STRATEGY FOR BURMA
By Roland Watson
December 3,   2004
Introduction
This past January Dictator Watch issued a   press release about ethnic cleansing by the Burma Army in Karen and Karenni   areas, which had the subtitle: Democracy in Burma: ItÂs Now or Never! The   announcement made three basic points: Burma is ruled by a gang of mass   murderers; the people of the country can no longer stand this; and, we must have   democracy this year.
It is now approaching the end of the year, so we   should evaluate our progress. The purge of Khin Nyunt and his subordinates in   Military Intelligence was a very significant development, the most important   event in the country since the Depayin massacre. The prisoner release was also   significant, because of the freedom for Min Ko Naing and other political   prisoners. Were this to be followed up by the release of all remaining political   prisoners, and a sincere willingness by the regime to allow a true democratic   transition, it would be extremely positive. However, we now understand,   particularly in light of the extended house arrest of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, that   the release was merely a diversionary tactic. It provided ammunition for the   SPDCÂs supporters in Asean and elsewhere, and it also redirected the Burma   democracy movement away from the opportunity that has been presented by the end   of MI.
Prisoner release or no prisoner release, the country is still   ruled by a gang of thieves and murderers. The Free Burma Rangers reported last   week that on November 14th, the Burma Army sent four battalions into Hsaw Htee   Township, Naunglybin District, Karen State, and that the soldiers burned houses,   field huts and rice paddy in the villages in the township. In such an offensive   villagers are subject to being shot on sight, and the trails around the villages   are mined.
As of November 27th, 800 people had been forced to flee for   their lives, with only a little food and clothing. Further, on November 30th,   two other battalions attacked ten villages in Tantabin Township, Toungoo   District, Karen State, and displaced an estimated 3,000 people. There are also   reports, from individuals who were forced to porter for the Burma Army, that a   similar attack is imminent in Ler Doh (Kyauk Kyi) Township, Naunglybin District,   which is just to the north of Hsaw Htee. Lastly, two additional battalions are   now active in the Mawchi area of Southern Karenni State, attacking sites there   that are occupied by over 2,000 IDPs, and also laying new landmines. A full   scale Burma Army ethnic cleansing offensive against at least 6,000 people is now   underway in Northern Karen and Southern Karenni States.
The villagers,   literally, cannot stand this  day-by-day and week-by-week they are being   killed, but we still have some way to go to achieve democracy. This article will   describe a strategy by which we can attain our goal (and the villagers   suffering can end).
The purge of MI is a major opportunity, which we   cannot afford to ignore. There are actually many derivative opportunities now,   which are revealed in the excellent October policy brief by the Burma Fund:   Breaking the Curse: The Rise and fall of Military Strongmen and their impact   on Democracy in Burma (see www.democratic-burma.com).
The Burma   governmentÂs  any governmentÂs  domination by the military is inherently   unstable. For Burma this instability is exacerbated by many factors:
-   The purge of MI has left a power vacuum. The functions that Khin Nyunt and MI   satisfied for the SPDC are now unfulfilled. It is likely that other elements of   BurmaÂs power structure will compete for these responsibilities (e.g., to   oversee the ceasefire groups), including for the economic spoils that they   enable. This has the potential to lead to serious divisions within the SPDC,   beginning with increased factionalization in the ArmyÂs command   structure.
- Military Intelligence cannot yet be ruled out. It would be   surprising if such a significant and powerful apparatus gave up without a fight.   Therefore, some form of retaliation should be expected in the coming   months.
Both of these factors could propel assassinations or a follow-on   coup, such as by Maung Aye against Than Shwe.
The power instability is   also leading to economic instability, including through disruptions to trade and   such steps as the issuance of new currency notes. Further, it has created   democratic space. For the moment, democracy activists inside the country have   less to fear, because the surveillance to which they are subject has been   reduced.
The purge of MI has also had numerous diplomatic consequences.   Khin Nyunt was responsible for the SPDCÂs relationships with the ethnic   ceasefire groups, and he was also the point man for the support the dictatorship   receives from China and Thailand. Similarly, he was the Âsoft face of the SPDC   that encouraged international proponents of engagement and dialogue. (He was the   primary contact for United Nations Special Envoy Razali Ismail.)
In   addition, because of the purge, the prisoner release, and Daw SuuÂs extended   detention, the international mass media is finally beginning to pay attention to   Burma.
What all of the above implies is that for the Burma democracy   movement having a clear and effective strategy is now more important than ever.   There are many different opportunities: to encourage increased division within   the SPDC; to launch new resistance; to change the policy of engagement by China,   Thailand, India, Japan and Asean; to end the diplomatic inertia of the United   Nations and the European Union; and to attract increased media interest. We must   keep our eye on the prize. Possible endgames to remove the SPDC and to install   democracy include:
- Using reason and appeals to the Tatmadaw to   do what is best for the country, to convince the junta to permit a real   democratic transition.
Barring this, to:
- Create pressure on the   generals so great that they choose to go into exile (e.g., in China).
