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Burma, Darfur and Democracy -- The Bush Betrayal

A BUZZFLASH EDITORIAL

None other than Alan Greenspan, touting his recent book, said once again what we all know: the Iraq War – as the Iran War will be – is primarily about oil.

Forget the calculated White House "narrative" about freedom and democracy. Unless a nation favors the economic interests of the U.S., it is on the target list of the White House. And if you are a tyrant who is friendly to Western economic interests, you are on the "A" list of nations. Hey, that’s where Saddam was in the ‘80s (in large part, ironically, because he kept Iran in check.) And that’s why the most repressive military dictatorship -- after North Korea -- is on the White House "A" list. We’re talking about Burma, now called Myanmar.

If you’ve been hiding out in a remote cabin for a few days, the brutal troops in Burma bludgeoned a protest of 100,000 monks into submission over the past few days. All Bush did, as he has done for years, is give lip service at the U.N. to denouncing the latest crackdown in Myanmar, but he did little else.

Bush is only interested in using the "freedom" narrative to justify military dominance of the Middle East oil reserves and gas pipelines, at the cost of hundreds of thousands of American and Iraqi lives and hundreds of billions of dollars . He has brought no freedom to Iraq, only death and bloodshed that far exceeds what existed under Saddam Hussein. (As BuzzFlash noted this past week, the mainstream Canadian Maclean’s news weekly ran a cover story calling Bush the new Saddam. This is a publication that is the "Time" or "Newsweek" of Canada.)

Combined with Saudi Arabia as an "ally" (although they are the major cradle and financiers of Al-Qaeda terrorists), with control of the Iraq and Iran oil reserves, and Afghanistan for a gas/oil pipeline, the U.S. would control the primary oil reserves in the world. (The Bush Administration is particularly focused on Chavez, by the way, because Venezuela produces oil and has what many consider to be large untapped offshore reserves, which will be needed as the Middle Eastern lighter oil becomes depleted.)

Western interest in asserting "ownership" of the oil in the Middle East goes back to the early 1900s when the British militarily dominated Iraq and later wrested virtual ownership of the Iranian oil reserves. In fact, when a democratically-elected and generally pro-Western government was elected in Iran, the U.S. overthrew it in 1953 because the charismatic head of state had the "radical idea" of declaring that the Persian oil fields belonged to Iran, not Britain. (This caused the chain of events, after the installation of the Shah, that has led to the current hardline Islamic government in Tehran.)

So it is no surprise that Burma – and Darfur for that matter – will receive little but lip service in "advocating" for freedom and the protection of innocent lives from Bush. George W. is not interested in spreading democracy; he is interested in bolstering the already flagging economic interests of the U.S., period.

You might ask then how Burma and Darfur figure into this?

It’s a little complicated, but it runs something like this.

Burma and Sudan do have some oil reserves and natural gas. In Burma, they are largely undeveloped (only about 0.3 percent of the world's total reserves). In large part China has laid claim to exploiting the industries in both countries (and is very far along in extracting oil from the Sudan). India also has a role in helping the military dictatorship in Burma develop its natural gas industry. In fact, Indian companies were in Burma to sign oil and gas development contracts just this past week, as peaceful monks were being bludgeoned, presumably tortured, and killed:

Just last Sunday — when marches led by Buddhist monks drew thousands in Myanmar's biggest cities — Indian Oil Minister Murli Deora was in the country's capital for the signing of oil and gas exploration contracts between state-controlled ONGC Videsh Ltd. and Myanmar's military rulers.

The signing ceremony was an example of how important Myanmar's oil and gas resources have become in an energy-hungry world. Even as Myanmar's military junta intensifies its crackdown on pro-democracy protests, oil companies are jostling for access to the country's largely untapped natural gas and oil fields that activists say are funding a repressive regime.

China — Myanmar's staunchest diplomatic protector and largest trading partner — is particularly keen on investing in the country because of its strategic location for pipelines to feed the Chinese economy's growing thirst for oil and gas.

Companies from South Korea, Thailand and elsewhere also are looking to exploit the energy resources of the desperately poor Southeast Asian country.

But U.S. oil companies, including Secretary of State Rice’s beloved Chevron, are playing a minor role in developing the offshore oil and gas deposits in Burma, with the eager support of the military dictatorship for eventual cash:

Despite economic sanctions against Myanmar by the United States and the European Union, Total continues to operate the Yadana gas field, and Chevron Corp. has a 28 percent stake through its takeover of Unocal. Existing investments were exempt from the investment ban.

