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The Politics of Hypocrisy
The news is no more from Burma. The young monks are quiet in their cells, or they are dead. But words have escaped: the defiant, beautiful poetry of Aung Than and Zeya Aung; and we know of the unbroken will of the journalist U Win Tin, who makes ink out of brick powder on the walls of his prison cell and writes with a pen made from a bamboo mat - at the age of 77. These are the bravest of the brave. What shame they bring to those in the west whose hypocrisy and silence helps to feed the monster that rules Burma.
Condoleezza Rice comes to mind. "The United States," she said, "is determined to keep an international focus on the travesty that is taking place in Burma." What she is less keen to keep a focus on is that the huge American company, Chevron, on whose board of directors she sat, is part of a consortium with the junta and the French company, Total, that operates in Burma's offshore oilfields. The gas from these fields is exported through a pipeline that was built with forced labour and whose construction involved Halliburton, of which Vice-President Cheney was chief executive.
For many years, the Foreign Office in London promoted business as usual in Burma. When I interviewed Aung San Suu Kyi a decade ago I read her a Foreign Office press release that said, "Through commercial contacts with democratic nations such as Britain, the Burmese people will gain experience of democratic principles." She smiled sardonically and said, "Not a bit of it."
In Britain, the official PR line has changed; Burma is a favourite New Labour "cause"; Gordon Brown has written a platitudinous chapter in a book about his admiration of Suu Kyi. On Thursday, he wrote a letter to Pen, waffling about prisoners of conscience, no doubt part of his current empty theme of "returning liberty" when none can be returned without a fight. As for Burma, the essence of Britain's compliance and collusion has not changed. British tour firms - such as Orient Express and Asean Explorer - are able to make a handsome profit on the suffering of the Burmese people. Aquatic, a sort of mini-Halliburton, has its snout in the same trough, together with Rolls-Royce and others that use Burmese teak.
When did Brown or Blair ever use their platforms at the CBI and in the City of London to name and shame those British companies that make money on the back of the Burmese people? When did a British prime minister call for the EU to plug the loopholes of arms supply to Burma. The reason ought to be obvious. The British government is itself one of the world's leading arms suppliers. Next week, the dictator of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah, whose tyranny gorges itself on British arms, will receive a state visit. On Thursday the Brown government approved Washington's latest fabricated prelude to a criminal attack on Iran - as if the horrors of Iraq and Afghanistan were not enough for the "liberal" lionhearts in Downing Street and Whitehall.
And when did a British prime minister call on its ally and client, Israel, to end its long and sinister relationship with the Burmese junta? Or does Israel's immunity and impunity also cover its supply of weapons technology to Burma and its reported training of the junta's most feared internal security thugs? Of course, that is not unusual. The Australian government - so vocal lately in its condemnation of the junta - has not stopped the Australian Federal Police training Burma's internal security forces.
Those who care for freedom in Burma and Iraq and Iran and Saudi Arabia and beyond must not be distracted by the posturing and weasel pronouncements of our leaders, who themselves should be called to account as accomplices. We owe nothing less to Burma's bravest of the brave.
Guardian Unlimited © Guardian News and Media Limited 2007



22 Comments so far
Show AllWhile progressives rhetorically "call all our leaders to account", corporations will place money bets on who will be the next president in the USA, the money will buy the 30-second ads, and we'll get either a Republican who will ignore the Burma problem, or a Democrat who might pay it slightly more attention. Slightly more attention is better than no attention, and a change away from the party of Bush/Cheney/Rice would be welcome.
Democrats won't do anything substantive... it will be more of the same.
Americans and Brits should study the government repression of Burma/Mayamar VERY carefully...because that will be THEIR lot soon enough...stupid sheep
I agree with Canuckchuck, we are on the downhill slide into the shit. My mother was a Canadian, I wish to hell that she'd have stayed in her home country, so that I would now be living up there instead of being committed to being in a country who's government I truly loath.
Veteran '66-68
We Brits and Americans, have such a way of demonising others and not failing to see ourselves as the good guys. We perpetuate the racist nonsense that the bogeyman is black and we must be good because white is emblematic of good.