-   Accomplish the direct defeat of the SPDC through reinvigorated resistance,   including renewed and strengthened armed resistance, or via a new popular   uprising.
- Encourage internal divisions and conflict within the SPDC,   including assassinations and a follow-on coup.
Premises
An   effective strategy must be consistent with the ways in which social change  the   defeat of dictatorship  can be accomplished. The following premises must be   satisfied if our efforts are to succeed.
1. Dictatorship is a Âglobal   system. In Burma, the SPDC dominates all aspects of the country. The generals   are able to do this because their system of control is in equilibrium. They have   power sources or structures that guarantee the stability of their   rule.
The basic implication of this is that we must attack and weaken   these power structures.
2. Because dictatorship is a global system, you   cannot change it part by part. You must change it in its entirety. You must   build pressure sufficient to cause the system to break, to in one way or another   force the dictators to yield. This break is termed a phase transition, and it is   necessarily characterized by chaos.
As an example of this, the system in   Burma is changing right now, with the elimination of one part  Military   Intelligence. However, the dictatorship itself  the SPDC  remains.
In   addition, chaos is not equivalent to violence. It is conceivable that sufficient   pressure could be created through non-violent means, e.g., a widespread popular   uprising, combined with an appeal to the Burma Army not to fire on   demonstrators. (This is what happened in Serbia, where such an appeal was   successful. The Serb student group Otpur led a popular uprising; the army did   not fire on the demonstrators; coal miners subsequently joined the movement by   launching a national strike; and Dictator MilosevicÂs regime   collapsed.)
3. You also cannot change the system part way. There has to   be a complete break.
An important implication of this is that power   sharing with the SPDC will not work. If the military retains power in any way,   e.g., through a rubber-stamped constitution from the National Convention that   grants them a perpetual role in the government, the country will continue to be   a military dictatorship and the people will not be free.
4. The breaking   or Âtipping point, the beginning of the phase transition, is an unknown. You   have to keep pushing until it is reached.
One implication of this is that   if something significant occurs, we shouldnÂt get our hopes up and sit back and   wait to see what happens next. For example, in 2001, when Daw Suu engaged in   confidence-building discussions with the SPDC as a prelude to dialogue, the   international community, particularly the U.N. and the E.U., eased its pressure   because Âthey were talking. The correct response would have been to find ways   to increase the pressure on the SPDC, to force them to negotiate with   sincerity.
At the present time, the purge of Khin Nyunt and MI has also   created pressure. We must now find ways to add to this. We should not sit back   and wait. It was a mistake by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan and Special   Envoy Razali to comment without qualification that the prisoner release was a   positive development, particularly since it had not yet been completed. The   announcement, we now realize, was SPDC disinformation, Âpositive news designed   to relieve the pressure. Annan and Razali fell right into the SPDCÂs trap.   
5. The best way to create sufficient pressure (perhaps the only way for   Burma) is through the use of Âfeedback. We need a cycle of events from inside   the country and from the outside, and which reinforce each other. We need to   respond to the purge of MI by creating pressure on the outside, and also   communicate into the country to stimulate additional pressure-building   activities inside.
Unity
A final premise has to do with   unity. The more unified we are in our opposition, the more effective it will   be.
On the other hand, freedom of expression is fundamental in a   democracy, and one thing that should be cultivated is a diversity of   perspective. Regarding democratic change in Burma, two different perspectives in   recent years have come to the fore:
1. The SPDC is a gang of criminals,   and if anything the problems in Burma are a question of international law   enforcement as much as a fight for democracy. You do not negotiate with   criminals. You apprehend them and subject them to a judicial system, with trial   and incarceration.
Similarly, regarding diplomacy and business   relationships, there should be none. The regime should be completely isolated.   You do not do business with murderers.
2. Power grants legitimacy. Since   the SPDC rules, regardless of the foundation or nature of its rule it is still   the government of the country. And governments can be successfully reformed   through negotiation and dialogue. Further, because of this diplomatic and   business engagement is acceptable.
Many parties who take an interest in   Burma have held the second view, and for a variety of reasons. Some, such as the   academic David Steinberg and the analysts at the International Crisis Group,   undoubtedly believe it to be true. Others, for example, China and the nations of   Asean, have supported it because it serves their own selfish interests. These   include to profit from the repression in Burma including through the plunder of   the nationÂs natural resources, and also to reduce the glare on their own   dictatorial behavior. Still others, such as the U.N. and the E.U., also   seemingly believe this view, although their sincerity is undermined by the fact   that having this position enables them to appear supportive while requiring   nothing in the way of concrete action. And lastly, some parties who promote   engagement are likely doing so because they have made secret arrangements with   the SPDC or its financial surrogates. They are effectively spies and agent   provocateurs.
As we have commented before, the great benefit of the purge   of MI is that it stripped away the Âmoderate veneer of the SPDC to reveal the   hard, brutal reality underneath. Now there can be no confusion about whom we are   dealing with. It is clear that dialogue, on its own, without the backing of the   strongest possible pressure, will never work.
