's tanker fleet would be required to sail further. Closure would
immediately raise freight rates worldwide. More than 50,000 vessels per year
transit the Strait of Malacca. The region from Maynmar to Banda Aceh in
Indonesia is fast becoming one of the world’s most strategic chokepoints. Who
controls those waters controls China’s energy supplies.
That strategic importance of Myanmar has not been
lost on Beijing.
Since it became clear to China that the US was
hell-bent on a unilateral militarization of the Middle East oil fields in 2003,
Beijing has stepped up its engagement in Myanmar. Chinese energy and military
security, not human rights concerns drive their policy.
In recent years Beijing has poured billions of
dollars in military assistance into Myanmar, including fighter, ground-attack
and transport aircraft; tanks and armored personnel carriers; naval vessels and
surface-to-air missiles. China has built up Myanmar railroads and roads and won
permission to station its troops in Myanmar. China, according to Indian defense
sources, has also built a large electronic surveillance facility on Myanmar’s
Coco Islands and is building naval bases for access to the Indian Ocean.
In fact Myanmar is an integral part
of what China terms its “string of pearls,” its strategic design of
establishing military bases in Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia in order to
counter US control over the Strait of Malacca chokepoint. There is also energy
on and offshore of Myanmar, and lots of
it.
The gas fields of Myanmar
Oil and gas have been produced in
Myanmar since the British set up the Rangoon Oil Company in 1871, later renamed
Burmah Oil Co. The country has produced natural gas since the 1970’s, and in
the 1990’s it granted gas concessions to the foreign companies ElfTotal of
France and Premier Oil of the UK in the Gulf of Martaban. Later Texaco and
Unocal (now Chevron) won concessions at Yadana and Yetagun as well. Alone
Yadana has an estimated gas reserve of more than 5 trillion cubic feet with an
expected life of at least 30 years. Yetagun is estimated to have about a third
the gas of the Yadana field.
In 2004 a large new gas field, Shwe
field, off the coast of Arakan was discovered.
By 2002 both Texaco and Premier Oil
withdrew from the Yetagun project following UK government and NGO pressure.
Malaysia’s Petronas bought Premier’s 27% stake. By 2004 Myanmar was exporting
Yadana gas via pipeline to Thailand worth annually $1 billion to the Myanmar
regime.
In 2005 China, Thailand and South
Korea invested in expanding the Myanmar oil and gas sector, with export of gas
to Thailand rising 50%. Gas export today is Myanmar’s most important source of
income. Yadana was developed jointly by ElfTotal, Unocal, PTT-EP of Thailand
and Myanmar’s state MOGE, operated by the French ElfTotal. Yadana supplies some
20% of Thai natural gas needs.
Today the Yetagun field is operated
by Malaysia’s Petronas along with MOGE and Japan’s Nippon Oil and PTT-EP. The
gas is piped onshore where it links to the Yadana pipeline. Gas from the Shwe
field is to come online beginning 2009. China and India have been in strong
contention over the Shwe gas field reserves.
India loses, China wins
This past summer Myanmar signed a
Memorandum of Understanding with PetroChina to supply large volumes of natural
gas from reserves of the Shwe gasfield in the Bay of Bengal. The contract runs
for 30 years. India was the main loser. Myanmar had earlier given India a major
stake in two offshore blocks to develop gas to have been transmitted via pipeline
through Bangladesh to India’s energy-hungry economy. Political bickering
between India and Bangladesh brought the Indian plans to a standstill.
China took advantage of the
stalemate. China simply trumped India with an offer to invest billions in building
a strategic China-Myanmar oil and gas pipeline across Myanmar from Myanmar’s
deepwater port at Sittwe in the Bay of Bengal to Kunming in China’s Yunnan
Province, a stretch of more than 2,300 kilometers. China plans an oil refinery
in Kumming as well.
What the Myanmar-China pipelines will
allow is routing of oil and gas from Africa (Sudan among other sources) and the
Middle East (Iran, Saudi Arabia) independent of dependence on the vulnerable
chokepoint of the Malacca Strait. Myanmar becomes China’s “bridge” linking
Bangladesh and countries westward to the China mainland independent of any
possible future moves by Washington to control the strait.
India’s dangerous alliance
shift
It’s no wonder that China is taking
such precautions. Ever since the Bush Administration decided in 2005 to recruit
India to the Pentagon’s ‘New Framework for US-India Defense Relations,’India
has been pushed into a strategic alliance with Washington in order to counter
China in Asia.
In an October 2002 Pentagon
report, ‘The Indo-US Military
Relationship,’ the Office of Net Assessments stated the reason for the
India-USA defense alliance would be to have a ‘capable partner’ who can take on
‘more responsibility for low-end operations’ in Asia, provide new training
opportunities and ‘ultimately provide basing and access for US power
projection.’ Washington is also quietly negotiating a base on Indian territory,
a severe violation of India’s traditional non-aligned status.
Power projection against whom?
China, perhaps?
As well, the Bush Administration
has offered India to lift its 30 year nuclear sanctions and to sell advanced US
nuclear technology, legitimizing India’s open violation of the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty, at the same time Washington accuses Iran of violating
same, an exercise in political hypocrisy to say the least.
Notably, just as the Saffron-robed
monks of Myanmar took to the streets, the Pentagon opened joint US-Indian joint
naval exercises, Malabar 07, along
with armed forces from Australia, Japan and Singapore. The US showed the
awesome muscle of its 7th Fleet, deploying the aircraft carriers USS
Nimitz and USS Kitty Hawk; guided missile cruisers USS Cowpens and USS
Princeton and no less than five guided missile destroyers.
US-backed regime change in Myanmar
together with Washington’s growing military power projection via India and
other allies in the region is clearly a factor in Beijing’s policy vis-à-vis
Myanmar’s present military junta. As is often the case these days, from Darfur
to Caracas to Rangoon, the rallying call of Washington for democracy ought to
be tasted with at least a grain of good salt.