The meddling and decieit of our respected white rulers is the greatest threat to our liberty and security.
We cannot forever countenance war for oil, but immunity for tyrants because they appear not to threaten other nations. It's false, they do threaten. They threaten to let leaders think we can all be kept as silent workers for the machine.
We should invade and relieve our Brothers and Sisters. Mugabe must go.
Aung San Suu Kyi must be freed.
The arms trade must be made transparent and responsible.
It is time to clean up. Both Morally and literally.
Some interesting research with the power of Google and http://www.govtrack.us/ would be to follow the armaments builders locations, the votes in Congress to fund them and the places they develop, like Connecticut, home to two Dems in the Senate.
No arms, no wars of oppression or their occupational brothers.
Thaddeus,
"like Connecticut, home to two Dems in the Senate."
Lieberman is no longer a Democrat. Not that it makes any difference.
Canuckchuck, you think your government is immune?
Last I heard you had Conservatives up there and they are solidly connected to the Bush crime family.
PS, did you guys find Osama in Afghanistan yet? I here you will be there till 2011, thats the spirit! and nice CBC radio skit you have going "Afganida" ...what is the purpose of that?
John Freeman, I know exactly how you feel. My maternal grandparents were from British Columbia, Canada.
In a world bereft of an institution worthy of respect
I have seen and know of the brotherhood of Burmese Monks
and my soul feels praise.
It is silent as a tomb in Burma. In this age of the internet people need to remember that silence...our silence is the tomb of the Burmese. Make some noise... don't keep silent. Make enough noise to wake the dead... you'll be keeping the Burmese from dying.
It would be nice if someday the USA supported democracy... for a change. If you say there is nothing we can do, you maintain that deadly silence and the generals smile and begin to feel their ease. What they cannot do is smash those outside of Burma who speak out like they did to the monks in Burma. Thus the generals' only real fear is that we outside Burma will not keep silent.
Send an e-mail to your Congressman and to your newspaper or radio/tv station etc.! Think it won't do much? By itself perhaps not but when many say the same thing then that BECOMES the reality and is not dismissed so easily. When many say nothing then that IS the reality that seemingly nobody cares.
Silence is $$$ golden ...for Chevron. Send one to them. Say you'll simply just try to avoid buying gas from a Chevron station. Now a million people saying they are choosing not to patronize a Chevron station until something is done... now why would Chevron care about losing a million customers?
If you tell them you just won't buy their product because you just don't feel like it... without all the screaming hyperbole... they know you mean it. Tell them "I just would rather not aid the junta in Burma and so I'll be buying from the gas staion across the street and not yours. It is not their pipeline. It's nothing personal Chevron. I just would rather not and well there is another gas station ...just across the street."
Our silence is the tomb of the Burmese. Doing something and saying something ...not buying something... is the only thing the generals don't want to hear. That reminds me...I should get some gas for the car. Once a letter is sent to Chevron...each time I get gas from another station besides Chevron's... I am doing something. Hey... I am making some noise... all I had to do was tell them why. They'll see the figures. Figures speak louder than ...silence.
Just as they did (fortunately unsuccessfully) in Nepal last year, the US hypocritically mouths platitudes and introduces meaningless, purely cosmetic sanctions while secretly aiding, abetting and for all we know (as in Nepal) secretly arming the vile dictators.
The governments of the US and Britain are not going to be quite like the government of Burma any time soon. Stop.
Good Article !
It's a pipe dream if you think that Canada's political situation is much better than the U.S., Britain's, or Australia's. We're victims to the same big neo-con boys' global stranglehold -- merely 5 or 10 years behind to our neighbours to the south. We have our own "no-fly list," are in the process of integrating with the US and Mexico with the forthcoming SPP and the Peso-Amero, and we long ago sold out our natural resources for a song thanks to the avaricious, hand-rubbing robber barons who knitted up that clever piece of sheep's wool, NAFTA in smoke-filled back rooms in Washington or New York.