Proponents of engagement   obviously have no idea of the conditions on the ground. They do not understand   what it is like to be tortured and to see your life evaporate in prison, or to   be driven from your home, repeatedly and systematically, with the result that   millions of families have been displaced and broken. The prescriptions of   engagement are akin to putting a band-aid (plaster) on a severed artery. For the   ethnic nationalities of Burma, the TatmadawÂs invasion of their states is   no different than HitlerÂs invasion of Poland.
In other words, engagement   has completely and utterly failed. Years of effort have achieved nothing, and   during this time the suffering, death and destruction in the country have   continued.
This has been recognized. There is now great unity around the   first position. The achievement of democracy will take more than talk.   Everything the SPDC says and does should be treated as a ruse, and with outright   skepticism if not cynicism.
As mentioned above, though, the SPDC is now   implementing its own strategy to reverse our hard-won unity. It is offering   tantalizing signs that it is reasonable, and these signs will inevitably be   seized upon by the most outspoken supporters of engagement, including Asean,   Steinberg and the ICG. We must do our best to preserve our unity in the face of   these attempts to disrupt it. In particular, we need to ensure that the U.N. and   the E.U. do not continue to take the easy way out (for them, certainly not for   the people of Burma).
The Burma democracy movement and the issue of   coordination
Many, many different individuals, groups and other   parties now work on or follow the events in Burma. In general, they can be   divided into the democracy movement; the SPDC and its allies; and other   interested parties.
Such distinctions, though, are not always clear. This   article is a strategic analysis for the democracy movement, but who is actually   part of the movement? Probably the easiest way to understand this is to consider   who is not in the movement, and why.
The enemy, of course, is the SPDC.   Further, I would argue that the ethnic groups that have signed ceasefire   agreements have effectively sided with the SPDC. Their actions have destroyed   any opportunity for a nation-wide armed resistance, which is the means by which   the greatest pressure of all could be imposed, and which has also enabled the   Burma Army to redirect its forces in a concentrated fashion against the groups   that continue to fight.
There are many other parties that take an   interest in Burma, and most of these support  directly or implicitly  either   freedom or dictatorship. For the latter, the SPDC has many national backers, the   most obvious of which are China, Thailand under the current government, and the   other nations of Asean and the grouping itself. Other countries that are giving   support to the SPDC include Japan; BurmaÂs western neighbors, India and   Bangladesh; and also, through their arms manufacturers and dealers, which have   governmental links, Russia and the Ukraine.
The SPDC also benefits from   its relationships with multinational corporations, and probably the most   egregious examples of these are the natural resource companies. Resource   exploitation in Burma is a form of armed robbery. There is a criminal conspiracy   between the resource companies and the SPDC. The SPDC provides the guns, the   companies steal the resources, and together they split the loot. Such resources,   including the oil and gas stolen by Unocal and Total, the Petroleum Authority of   Thailand (PTT), South KoreaÂs Korean Gas (KOGAS) and Daewoo, and IndiaÂs Gas   Authority of India Limited (GAIL) and ONGC Videsh, and also the timber stolen by   Thai and Chinese timber companies, actually belong to the people of Burma. There   should be no resource extraction until Burma is free, and even then only in a   way in which the countryÂs biodiversity is preserved.
Those parties that   incline towards freedom and democracy include: the worldÂs media; and also   certain state and multi-state actors  the U.N., the E.U., its member states,   the U.S., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Such parties are not actually   members of the democracy movement, since, for the media, if they do not cover   Burma, and for the rest, if they do not actively and on a regular basis support   the establishment of democracy, then they are effectively complicit with the   regime.
(Note: While the U.S.  through its sanctions on new investment   and trade  has taken the strongest international steps in support of democracy,   on a daily basis it is more an observer of the situation than an active   participant; and, it continues to allow Unocal, Halliburton, Caltex and others   domestic companies to conspire with the SPDC.)
This leaves the rest of   us, the actual participants in the movement: the people of Burma; their leaders,   including the various political and resistance organizations based inside the   country; all of the groups that are active outside the country, both in the   border areas and in other nations; the various alliances of such groups and   organizations; the Burma diaspora; border-based media groups; and the various   foundations and other providers of funding who help support the democracy   effort.
A further distinction is if such organizations are primarily   humanitarian or if they have a political focus. All humanitarian groups   certainly support democracy, but the impetus for change derives for the most   part only from those groups that have a political agenda. Dictator Watch has   long argued that the humanitarian groups would be well served to devote at least   a small portion of their time to political activities (e.g., through   participating in demonstrations).
One other factor is that the movement,   in recent years, has grown dramatically. There are more than one hundred groups   that are now active, and which are spread all around the world. This is very   positive, but it also raises one of the most important strategic issues of all.   How can such a massive effort be organized to achieve its maximum effectiveness?   Indeed, is coordination even possible?
There is a war in Burma. It is a   civil war, by the Army against the people, and which the Army has largely won.   Only pockets of resistance remain, but such groups continue to fight, in   self-defense and with the longer-term goal of freedom such that their need for   defense becomes moot.
