Its Not Just Intervene Or Beg In Burma
Years from now, how will the world recall the aftermath of Cyclone Nargis? How will the abandonment of between a quarter million to a million or more people to certain death by the world be viewed?
Of course, killing fields are all too common so this line of questioning is pointless.
Cambodia, Rwanda, Dar Fur, the Congo. All have witnessed “the treatment”, international hand-wringing and the occasional hiccup of half-hearted measures to stem the dreadful tide of death. History repeats itself, especially in this fashion, early and often.
Burma seems destined to join these ranks. Credible reports of aid theft, continued obstruction and delay of accepting the necessary aid workers and whispered observations of ethnic minorities getting nothing intentionally (we call that ethnic cleansing in some places) mean nothing to the world at large.
What then could be done?
Military intervention is highly unlikely and probably not advisable.
Inaction is preferable to most but morally repugnant.
Begging the junta publicly and privately to accept aid is disgraceful.
Once again, the US finds itself in a position where it could influence events but cannot because it lacks the capacity in most instances to operate on multiple levels of policy and activity. The crisis develops to America’s policymakers as an either/or fallacy, either intervention or nothing, or like Dar Fur, intervention or half-hearted measures.
There is more to the picture. The following are examples of other measures that could be explored, some in tandem, some obviously cancel the other out.
- The US could dangle the prospect of a lifting of sanctions against Burma in exchange for a firm agreement to allow aid and (perhaps) engage in a real dialogue with China, India, Thailand and ASEAN or the UN present with regime opponents. The sanctions have a symbolic effect but little else in a country where the above countries enjoy far greater influence and economic pull than we do.
- The US could muster the “democracies” as John McCain and Robert Kagan are fond of claiming can be “aligned” and push at the UN and through the global media for an ICC related indictment of the junta as war criminals (Crimes against humanity, to include ethnic cleansing). Even if the Chinese and Russians veto it, push and push harder until the Olympic Games are set to begin. Control the narrative of the global media by influencing events relentlessly that builds up pressure on more affected parties like India, Singapore and Thailand. Failure is still likely but lessons learned from this may come in handy in future potential disasters like Bangladesh, North Korea, Laos, Cambodia, etc.
- Find an answer to the question of how influential are the Chinese in Burma? How many of the officers in the junta are in their pocket? What it would take if the possibility existed for China to support a coup in Burma? How could the US push this forward?
- Start arming the rebels in abundance. Such a tactic may be morally dubious at worst (though given the ruthless assault on ethnic minorities via rapine, aerial bombardment, murder of children, food weaponization and enslavement by the regime it isn’t that repugnant) but it will be China, Thailand & India’s mess to clean up after the failed state finally totters over. Their choice to worship the false deity of “Burmese stability” that supporting the generals represents is tantamount to that of an accessory to mass murder.
Is anything else available? Perhaps a long-term goal of opening the regime through trade (again, the lifting of useless sanctions) is the best option to be explored, though its also the most unlikely due to the idea of sanctions being a sanctified sacred cow in bipartisan American foreign policy.
Note none of these require an intervention by the US military. Just as a variety of diplomatic possibilities were not explored before and during Dar Fur, failure to identify the RPF as preferential to Hutu Power (Or even jamming the Hutu Power radio signals) and how realpolitik trumped humanity (supporting the ghastly Khmer Rouge versus the Vietnamese), matters are regularly portrayed in Washington as “either-or” and actual understanding of the problem at hand (and the opportunities open to explore) suffers greatly as a result.
Above all else, the world today and in the near to mid future will likely be as hostile and unpromising to the application of American military power to address such tragedies. The need for potential alternatives besides doing nothing will only increase.
This blogger is not egotistical enough to believe the ideas presented here are the best alternatives for Burma, yet considers the need for options beyond “just do something” or “do nothing” imperative to having a fighting chance at achieving some measure of our goals for Burma and respond to the enormous injustice regularly inflicted upon the many Burmese peoples in the future.
* Besides, stunned silence in the face of such depravity and craven shortsightedness from the generals and politicians in Asian and Western capitals is too much to bear without at least one more post about this.
Sources/Influential Posts:
“Is Armed Humanitarian Intervention The Answer In Burma?” @ New Yorker In DC
“Yes We Can” @ Coming Anarchy
Jim Hoagland, Washington Post: “Murder In The Name Of Sovereignty”

your ideas on this seem as good as any. However, arming rebels was something we did in Afghanistan. it seems that every time we do this, we wind up fighting against our own armament later.
I would like to try to defund terror and tyrants by become Energy Independent. This would not help Darfur or Burma, but I don’t want to be the world’s policemen either.
Eddie,
Good post/response. Although, it seems to run a bit counter to your earlier one, which I used as part of the basis for my own. There you talked about rehabilitating the “coalition of the willing” as preferable to continuing with the sorry spectacle we are now witnessing and even waging personal war against dictators and tyrants.
I’d also make a second point, and that has more to do with some of the steps you advocate here. The problem with them is that they would take time to work. The junta is known for being extremely xenophobic, and is unlikely to allow aid in or engage in a dialogue with the opposition if the US promised to lift sanctions against the regime. The reason for this is that allowing aid in under international organizations or through US agencies undermines the junta’s legitimacy (from their perspective) and they are willing to let their people die to prevent that from happening.
Some of the others are a bit more compelling, as I noted in my post. Getting the Chinese to either push those generals in their pockets to accept aid, or support a coup. However, China would be less willing to do this, if at the end of the day it ended up stuck with the bill all by itself. This is why I suggested using Barnett’s A-Z ruleset for processing politically bankrupt states, because it would institutionalize the steps we need to take to execute such an option. It would also relieve one power from having to go it alone, be it the US or China, and would allow them all to move in concert with one another bearing the burden together. It would also deal with fears like those expressed by poetryman69 above, that the US would bear the responsibility of being, “the world’s policeman,” by making an expanded G-8 into the responsible entity for ensuring that these things are dealt with, and paid for.
Poetryman,
Certainly arming rebels is a serious measure to pursue with potential blowback. There are excellent reasons not to. In the case of ethnic minorities facing slavery, ethnic cleansing and rapine, I would say they deserve the full support we can give them. Such activities by a government go far beyond any defensible counterinsurgency activity by a soverign government.
NYkrindic,
At some point, coalition of the willing is a phrase and reality that will have to be revisited. I wonder if the potential civil war in Sudan in 2011-2012 may be the best opportunity? Nevertheless, the more I read about the geopolitical interests of the neighbors, the more I realized this was not the place for it and thus decided other options had to be at least explored.
Barnett’s A-Z framework could be useful one day, but right now, we’re in the death throes of liberal internationalism, the birth pangs of a nasty century or something in between that is temporary and allows for great ideas like Barnett’s to take hold. Given the political stupidity on China coming from both Obama and McCain (as well as others in leadership positions and those in China), I won’t personally hold my breath for it.
That would require nuance and maturity, something sorely lacking in leadership these days.
The matter of sanctions for Burma, Iran & North Korea is one that also should be explored as it robs us of influence at a tremendous cost with little reward. This would require certain sacred cows in Washington to be sacrificed for good that I don’t see happening.
Thank you both for your comments!