As with Americans who fell for the propoganda about weapons of mass destruction, the Maple Sheeple here are being seduced by the MSM into believing our troops are in Afghanistan on a "rebuilding" mission to hand out chocolate bars, reconstruct huts, and to teach little girls how to sing "We are the World." Our public broadcaster, the CBC (T.V. in particular) is spectacularly complicit in the regaling of this not-so-exotic Arabian Night fairy tale.
I urge Mr. Pilger to investigate Canada's role in Afghanistan as chief cheerleader and bottle-washing accomplice to the NATO and U.S. bloodthirsty grab-for-oil from the Caspian Basin. My God, what deluded Good Little Germans we've become (and undoubtedly have been since the outspoken farmers' backs were broken in the last century). Only now, the chickens are coming home to roost.
Nation Cannibalism. Its the sure sign that a nation has out stripped its own national resources, has squandered its natural inheritance, has let its population blossom on the good times of eating the environmental capital. Nothing but to it to go and start eating another nations capital. All the technological advanced nations do the world cannibalism to some degree. All are complicit. Even resistance to external cannibalism is fortified by local cooperative environmental cannibalism, as expensive nuclear defence is required when the chief cannibal nations are all so armed. So the nuclear club nations are expending enormous resources to fight over the resource rich but defence poor nations, when they (and my country too) should be learning to live within local means. How much national cannibalism do you support?
Corporations are basically in charge; they have corrupted what remains of Democracy in the US with their money's influence. They don't give a damn about the killing that is euphemistically called war, not if there is money to be made (which again buys the political process...).
Our main recourse is to vote with our personal economies. Avoid all that is megacorporate. Remember who enables the rulers of Burma.
Thanks, John Pilger, and also BugsBBunnyIII. silence in the face of evil is also evil
seems like we as a people have a choice. we can either learn to live under a fascist, totalitarian state, or we can begin dealing with the 800 pound gorilla in all our living rooms that is sort of disrupting the quality of life for most of the planet. That gorilla is our corporations and the status they have achieved under the US Constitution. They are treated as living, breathing human beings. While they have all the percs of being treated under the law as people, they have few of the responsibilities and none of the accountability. Their first priority, first and foremost is to make a profit. It that profit comes from the destruction of the environment, and the middle class, that just doesn't register on their bottom lines. Each one of us on whatever level we live can begin by drafting local laws limiting a corporation's right to interfere in and purchase our elections.
Silly people, we do not have a Democracy in the US, we have a mafia. Our main export is thuggery. Greed is the fuel that drives the machinery of state. The Chevron allied regime in Burma is performing exactly as scripted.
Nader2000: We aren't being Burma-fied just yet. However, we are being Thatcherized. The thugs in power are warming their toes in pools of Nazi style control techniques. We are being tasered and beat, and soon we'll be microwaved (See: http://www.raytheon.com/products/silent_guardian/).
No one wants to believe that "it" can happen here. But it is happening, the evidence is all around. Free speech is so threatening that it must be contained in razor-wired "zones", the 4th amendment is no more.
As we tumble down the the precipice of peak oil, you can be sure that the police, military, and militias will have plenty of fuel. Blackwater is just another name for oil.
You know to be fair about all this, in my opinion, if Chevron pulls out, which I think they should do, some other company that does not have the same moral philosophy will just take over their part of the oil and gas operations in Burma. This antiquated notion that the free hand of the market is the best at resolving problems is laughable, the free hand is unrestrained in its greed and drive for profits, and improving shareholder value in their stock. The free hand has failed completely too many times to be trusted or left unrestrained to the degree that it is. There is a scarcity of ethics in how the free hand operates, and it is long overdue that more regulation is imposed upon the markets to operate in a ethically based mode, and not just profits. Some companies do try, and it is awesome, but too many are driven by greed to allow ethics to enter into the equation of how their company operates.
What is the word Western leaders have used in prescribing for Burma? Reconciliation. Reconciliation!?!? Reconcile with the most brutal tyrants imaginable. The word reveals their hypocrisy. They want stability to keep the resources flowing out of that country. These people aren't even members of the same species as those monks and poets. Divorce should be the word. The military junta should divorce itself from Burma and just disappear.