In a war, a central command structure is the most   effective. For example, in World War II the United States military did not allow   its various divisions and fleets to act on their own. There was a headquarters   command, which was responsible for developing a clear understanding of the   overall conflict and for assigning all such units.
Similarly, a central   command for the Burma democracy movement would arguably be the best form of   organization. Such a structure would improve our professionalism, management,   division of responsibilities, and accountability. Unfortunately, it is not   feasible. The logical candidate for the command would be the NLD together with   the government in exile, the NCGUB, and the leading resistance alliance, the   NCUB. But these organizations do not have sufficient operating freedom, funding   and staff to fulfill such a responsibility.
We therefore must make do   with a much looser form of organization, and on a consensus basis. I donÂt mean   to be too negative, though. We have numerous channels of communication,   including email and through travel, in particular to conferences and seminars,   since this provides the invaluable benefit of being able to meet one another,   form personal bonds, and plan initiatives. And through these channels we have   established good cooperation, which is the prerequisite of   coordination.
The challenge of effective coordination remains severe,   though, and probably the best way to facilitate this is to try to agree on a   strategy, not only the main points but the detail as well. This way different   individuals and groups operating for the most part on their own or in small   coalitions can use their ingenuity to satisfy the various aspects of the plan,   such that the overall strategy is implemented and without the need for a central   command and hierarchy.
Movement strategy
A strategy is a   long-term plan to achieve a goal. Further, this strategy must be implemented   step-by step, through the use of both short and long-term tactics.
The   movementÂs strategy to date, to achieve the goal of a free and democratic Burma,   has been to push for economic sanctions and other forms of diplomatic pressure   from the interested parties, to force the SPDC to engage in a sincere,   tripartite dialogue. There has been no real effort to launch a new popular   revolution  no issuance of a call to the people of Burma to rise up, nor has   there been any significant attempt to renew, strengthen and expand the armed   resistance.
This strategy has failed because the sanctions that have been   imposed have not been strong enough or uniform, and because the diplomatic   pressure has been weak.
Another implication of the fact that the tipping   point for the phase transition is an unknown is that infrequent and reactive   actions will never create sufficient pressure. We cannot just oppose the SPDC   according to a set schedule and through reactions to unanticipated events. This   is not a strategy. A real strategy is proactive: it comprises a plan for what we   intend to do, in a coordinated and orchestrated fashion, to achieve our   goal.
Also, if we try a strategy, and it fails, we should change our   approach and try something new. We should not resist change within our own   ranks, because ÂthatÂs not the way we have done it in the past. What we have   tried in the past has not worked. Burma is still enslaved.
And, we should   expect the unexpected. There will be more Ânews out of Burma. We should not be   surprised when this happens. Instead, we should be prepared.
1. The   strategy of the Burma democracy movement begins with media relations. We must   document the situation in the country and then use this documentation to raise   international awareness and to generate interest and support.
2. Media   coverage feeds into diplomatic relations. If we can get enough coverage from the   newspapers, magazines, television stations and websites of the world, this will   force diplomats to overcome their inertia and to take strong steps to force the   SPDC out and to establish democracy.
3. Media and diplomatic relations in   turn support funding. Democracy does not come free. Even popular uprisings   require leadership, and such leaders need funding to organize a   mass-mobilization. The higher the profile an issue has, the easier is to attract   financial support from governments, foundations and other sources (foremost the   public, through charitable donations).
(Note: The U.S. and the E.U.   provided millions of dollars in funding to Otpur in Serbia, and the U.S. is also   backing the Ukrainian Pora youth movement. In addition, on October 18th,   President Bush signed the North Korea Human Rights Act of 2004. Important   provisions of this act include:
Section 102 - $2 million each year from   2005-2008 to support pro-democracy programs by private NGOs.
Section 104 - $2   million each year from 2005-2008 to increase the availability of   non-government-controlled sources of information, such as radios capable of   receiving outside broadcasts.
Section 202 Â an amount of not less than $100   million per year for humanitarian assistance inside North Korea.
Section 203   - $20 million each year from 2005-2008 for assistance to refugees.
In   summary, Burma is receiving only a fraction of the funding that the United   States has made available for North Korea.)
4. With sufficient funding,   the movement can then provide humanitarian aid to the many different groups that   are suffering, including refugees, internally displaced persons, and migrant   workers.
5. And finally, and most importantly, we can organize and expand   the democracy resistance such that we create a real threat to the   regime.
(Of course, funding is required even for the first step,   documentation of abuses in Burma and their international publicity through the   media. At this point in the struggle, though, significant financing for the task   has been secured and the documentation effort is well underway.)
Media   relations
A basic approach to organizing is the issue of   centralization. Is it best to delegate a task to a specific group, or offer it   to everyone in the movement in the hopes that there will be a larger and more   widespread response?
For media relations, both approaches have merit and   should  and are  being pursued. Central responsibility for media relations   lies with the NLD, the NCGUB and the NCUB (and, when it becomes more secure and   established, the CRPP). These organizations have the legitimacy to speak for the   movement, and the people of Burma, and they have good intelligence-gathering   networks.