Both Total and Chevron broadly defended their business in the nation.

"Far from solving Myanmar's problems, a forced withdrawal would only lead to our replacement by other operators probably less committed to the ethical principles guiding all our initiatives," Jean-Francois Lassalle, vice president of public affairs for Total Exploration & Production, said this week in a statement.

French President Nicholas Sarkozy urged Total this week to refrain from new investment in Myanmar; the French concern said it had not made any capital expenditure there since 1998.

Chevron's interest in the Yadana project is "a long-term commitment that helps meet the critical energy needs of millions in people in the region," said Nicole Hodgson, corporate media adviser for Asia.

Total and former partner Unocal Corp. were accused of cooperating with the military in human rights violations while a pipeline was being built across Myanmar to Thailand in the 1990s. Both companies have denied the accusations but Unocal settled a related lawsuit in the U.S. in 2005, prior to being acquired by Chevron.

In the Associated Press story above, there are a couple of quotations, which might speak well for the Bush Administration’s perspective:

India is not facing any diplomatic pressure to reduce investment in the country, said R.S. Sharma, chairman of the state-run Oil and Natural Gas Corp.

"There is a trade-off between the two: That is a moralistic position and these strategic interests," said Muchkund Dubey, president of the Council for Social Development, a New Delhi think tank, and the former top bureaucrat at India's Foreign Ministry.

Thailand's PTTEP, a partner in Total's Yadana and Petronas' Yetagun gas projects, said in a statement that production of natural gas is at the normal rate, and should not be affected by the unrest.

"It is business as usual," said Sidhichai Jayamt, the company's manager for external relations. "When we have a contract with the government, it doesn't really matter who the government is."

So don’t expect anyone to come to the assistance of the Burmese living under an Orwellian tyranny soon. The Bush Administration doesn’t want to tick off the Chinese or Indian governments, and figures that American oil companies will at least get some of the profit if the Burmese oil fields start yielding black gold.

As for Darfur, the Bush Administration is so far in bed with China economically, that it isn’t about to make a stink about the genocide in Darfur by leaning on Beijing to rein in the Khartoum government and its use of Arab militias to slaughter African residents by the tens of thousands who live in Sudan’s western province.

And, for that matter, has the U.S. ever lifted a finger to stop the destruction of Tibet and the forced dismantling of its Buddhist monasteries, not to mention the torture and murder of those Tibetans fighting for freedom?

No.

For Bush, freedom’s just another word for maintaining market control as we quickly slide into becoming the world’s largest debtor nation.

Recently, Mattel toys abjectly "apologized" to the government of China for the lead-tainted toys produced by that nation. It was a moment when American dignity and sovereignty turned on a dime into slavish humiliation.

The reason even the top 3 Democratic candidates for president are talking about a long presence in Iraq is that economically Iraq and Iran are about the only cards the U.S. has left to play in controlling the world’s major current natural resource.

Freedom is just another word for making Americans feel good about greed.

It’s got nothing to do with liberty and democracy at all.

Just ask the monks in Burma, or the survivors in Darfur, or the residents of Tibet, or dozens of other nations and peoples living under one form of tyranny or another.

Just ask the people of Iraq. The only thing that "freedom" has brought them is chaos and death.

A BUZZFLASH EDITORIAL

Additional BuzzFlash Footnotes: Yes, we have had ineffective and largely cosmetic embargoes against Burma since the Clinton Administration. Chevron, for instance, is curiously grandfathered in. And the embargo can be easily evaded through third-party transfers or susidiary sales, as Dick Cheney and Halliburton did with Iran. It's also worthy of note that when it came to invading Iraq, Bush ditched the U.N. as useless. In regards to Burma, the White House is hiding behind the U.N. and touting the sending of a U.N. envoy there as a big political victory for Bush. Just call it hypocrisy.

The reality is that the Busheviks, China, and India would fear a democracy in Burma, because it is likely to go populist left after years of tyrannical rule tolerated by nations that could have ended the nightmare if they had wanted to. The Busheviks prefer a known iron first to an unknown process of democracy. Iron fists are much easier for them to deal with, as long as they don't go "freelancing" on the U.S., as Saddam and Noriega did.


Good job, Buzzflash----pass it on BIG TIME!

I read Buzzflash regularly, but I have thought that you folks missed some of the Peak Oil implications of our Corporatist foreign policy a lot of the time. I was wrong...this is a big one, and you've nailed it. I hope this will get passed on to the so-called "progressive" camp, and that it will make some see who wish, perhaps, to be blind to oil as the prime mover in these last 7 years of total T-Rex Corporatism on a (very) finite Earth.

