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The First Thing the U.S. Should Do In Myanmar

Posted: 02/23/2012 3:39 pm

YANGON, Myanmar--During the years he lived as a child in Indonesia, President Barack Obama learned the culture of Jakarta, spoke the language, survived chicken pox and recalls frequently feeling "the sting of [his] teachers' bamboo switches." As a young military officer training in the United States, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, known as SBY, parachuted out of planes with Fort Benning's storied 82nd Airborne Division and attended the U.S. Army Command and General Staff College. It is an interesting parallel between presidents that each spent formative years in the other's country.

Many have remarked that President Obama's time overseas gave him the gift of a global perspective. What's unfortunate, however, is that SBY's experience is the increasingly rare one for some Southeast Asian nations. At a time when the region is undergoing a potentially seismic shift from military to civilian leadership, well-meaning restrictions on our International Military Education and Training (IMET) program -- which sent SBY and thousands like him to the U.S. -- have prevented us from exposing a new generation of leaders to principles of civilian governance, democratic values and human rights.

Walking these streets today reminds me of the time I spent in Indonesia a decade ago, where I saw IMET-educated officers managing Indonesia's transition from dictatorship to democracy. It's hard not to feel a new energy and sense of possibility here since Myanmar's mostly-democratic elections re-opened it to the world last November. If the upcoming parliamentary elections in April proceed smoothly, the U.S. will likely lift economic sanctions that have been in place for two decades. The very first thing the U.S. should do when easing those sanctions is to bring IMET back to Myanmar and help breathe new life into a society that hasn't experienced rule of law in more than half a century.

Established in 1976 to strengthen ties between the U.S. and foreign militaries, IMET gives promising junior officers from friendly nations the opportunity to study in the U.S., modeling what a vibrant civil-military relationship looks like in a free society. In 1991, Congress expanded IMET to more overtly emphasize human rights promotion, and the program currently provides roughly $100 million in grant aid to over 7,000 students from 130 countries, from Albania to Zambia.

Myanmar is not one of them. Despite rewarding ruthless dictators like Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and AWOL allies such as Pakistan, the U.S. cut off IMET and other aid to Myanmar following the junta's brutal crackdown and refusal to honor the results of the 1990 election.

Before that, thousands of young military leaders traveled back and forth between the U.S. and Myanmar. Within 14 years of achieving its 1948 independence, Myanmar had sent over a thousand officers to the U.S. in the days before IMET. Even after the military coup of 1962 and the ruthless dictatorship of Ne Win, the U.S. maintained aspects of this relationship. In the decade before the U.S. imposed sanctions, 255 Burmese officers graduated from American military training programs -- more than in any other country.

This support provided a promising link between an established democracy and a country wracked by successive coups and anemic economic development. But today's generals were all trained in Burma, and consequently, as Georgetown professor David Steinberg writes, "largely insulated from the outside world."

IMET's absence cuts to the heart of Myanmar's present difficulties. In a country where the military has been called a "state within a state," the insularity of the military will continue to threaten the long-term stability and potential of the nation. Across the army, there isn't an officer under the age of 55 with any memory of what a free society looks like. Until young officers experience for themselves how civil society and rule of law operate, Myanmar will never fulfill its full potential.

There's no question that militaries that have benefitted from IMET have committed reprehensible human rights violations. In a recent review by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, only a third of IMET training programs for relatively "unfree" participant countries emphasized respect for human rights. That is an area that the Departments of State and Defense, which jointly administer IMET, can and must strengthen.

But cutting off IMET entirely weakens the hand of reform. It is a tragic Catch-22 that says, "Until your military is more professional and respectful of human rights, we will not teach your military to be more professional and respectful of human rights." Much as economic engagement very often does more to liberalize a society than absolute economic isolation, IMET's military-to-military engagement provides us far more leverage.

Critics focus on the horror, not the hope. A study from the Center for Civil-Military Relations found that 95 percent of IMET participants reported that they had gained an improved understanding of U.S. systems, while 84 percent said their views of the U.S. had changed, largely for the better. It brings to mind the many young Indonesian officers I met while living through Indonesia's halting but determined evolution who knew there was a better way -- because they had seen it in America.

As Yunus Yosfiah, a former lieutenant general and minister of information fiercely supportive of a free press, said to me at the time, "I first learned about the importance of the First Amendment in the library at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas."