They are responsible for setting the basic message of the   movement, in general and regarding specific issues. Further, they issue   statements both to secure support for the cause of democracy, and in reaction to   (including in advance of) all significant events, internal and external,   including those involving state actors and multi-state meetings.
This   system is already in place and it is functioning, but as a constructive comment   I would suggest that such statements should be issued on a more frequent and   regular basis (weekly?). Many events that are significant have occurred without   a response. For example, in October the opposition party in Malaysia said that   Burma should be suspended from Asean. We should have reacted to this,   immediately, with widely publicized statements in support of the position.   Further, since this issue is not going to go away, we should periodically issue   new statements saying that Burma should be expelled from the group. For   instance, we should now release denunciations of the fact that the issue was not   discussed at the Asean summit in Vientiene (and that the SPDC was not even   publicly criticized); and expressions of support for the United States   prospective boycott of Asean if in 2006 Burma becomes its head.
As   another example, Philippines PM Gloria Arroyo said in response to the purge of   Khin Nyunt that Asean would continue its policy of constructive engagement. We   needed an immediate rejection of this as well. (Also, as an answer to the   question posed in Dictator WatchÂs last press release, Arroyo apparently was the   first democrat to shake Lt. General Soe WinÂs hand. We should denounce her   rapprochement with the architect of the attempted assassination of Daw Aung San   Suu Kyi.)
One way to address this issue, which is really one of capacity   building for the movement, would be to establish a quick reaction media team, in   either or all of these organizations, to respond to new events and to reinforce   advances and minimize setbacks. Such teams could formulate and then immediately   release a standard response to all such events. (The NCUB and NCGUB already have   a combined Information Unit, which is an excellent start.)
A final   responsibility for the centralized media effort should be to research,   coordinate and expand the movementÂs list of journalist contacts, and then make   this available to other pro-democracy groups that are also issuing statements.   For Burma to achieve a higher international profile, we must do a better job of   demanding attention.
One of the strengths of the democracy movement is   that in addition to this centralized effort we also have a large, decentralized   documentation and advocacy ability. Many different individuals and groups   collect information about what is happening in Burma, and also release   statements (and reports) about this documentation and other significant events.   If we can improve our ability to communicate on point and in chorus, we will be   impossible to ignore.
However, there are two other issues that we need to   consider if we are to maximize our impact. The first is that we need to improve   our coverage on television news programs. Burma is rarely mentioned on TV, on   such stations as CNN, the BBC, and the American networks. And, when it is, the   coverage is largely motivated by the SPDCÂs own actions, both bad and   (seemingly) good. In recent years Depayin, the roadmap and national convention,   the purge of Khin Nyunt, the continued detention of Daw Suu, and the prisoner   release, were what attracted the mediaÂs attention. We must find ways to set the   agenda and to draw television to our cause.
One means to this end is the   aforementioned increased frequency and regularity of our statements. We should   also make stronger, more aggressive statements, and even demands. It is arguable   that we have been too timid. While there are risks with this approach, such as   to the non-imprisoned members of the NLD, there are also solutions. Strong   statements can be issued by Âunidentified spokespersons, and also through the   many NLD-LA branches outside Burma.
Of course, we need more than words:   TV requires images. To date, coverage of the problems in Burma has focused   mostly on Daw Suu and the other political prisoners, which does not lend itself   to visual description. We cannot get cameras inside the prisons, and Daw Suu can   only be a subject when she is free. In any case, the suffering is worst, and   this is what makes strong TV, in the ethnic nationality areas, where the Burma   Army has conducted a decades long campaign of ethnic cleansing. I believe we are   doing a disservice to ourselves, and to the ethnic nationalities, by not   focusing more on their suffering. We need to attract the worldÂs ranks of combat   reporters to such areas (this should be an objective of the media teams), and   also where we are able to provide such footage ourselves. As an example of the   latter, BBC World News on November 18th ran a segment about Burmese refugees and   IDPs, which used in-country video provided by the Free Burma   Rangers.
Burma Army offensives are underway right now, in Karen and   Karenni areas, and also in the northwest against the Naga. Abuses are also being   committed against the Shan, the Mon, Rohingya refugees, and other groups. We   need to obtain video images of as much of this as possible and then work to get   it on TV.
To do this, to attract such reporters, we need to make it   widely known that large numbers of people are dying, and that this is inevitably   going to continue. As another suggestion, then, the member news agencies of   Burma News International (www.bnionline.net) could work together to compile a   periodic nation-wide report of SPDC crimes, including deaths (from Burma Army   soldier attacks and landmines, and also including IDPs who die from disease and   starvation while on the run), rapes, and burned homes and villages. Such a   report could contain as much information as possible about all such events,   including photos or video where available (of the victims, crime scenes, etc.).   This ÂMonthly Burma War Crimes Report could then be distributed to the entire   press corps that covers Burma.
Similarly, we should improve out   documentation of environmental destruction (a ÂMonthly Burma Environmental   Devastation ReportÂ). Indeed, more people and advocacy organizations around the   world are concerned about the environment than are actively opposed to political   dictatorship. They effectively constitute a second audience, and one that we for   the most part have ignored. To correct this failing, we should strive to provide   real-time documentation of environmental destruction in Burma, e.g., what   forests are being cut down right now, and by whom (and with accompanying   photography and maps).
