Analysis

Obama’s Myanmar legacy in trouble and it’s not Trump’s fault

With some 400 Rohingya Muslims killed in fighting over past week, the fledgling democracy, also known as Burma, is under strain

Broken dishes can be seen in the burned out remains of a house in Myo Thu Gyi village near Maungdaw, Rakhine State, Myanmar, on August 31, 2017. (AFP Photo/Stringer)
Broken dishes can be seen in the burned out remains of a house in Myo Thu Gyi village near Maungdaw, Rakhine State, Myanmar, on August 31, 2017. (AFP Photo/Stringer)

WASHINGTON (AP) — One of former US president Barack Obama’s greatest foreign policy achievements is at risk — and it has nothing to do with his successor

Myanmar, which Obama helped usher back to democracy, has been roiled by an explosion of violence between Rohingya Muslim insurgents and security forces. Four hundred have been killed in the past week. Tens of thousands have fled to neighboring Bangladesh.

The crisis has attracted unprecedented criticism of Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar’s civilian leader who once assumed an almost saintly status in Washington and other Western capitals. She met Obama several times and was long championed by Democrats and Republicans in the US for her long, peaceful struggle against military rule that culminated in her rise to power a year and a half ago.

The Rohingya militant attacks have “in some ways empowered the military to assert themselves ‘as saviors of the country,’ which is how they like to see themselves,” said Derek Mitchell, who pushed for political change as Obama’s ambassador to Myanmar. “That’s not very helpful to the transition.”

Then US resident Barack Obama shakes hands as he meets with then Republican president-elect Donald Trump (L) on transition planning in the Oval Office at the White House on November 10, 2016 in Washington, DC. (Jim Watson/AFP)

Myanmar’s troubles involve many factors, but none involve US President Donald Trump. While he has tried to erase much of Obama’s overseas legacy, Trump has largely ignored Myanmar as it struggles with ethnic and religious tensions, military abuses and ineffectual governance.

Trump has yet to even pick up the phone to speak with Suu Kyi. That has opened the door for northern neighbor China to exert greater influence. Beijing had ceded much of its sway to Washington after Obama, who visited twice, helped coax Myanmar’s generals to relinquish power.

David Mathieson, an independent analyst based in Myanmar, said Washington and other Western governments lost their leverage in the race to abandon economic sanctions when the country started to open up. They did so although the military remained entrenched in business and politics, controlling key ministries responsible for security and retaining a guaranteed quota of a quarter of parliamentary seats.

The military is now pushing for the president, who is subordinate to Suu Kyi, to convene a high-powered council with authority to grant it emergency powers to manage the crisis in western Rakhine state. Doing so raises further doubts about the country’s political direction, but Mathieson doubted the military would grab absolute power.

“Why risk all that with a coup d’etat?” Mathieson said. “Especially when they are getting away with unchecked abusive operations while their longtime nemesis Suu Kyi takes the blame?”

Suu Kyi is taking diplomatic fire for failing to rein in security forces over which she has no formal control in her position as state counselor. She is also being pressed internationally to do more to protect the Rohingya, who are loathed by majority Buddhists in Myanmar as illegal immigrants even though many have lived there for generations. Those feelings have only intensified since some Rohingya took up arms.

A former political prisoner, Suu Kyi opposed a UN fact-finding mission to investigate violence in Rakhine state. And in a scene evocative of Myanmar’s long years as an international pariah, the UN Security Council this week discussed the instability in Rakhine, from where civilians have fled across rivers and muddy rice fields, some on makeshift stretchers.

Leader of Myanmar’s National League for Democracy party, Aung San Suu Kyi, leaves her party headquarters after delivering a speech to her supporters in Yangon, Myanmar, Monday, Nov. 9, 2015. (AP Photo/Mark Baker)

US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley condemned recent coordinated attacks by Rohingya militants on security posts, but she pointedly said government forces have a responsibility to avoid abuses and allow in aid. She cited reports of civilians being killed and villages being burned down.

Katina Adams, a State Department spokeswoman, said the US was discussing the crisis with Myanmar “at the highest levels.”
Lawmakers are also paying attention in the US Congress as they consider an incremental expansion in military ties with Myanmar, long taboo because of human rights abuses.

“Ultimately, the root cause of tensions and strife in the Rakhine state is poverty and the systemic disenfranchisement of the Rohingya,” said Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s top Democrat. He decried accusations from Myanmar’s government that international aid groups have supported Rohingya militants, claims the UN human rights chief has branded “irresponsible.”

Still, US officials past and present remain sympathetic to Suu Kyi. She faces a political dilemma, both in confronting the military and dealing with the turmoil that she inherited from the army-led administration that preceded her. Beyond the latest violence, Rakhine’s 320,000 Rohingya have been targeted in sectarian attacks by hard-line Buddhists for the past five years and live in squalid camps.

“Most of the responsibility for the current situation lies with the previous government,” said Mitchell. “The current government could have done more, but it’s not an easy issue when 90 percent of the people are pushing the other way.”

Burmese policemen look at burnt homes Myo Thu Gyi village near Maungdaw, Rakhine State, Myanmar, on August 31, 2017. (AFP Photo/Stringer)

Myanmar has faced ethnic rebellions in its border regions since winning independence from Britain nearly 70 years ago. Suu Kyi’s government also has struggled to peacefully end rebellions in the northern states of Kachin and Shan, targeted in military operations that have displaced tens of thousands.

While her failure to call out military abuses has damaged her reputation, Suu Kyi, 72, remains popular at home. Journalists have been periodically jailed, and Suu Kyi herself has acquired a reputation for being aloof and controlling of information.

But the country also known as Burma is far more open now than it was before its democratic transition.

Its first free elections in a generation were won by Suu Kyi’s party in 2015. Hundreds of nongovernment groups involved in health, education and development have emerged. Young officials and economists are advocating changes.

Daniel Russel, former top US diplomat for East Asia, said international disenchantment with Myanmar’s civilian leadership would only hurt what he described as a reform process. In Rakhine state, isolating Suu Kyi’s government would “make a difficult situation a lot worse.”

Mitchell’s greatest fear is foreign extremists capitalizing on the turmoil and fanning a worse conflict, giving the military a pretext to assert more control.

“That’s a recipe for ruin,” he said.

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