I look forward to the day when Myanmar's military leaders can say the same. President Obama's latest budget includes $27.2 million in aid for Myanmar, with a focus on "strengthening civil society." The best way to accomplish that would be to reestablish IMET, so that officers like his Indonesian presidential counterpart can live and learn in the U.S.

There will always be bad apples, of course, and a single course at Fort Bragg will not change the course of a country overnight. But it would go a long way toward showing other nations that true, lasting power comes not from a bayonet, but from a ballot.

Stanley A. Weiss is Founding Chairman of Business Executives for National Security, a nonpartisan organization based in Washington. The views expressed are his own.

 
YANGON, Myanmar--During the years he lived as a child in Indonesia, President Barack Obama learned the culture of Jakarta, spoke the language, survived chicken pox and recalls frequently feeling "the ...
YANGON, Myanmar--During the years he lived as a child in Indonesia, President Barack Obama learned the culture of Jakarta, spoke the language, survived chicken pox and recalls frequently feeling "the ...
 
 
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studana51
Old and tired
05:34 AM on 02/24/2012
The last thing we need to do is get into bed with another military dictatorship. These guys make enough $$ from the heroin trade, kinda like our great friend Kharzi. Send the money to some teachers in Dayton or train some inner-city kids to be doctors. Stanley you have very bad ideas and it's your kind of thinking that gets us into forever wars. But I guess that's what you had in mind.
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hrpmap
Retired man still active..
03:26 AM on 02/24/2012
End all foreign aid and stay out of other countries business...we are broke so sending anyone money will be borrowed money.
12:29 AM on 02/24/2012
American military hegemony is the problem, not the solution. Why would your instinct be to militarize a country that may be--and I say MAY be--just emerging from decades of oppressive military rule? Because your killers are better than their killers?
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OzzieTonto
“Hatred, the only thing that lasts.”
10:05 PM on 02/23/2012
Outrageous! What about FEEDING the Burmese, enslaved and abused for 40 years?
Mr Weiss, does it not even cross your mind how the exoteric military indoctrination led to the Ne Win dictatorship? Does the eccentric American military mindset totally exclude reality?
Literate people the world over are familiar with America's role in alienating foreign military classes from America's targeted victim countries, so as to encourage them to subdue, exploit and genocide their own peoples, and to identify instead with a foreign power, i.e. America. If you haven't been reading newspapers or books, I recommend you look up the School of the Americas, where foreign police forces were taught 'modern policing', that is counter-terrorist theory and practice - torture, terror and repression.
It's almost impossible to imagine a worse use of $100 million to instill more military madness in a country enslaved by its military for so long. What is the matter with you? Scrap the whole horrible IMET whatever, for heaven's sake - your deficit is calling!
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Hornito
Thoughtful Progressive
01:28 AM on 02/24/2012
Your comment is so intelligent and forthright, I doubt Mr. Weiss can comprehend it. Good job. Thank you....
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BeamMeUpScottie
None of the Above should be on every US ballot.
07:56 PM on 02/23/2012
$27 mil ought to buy a lot of 25 year old scotch for the Burmese generals bunkers.
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tnkeating
Dyslexic agnostic insomniac
07:25 PM on 02/23/2012
Umm, you mean like Noriega, and the likes of Bin Laden who was recruited to help the Afghanis fight the Russians? I was on a San Antonio Air base when a large group of Irainians were training to fly military jets and I can't say very good things about their attitudes and arrogants tword the people that were training them.
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modeforjoe
We had the experience, but we missed the meaning
07:09 PM on 02/23/2012
I think we have had enough with training foreign nationals in military techniques, only to see them return home and crush home grown, indigenous movements.

Our American track record in this area is more than black, more than evil. If you are so concerned w national security, I recommend you use your organization to push back against the unnecessary wars, and to require American corporations to deal fairly with peoples and their environments around the world.
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Captai
Get out while you still can!!
10:16 PM on 02/23/2012
ff
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Mark Knudsen
04:55 PM on 02/23/2012
We don' t seem to be able to save our selves from our selves and were spending a pile. of money to save some one else.....dahhhhh
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Djay0252
17th Airborne..a tribute to my Father
04:36 PM on 02/23/2012
President Obama's latest budget includes $27.2 million in aid for Myanmar, with a focus on "strengthening civil society." ...which means we will have to borrow $27.2 million to give to Myanmar. The first thing the US should do it pay off its debts.
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hrpmap
Retired man still active..
03:29 AM on 02/24/2012
Agreed big time.