To continue, the second point is simply that we   need to stay on message. When contacted by the media for interviews (even by   friendly media, e.g., DVB, VOA, RFA and the BBC), we should have a carefully   prepared response. In particular, we should be very wary of suggesting that   events, foremost SPDC-initiated events, are in any way   positive.
Diplomatic relations
The Burma democracy movement   has also expended a lot of time and effort on diplomatic initiatives, but with   mixed results. There are a number of reasons for this. First, and as was just   described, we do not have enough in-country documentation and because of this   major-media interest. Also, in even the best of circumstances diplomacy is   extremely challenging. Diplomats are confronted with many different issues. It   is difficult to attract their attention to your cause, much less their   involvement and commitment. In addition, there are problems with our approach,   including that we do not have enough funding (lobbying is expensive!), but also   with our organization and tactics.
A further challenge derives from the   fact that we have multiple objectives. We want support not only for democracy,   but also financial aid for refugees and other assistance programs. And, we need   this from many different parties, including supranational organizations (the   U.N., the E.U. and Asean) and upwards of twenty separate nations. This is a   monumental diplomatic initiative, which even a well financed and free to operate   organization would find difficult to achieve.
We therefore must   prioritize our objectives, and focus our resources where they will have the   greatest effect. In reviewing the current situation, we can say that only the   United States has taken a strong stand for Burma. We require a similar level of   support from the U.N. and Europe, and at the same time we must undermine the   support that the SPDC receives from Asean, Thailand, Japan, India and   China.
Regarding the behavior of all of these parties, one underlying   factor is present: China. Burma is not actively considered in the U.N. Security   Council, not because it is not a threat to international security and peace, but   because China would inevitably veto Council resolutions. The E.U. will not take   a stronger stand against Burma, because the country lies in ChinaÂs sphere of   influence. (Europe and China are each otherÂs largest trading partners.)   Similarly, Asean fears the imperial designs of its neighbor to the north, and   would never oppose it on an important issue. India, as is well recognized, has   improved its relations with the SPDC as a means to offset the extension of   Chinese power in the region. And even the United States commitment is fragile,   because of U.S. business interests in China, including President BushÂs family   investments through the Carlyle Group. (The Bush administration has already   signaled that in its second term its support for Taiwan will be   weaker.)
A very enlightening comparison is that of Sudan versus Burma. In   both countries specific groups are suffering genocidal repression. However, in   Burma there is a large democracy and human rights effort, while in Sudan such an   effort is, or has been, quite small. It is therefore surprising that Sudan is   receiving great international attention, including in the Security Council,   whereas Burma is not. The difference is China. While it is true that China is   also supporting SudanÂs dictators, it has not been willing to use its political   influence to shut down the debate. Also, the SudanÂs neighbors are not beholden   to China like the countries of Asean, hence they have been willing to form a   peacekeeping force to enter the country and protect the local   population.
In effect, the people of Burma, and the countryÂs natural   environment, have been sacrificed by the rest of the world. Burma has been   sacrificed to China, in the name of geopolitics.
Dictator Watch has   argued previously that as long as China is a dictatorship, Burma will remain one   as well. While this may be overly pessimistic, there is little doubt that to   pressure the SPDC we must find a way to reduce its backing from Beijing.   Fortunately, there are a number of opportunities available here. The SPDC   undermined the support it receives from China by purging Khin Nyunt. It will   take time to rebuild a strong relationship. And, the policy of engagement that   the U.N. and the E.U. preached, and which had Chinese links as well, is now   thoroughly discredited.
To take advantage of these opportunities, we must   review and where necessary revise our tactics. The Burma democracy movement also   uses a centralized/decentralized approach to diplomacy. In addition, there are   two basic types of tactics: political lobbying (including through letter-writing   campaigns and petitions), and demonstrations.
The centralized approach is   almost entirely direct lobbying (meetings, and letter and email communications),   and it is also severely restricted. The NLD in Rangoon has only periodic contact   with country missions and diplomatic delegations. Top NLD officials are under   arrest; visits by diplomats to the NLD office (when it is open), or by NLD staff   to local consulates, are problematic; and phone lines are tapped.
The   diplomatic effort thereby defaults to organizations based outside Burma,   foremost the NCGUB, which maintains diplomatic liaison with the U.N., the U.S.,   Canada, and certain countries in Europe. This effort is also constrained due to   the movementÂs limited funding. For example, we are not able to hire a   specialist lobbying firm to enhance the profile of our cause (as the SPDC   attempted, when it hired DCI in Washington).
