India seeks closer military ties with Myanma
DW.DE
August 9. 2012
India says it seeks better ties with
Myanmar to get the Burmese army act against the north-east Indian insurgents.
Experts, however, say that India's main aim is to counter China's influence in
the region.
Security analysts say the Indo-Burmese
cooperation is not only aimed at the crackdown on insurgents, but more
significantly, it is part of India's strategy to court Myanmar to counter
China's influence in the region.
Earlier this week, Myanmar's defense chief
General Min Aung Hlaing was on a week-long Indian visit in which he met Indian
Defense Minister A K Antony and other Indian military officials.
Apart from assuring the Burmese general
that India would train the Burmese army, the Indian defense officials also
promised more military aid to Myanmar.
Indo-Burmese military cooperation
Burmese President Thein Sein, who took
office after the military handed over power just over a year ago, has
introduced a series of political reforms, which have led to the European Union,
the United States and other Western governments to lift economic sanctions on
Myanmar.
In 1988, when the Burmese military
junta began its crackdown on the pro-democracy movement in Myanmar, India chose
to support opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. But in 1993, India started
mending relations with the Burmese generals and sought better economic and
military ties with Myanmar.
In 2006, then Indian army vice-chief
Lieutenant General S Pattabhiraman admitted that India was supplying Myanmar
with a host of military hardware including field guns and howitzers. In 2007,
it was reported in the media that Myanmar was seeking extra supply of Indian
field guns, mortars, helicopters, submarines surveillance aircrafts and spare
parts for its fighter planes.
Last year, a north-east India based
Burmese exiled pro-democracy activist said that India was supplying secret arms
consignments to Myanmar since 2003.
For years the US and European Union
sought to isolate the Burmese junta through an arms embargo and economic
sanctions, but India took the opposite path in the hope of getting Myanmar's
rulers to crack down on north-east Indian insurgents hiding in western Myanmar
forests.
Countering China's influence
Traditionally, the Burmese army, which
is known as Tatmadaw, has been dependent on Beijing for military supplies since
1988. China's People's Liberation Army (PLA) has long been assisting the
Burmese army.
Analysts say India is becoming
desperate to counter China's influence in Myanmar.
"In view of Myanmar's aim to
reduce its dependency on China and India's desire to counter-balance China's
influence in Asia, the military friendship between Myanmar and India is
natural," Jacob Zenn, a security analyst with Washington-based Jamestown
Foundation, told DW. "This move would also be welcomed by the West, which,
like India, seeks to contain China's increasing influence in Southeast Asia,"
he added.
Ralph A Cossa, president of the
Honolulu-based Pacific Forum of the Center for Strategic and International
Studies, told DW that India was seeking to provide a counterbalance to the
countries in the region.
"India is becoming more and more
involved in East Asia as a member of the East Asia Summit and the ASEAN
Regional Forum, and is looking to open doors to all southeast Asian countries
to increase its influence and to provide these countries an alternative to
Beijing's might," said Cossa.
"Now that Myanmar seems to be
reforming itself, India's new friendly gestures for Myanmar are unlikely to
draw Western criticism, so it is a smart diplomatic move," he added.
On his part, Udai Bhanu Singh, a
researcher at the Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses in New Delhi told
DW that India had legitimate concerns for the security of its north-eastern
states bordering Myanmar.
"Myanmar is experiencing ethnic
turmoil. India is equally concerned about the Indian insurgents hiding in
Myanmar. It is in this context that one has to look at the renewed military
cooperation between Myanmar and India," said Singh.
Author: Shaikh Azizur Rahman
Editor: Shamil Shams/ Michael Knigge
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