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Burma Road of WWII Fame Now Brings



Subject: Burma Road of WWII  Fame Now Brings Arms   From China


 Burma Road of WWII  Fame Now Brings Arms   From China

                         Rangoon's Rulers, Shunned in West,
                         Are Buoyed by Asian Neighbors

                         By R. Jeffrey Smith
                         Washington Post Staff Writer
                         Sunday, June 1 1997; Page A20
                         The Washington Post 

                         PYIN-U-LWIN, Burma -- Fifty-seven years ago, the
main road
                         through this small resort town northeast of
Mandalay served as a
                         gateway to the famous Burma Road, a vital supply
line through
                         the jungle for war materiel being shipped north by
the United
                         States and its allies into China for use against
the Japanese.

                         Today, the rutted, two-lane highway is still being
used to
                         transport armaments, but the flow has been reversed:
                         Chinese-made weapons are coming south on Japanese-made
                         trucks at the behest of the military government of
Burma, which
                         uses some of the arms to help keep its restive
citizens under strict
                         control, according to Western officials.

                         Burma's generals became notorious in 1988 for brutally
                         suppressing student protests and in 1990 for
annulling a
                         democratic election won by an opposition party.
Since then they
                         have been able to forge normal economic relations
with few
                         developed nations.

                         "Only the door to China has been open" without
interruption
                         since then, a diplomat said in Rangoon, the
capital. As a result,
                         the government has relied heavily on weaponry
imported from
                         China -- and lately from Russia as well -- to keep
its military
                         forces equipped for offensives against insurgent
ethnic minorities
                         and to preserve domestic order.

                         Buying military equipment from China is only one of
several ways
                         that Burma has been able to evade a Western-led
embargo on
                         trade. Narcotics merchants in China also have
played a helpful
                         role in Burma's continued export of near-record
levels of opium
                         gum for heroin production, and wealthy investors
from a few
                         other Asian nations have been spending just enough
money on
                         new Burmese hotels, real estate, mining and
manufacturing
                         projects to keep the country's economy afloat.

                         The economic or political support Burma gets from other
                         Southeast Asian countries and from China has
"effectively
                         annulled the West's attempt to induce domestic
political change
                         through international pressure," said Muthiah
Alagappa, a
                         Malaysian political scientist and senior fellow at
the East-West
                         Center in Hawaii.

                         Besides providing access to weaponry and economic
breathing
                         room, Burma's China connection also gives it
important refuge
                         from the world's disapproval, according to a
diplomat. "If they
                         keep deepening the relationship, Burma will always
have China
                         to turn to" if needed to veto trade sanctions that
might be sought
                         by the U.N. Security Council, he said.

                         Exact figures on China's military trade with Burma
are elusive.
                         The relationship is not openly discussed here. But
the shipments
                         include hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of
tanks, personnel
                         carriers, rockets, mortars, artillery, assault
rifles, grenade
                         launchers, trucks, attack aircraft and helicopters,
according to a
                         recent analysis by Andrew Selth, an Australian defense
                         intelligence official, with which officials from
two other
                         governments concurred.

                         China also has sold Burma naval vessels, including
some armed
                         with anti-ship cruise missiles, and has trained
Burmese military
                         personnel. Members of the ruling junta signify the
importance
                         they attach to this relationship by making a rare
public
                         appearance each year at the Chinese Embassy's
national day
                         celebration in Rangoon. 

                         Although most artillery and other heavy armaments
have been
                         deployed in rural areas, some of the Chinese-made
tanks and
                         automatic weapons have been used in displays of
force aimed at
                         dissenters in major cities.

                         Western and local sources say some of the Chinese
armaments
                         have entered the country near the town of Mongyu,
then south
                         along the road to Lashio -- a city with more than
50,000 ethnic
                         Chinese -- before passing through the teak forests
and coffee
                         plantations around here to reach Mandalay, Burma's
                         second-largest city.

                         Pyin-U-Lwin is dotted with important military
facilities, including
                         the Defense Services Institute of Technology. 

                         Much of Burma's arms purchases evidently have been
financed
                         by China at discounted interest rates, according to
these sources.
                         But China may also have been paid in valuable
Burmese goods,
                         such as timber, agricultural products, minerals and
gems.

                         The road north to China also is frequently used to
transport
                         opium gum derived from Burmese poppies. Chinese
narcotics
                         merchants then smuggle it elsewhere in the region,
and later ship
                         the resulting heroin to the United States, U.S.
officials say.

                         Some of the drug profits allegedly have been plowed
into
                         commercial investments or been used to help buy
food for troops
                         and import additional weapons. Having been blocked by
                         Washington and its allies from gaining access to
international
                         loans, "the regime is essentially depending on drug
money to get
                         it through" and keep the economy afloat, according
to a longtime
                         foreign observer in Burma. 

                         A recent visitor on a drive along the road near
here saw a
                         handful of green Burmese army trucks dodging
immense potholes
                         on their way south, each packed high with boxes and
crates
                         covered by heavy tarpaulins.

                         The ruling generals in this country control a wide
range of private
                         businesses as well as military forces, so the items
might well have
                         been Chinese-made commercial appliances instead of
                         armaments, and have been destined for the public
marketplace in
                         Mandalay, several Western officials said.

                         The United States, Britain and Germany, which
formerly had
                         equipped much of the Burmese army, imposed an
embargo on
                         military trade with the country beginning in 1988,
after the
                         "retired" military officials that had ruled the
country with an iron
                         fist since 1962 officially stepped aside in favor
of more direct rule
                         by active military personnel.

                         The Clinton administration, citing the forced
closure of all
                         Burmese universities and other Draconian government
measures
                         to stifle dissent, last month expanded controls on
U.S. trade with
                         Burma by barring most new investments by American
firms in
                         commercial and energy projects. It also has lent
rhetorical
                         support to Aung San Suu Kyi, a 1991 Nobel Peace Prize
                         laureate and democracy activist in Burma whom the
regime has
                         barred from making public speeches or meeting with
foreign
                         reporters.

                         But Suu Kyi's calls for worldwide economic
isolation of the
                         country have had no apparent impact on China or
Burma's other
                         Asian neighbors.

                         Singapore is now the leading source of overall
foreign investment
                         in Burma, with Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and
Japan also
                         playing important economic roles here. Officials in
Thailand have
                         been quoted by Thai newspapers as hailing the U.S.
sanctions as
                         a potential boon to that country's own commercial
prospects in
                         Burma.

                         A visiting Singaporean businessman said in an
interview here,
                         "We have a different standard than America does for
human
                         rights and foreign trade. These people are free to
pursue their
                         own work."

                         Western diplomats here say many of Burma's
neighbors are
                         willing to overlook the government's abuses because
they seek
                         access to its cheap labor and abundant natural
resources,
                         including rare hardwoods and some of the world's
finest jade and
                         gems.

                         Thailand, in particular, is said to be worried that
serious political
                         instability in Burma would push refugees across its
border.

                         @CAPTION: The clock tower in Pyin-U-Lwin was a gift
from
                         Queen Victoria during Britain's colonial rule of
Burma. 

                         @CAPTION: Ethnic Chinese take tea at temple in
                         Pyin-U-Lwin, on road to Mandalay from China. The
temple was
                         built by immigrants from Yunnan Province, China.