The rest of the lobbying   effort is essentially decentralized, with nation-specific campaigns conducted by   domestic Burma groups (e.g., USCBÂs lobbying of the U.S. government), and also   through periodic letters and petitions, either movement-wide or initiated by   other groups. The second tactic, though, to demonstrate in public, is used only   infrequently and unsystematically. Protests at BurmaÂs embassy in Bangkok have   been curtailed because of Thai repression. Demonstrations at other Burma   embassies and consulates, other than in Washington, are rare. And, there has   been no concerted effort to protest at the facilities of the SPDCÂs leading   supporters (China, Thailand, Japan and now India). Nor are there regular or even   infrequent demonstrations at U.N. headquarters in New York.
We obviously   canÂt be everywhere at once, but a stronger and more coordinated protest   campaign would certainly seem possible. Indeed, I would suggest that we change   our target from Burma missions to those of the SPDCÂs supporters. Like letters   to Than Shwe, demos at Burma missions have little effect. We should concentrate   where our efforts will have an impact, on China, Thailand, India, Japan and the   U.N.
One way to increase our impact would be to have worldwide,   coordinated, and secretly planned protests (not publicized international days of   actions). The many national Burma groups should consider forming a task force to   organize secret strike demos (Dictator Watch, while not a national group, would   be happy to assist with this), with groups of demonstrators simultaneously   taking to the streets in front of embassies, etc., at ten or more locations   around the world. The demos could also have a single, coordinated and   translated, press release.
For China, we should call for a boycott of the   nationÂs consumer products, and also of the 2008 Olympics. Further, in this   effort we will not be alone. We can join the Free Tibet movement, which already   has a boycott in progress (see www.boycottmadeinchina.org), and even the Falun   Gong, which has been running protest camps at ChinaÂs consulates in New York,   Chicago, San Francisco and elsewhere. (They had a demo in New York on November   24th, with over 5,000 people  see www.faluninfo.net.) We should be able to   attract environmental groups to such protests as well. Chinese President Hu   Jintao recently completed a trip to South America, where he asked the government   of Brazil for access to the nationÂs natural resources. China wants to cut down   the Amazon, just as it does BurmaÂs forests, to fuel its economic machine (which   is also based on sweatshop labor). We should have little difficulty attracting   environmental (and labor rights) organizations to a coordinated and   multi-pronged protest campaign against the country.
While we certainly   want to keep the heat on all of the other interested parties as well   (particularly the E.U., Asean and Thailand), I would argue that the United   Nations should be our second primary protest target. Special Envoy Razali is a   dismal failure, and he recently said that the U.N. has no clear strategy for   Burma. Since he is the person responsible for the U.N. strategy, and since he   has just admitted that he has failed, he should resign. If not, we must pressure   the U.N. for a change. (If the U.N. were a business, he would have been fired a   long time ago.) I further believe that we should demonstrate for the resignation   of Kofi Annan, since he has also failed Burma. Human Rights Special Rapporteur   Sergio Paolo Pinhiero has repeatedly documented the SPDCÂs atrocities, but there   has been no response to this from the U.N.Âs political side (which, though   headed by Razali is ultimately AnnanÂs responsibility). It is as if they are   purposely ignoring PinheiroÂs findings.
Neither Razali nor Annan have   publicly admitted that there are humanitarian crises in both Eastern and Western   Burma, and which must be resolved. Instead, they have focused on the   imprisonment of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and BurmaÂs political prisoners. The reason   for this is clear. They understand that while the imprisonment of political   prisoners, including a Nobel Peace Prize recipient, is reprehensible, it is not   enough to motivate strong international action. Action for Sudan was only   precipitated by global attention on the humanitarian crisis in   Darfur.
U.N. evasion of the severity of the situation in Burma must end.   We should issue a widespread call for Razali and AnnanÂs resignations, for   allowing crimes against humanity to continue to be committed in Burma, and we   should back this call up with protests. Further, at these protests we should   carry signs not only with photos of Daw Suu, but with images of the SPDCÂs reign   of terror against the ethnic nationalities, including of burned villages and   murder victims. (These are available on the Dictator Watch website, and the   websites of many other organizations as well.)
As a final comment, we   have also let our corporate activism lapse. Our reduction in public protest also   underlies the movementÂs sorry state of opposition to the SPDCÂs corporate   cronies. For example, after forcing Premier Oil out, we did not follow this up   with reinvigorated initiatives against Total and Unocal (other than ERIÂs   on-going lawsuit against Unocal).
Before the U.S. imposed import   sanctions, American activists had an extremely effective boycott campaign. A   corporate target was selected, carefully orchestrated pressure was imposed, and   the company inevitably folded. Also, the Burma Campaign U.K. has had great   success with its ÂDirty List campaign. It would be excellent if other national   Burma groups would extend these approaches against their own domestic companies   that are active in Burma.
Funding, and humanitarian   assistance
Funding can also be addressed relative to whether the   money is for humanitarian purposes or for the fight for democracy. For the   first, humanitarian aid tends to be centralized. This is because the relief   effort is itself centralized (e.g., for refugees under the Burmese Border   Consortium) and also because the providers of the aid prefer it this way. For   the democracy effort, though, since there is no central command, there is no   requirement for a centralized funding system. We will have to continue to   attract funds for the most part independently, for our respective organizations.   (This holds for the smaller relief groups as well.)