Now tie this to the "terminal triangle" of resource depletion, population overshoot, and climate change. The Dems aren't going to do a damn thing about any of it, because they are vested in the "ownership party" also.

And let's make sure that Joe Baegent's comments about how the bastards will convince us that being poor is a good thing, and that they'll make it more expensive to be poor...so they can stay on top in a (near) future of high-tech feudalism...get figured into the mix. There IS another way besides unbridled Capitalism and unbridled socialism that embodies elements of both. Unfortunately, Corporatists want NO movement from below whatsoever, and some socialists feel the same way.

...which has led me to wonder...

A primate anthropologist once told me, when I asked him if he thought we were REALLY that far ahead of the Chimpanzees: "Chimpanzee politics are FRIGHTENLY human".

The Saffron Revolution is about People Power

I think many people, especially in media and in governments, are missing the point. What is happening in Burma is a mass civilian uprising against a brutal, ignorant regime whose only sources of support are the Chinese and Indian governments and corporations that do business with it. The regime has lost its legitimacy, and if the movement is able to split the ranks of the military, they could win. The crackdown and the fact there are fewer people on the streets today is not an indication of defeat. Of course the regime cracked down! That's what they do! But the people of Burma have resolved to see this through. They have had enough, and the leaders have been studying strategy in a way that may undermine the regime's ability to hold onto their control. Desmond Tutu said "When people decide they want to be free, there is nothing that can stop them." If you think bullets can, then how do you explain the nonviolent ouster of dictators like Marcos in the Philippines, Pinochet in Chile, and Milosevic in Serbia? Regimes like the one in Burma have a shelf life, and theirs has passed its expiration date. Once the regime understands that there are more people in Burma willing to die for this cause then there are soldiers willing to shoot them (already many soldiers have switched to the side of the people), they will have lost their last remaining recourse to staying in power: the ability to terrorize their people into submission. For this movement to succeed, it is incumbent on the rest of the world to keep the spotlight on this struggle and to let the people of Burma know we are with them, and to signal to the generals that the handwriting is on the wall.

It's reaching...

to blame Bush for anything that is going on in Burma. That dictatorship has been on the sanction shitlist of the Western powers, the US very much included, for years. We have absolutely no trade relations with Burma, hence no leverage. Only China and India are trucking with the Burmese dictators, and how exactly should Bush make demands of the two largest nations on Earth concerning their miscreant trading partner? When Mattel is even apologizing to the Chinese for buying tainted toys from them, the agent of their principal debtor (that's Bush) hasn't the standing to require any movement from the Chinese against their neighbor and trading partner.

Karlin demands that Bush boldly beg China to beg Burma to less harshly chastise its rebellious populace. Well, were Bush to do so, can anyone reasonably expect this act to affect events on the streets of Rangoon? We're ALL in bed with China; Mr. Karlin, who made your sheets?

Pity Bush couldn't have saved up his invasion chits for Burma instead of the disaster he selected; the Burmese may well have greeted us as liberators. But no, he had to piss away our armed forces on Iraq and ain't no cavalry gonna ride in on this one. In the West, we can only look on in horror at Burmese butchery. Only China would have the influence upon the Burmese dictators, and like the Burmese, we are their supplicants as well.

Bush has willingly committed enough crimes to warrant impeachment and imprisonment; there is no point in charging him with other's misdeeds over which he has no affect.

With regard to Darfur...

...it is all about oil, of course.

U.S. interest in Sudan

Sudan is the largest country in Africa in area. It is strategically located on the Red Sea, immediately south of Egypt, and borders on seven other African countries. It is about the size of Western Europe but has a population of only 35 million people.

Darfur is the western region of Sudan. It is the size of France, with a population of just 6 million.

Newly discovered resources have made Sudan of great interest to U.S. corporations. It is believed to have oil reserves rivaling those of Saudi Arabia. It has large deposits of natural gas. In addition, it has one of the three largest deposits of high-purity uranium in the world, along with the fourth-largest deposits of copper.

Unlike Saudi Arabia, however, the Sudanese government has retained its independence of Washington. Unable to control Sudan’s oil policy, the U.S. imperialist government has made every effort to stop its development of this valuable resource. China, on the other hand, has worked with Sudan in providing the technology for exploration, drilling, pumping and the building of a pipeline and buys much of Sudan’s oil.

Read more at http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=FLO20060606&articleId=2592

See also http://tinyurl.com/3xdzxv