We should also   carefully consider where the money for the democracy struggle is spent. While I   earlier expressed support for conferences and seminars, they are expensive.   Every time such an event is suggested, we should evaluate whether such funds   might be better spent on direct resistance activities, including in-country   documentation, mass media campaigns, and border and in-country organizing,   communications and defense.
Regarding humanitarian assistance, in   addition to helping the refugees there is also a push underway for aid for   internally displaced persons, and which we should do our best to further.   Refugees who have fled Burma are in a very bad situation. The refugees in   Bangladesh and Thailand are regularly threatened with deportation. (Some groups   of newly arrived refugees have been deported  turned over to the SPDC and an   uncertain fate.) The refugee camps can also more accurately be described as   containment or concentration camps. Many only have one access road, with   numerous army and police checkpoints, and visitors are prohibited. In addition,   in Thailand local officials have even tried to cut the food rations, seemingly   in a crude attempt to starve the refugees out.
As bad as it is for the   refugees, though, it is far worse for IDPs, who have fled their homes, have   little food or medicine, and are subject to being shot on sight by the Burma   Army. In other words, there is an assistance gap for IDPs. They require greatly   increased assistance including clothing and shelter, sustenance, medicine, and   security, and we, lobbying and protesting on their behalf, must try to secure   it.
Democracy resistance
There is a related funding issue   for the democracy resistance, which is simply that the international community   does not put its money where its mouth is. The parties that we are lobbying   repeatedly state that they want to see democracy in Burma, but they do not   support the groups who are fighting the hardest. There is a morbid irony here.   As long as the known number of people who are dying is small, and for the most   part out of the mediaÂs eye, the only funding we can get is for small-scale   political activities and not the self-defense of the groups who are under attack   by the Burma Army. It is as if the international community is saying that more   people  many more people  must die before it will truly help.
This is   outrageous. Are Kofi Annan, Razali Ismail, Jacques Chirac, Gerhard Shroeder, and   even George Bush really saying that they will only give the type of assistance   the movement needs (and which they have already provided in other parts of the   world including the Balkans, Sudan and the Ivory Coast), if the slaughter in   Burma reaches Holocaust standards? These Âleaders are stuck in Âwait and see   mode, knowing full well that if they do not help more Burma will never be   free.
For Burma to be free, the most important strategic objectives for   the movement are as follows. However, for these actions to be organized we   require greater financial (and other) assistance.
1. We need to encourage   disunity in the SPDC. One way to do this would be to launch a disinformation   campaign, to spread rumors inside Burma that the Than Shwe and Maung Aye   factions are in conflict and that a follow-on coup of Than Shwe by Maung Aye is   likely. (This is likely not even disinformation.)
2. We should approach   all of the groups that have signed ceasefire agreements with the SPDC and   convince them not to attend the National Convention when it is resumed (to join   the NLD boycott), and more generally to renew their resistance, armed or   otherwise.
3. We should support the Karen National Union and similar   resistance groups in their self-defense against the Burma Army. Here it is worth   considering that a rebellion generally succeeds by establishing and then   expanding a liberated area beyond the dictatorshipÂs control, and in which the   local population can be free of abuse. The Karen followed this strategy until   the fall of Manerplaw. It may be time for them to try it again (and also to heal   the internal Karen split with the DKBA). However, the prerequisite of a   successful resistance movement is adequate sponsorship. The Karen, and also the   Karenni, Shan, Chin and Arakanese resistance forces require much greater   sponsorship if their defense against the Burma Army is to succeed.
4.   Regarding the NLD, from the outside it appears that the organization has been   attempting to function within SPDC-imposed limits (as have we all). There have   been few attempts to break out. Now is the time to break out.
The NLD   must find ways to increase its effectiveness, and it also needs to implement a   succession plan to groom a new generation of leaders. I want to repeat an idea I   presented earlier. Even with the repression to which the NLD is subject, it can   issue stronger statements, and demands (We, the elected government of the people   of Burma Â
), for example to the U.N. and the E.U. This can be done through   unidentified spokespersons, in the name of the NLD Executive Committee, or   through officials based outside Burma.
The elected voice of the people of   Burma needs to be heard, with authority, and on a more frequent   basis.
(Note: congratulations to Dr. Sein Win for his statement in Canada   this week that the West should set a timetable of 2005 or 2006 Â 2005! Â for the   transition to democracy in Burma. This demand should become the movementÂs   mantra!)
As part of this, the entire democracy movement must strive to   find ways to assist the people of Burma with their political defiance. A new   popular uprising is within our grasp. We must identify leaders who are willing   to take risks, and then give them all the help that we can.
In closing,   there are a multitude of courageous, intelligent and highly motivated people who   are dedicated to freedom for Burma. Working together, and pushing just a little   bit harder, we can counter the strategy of the SPDC, reduce its regional   support, and draw the international fence-sitters to our side. There is change   in Burma now, and change means opportunity: the opportunity to clear the final   hurdles and to at long last bring the countryÂs nightmare to an end. 
Source: http://www.dictatorwatch.org/articles/burmastrategy.html
 
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