Learning to share: About low hanging fruits
From 3-6 August, I went to
attend a marathon series of workshops and a brainstorming session. Firstly, on
the merging of hither to hostile armed forces and then on the current peace
process.
The following is what I think
will be useful for readers who are concerned with Burma’s peace and prosperity.
As usual, few personal names will be used so the blame, if there is any, falls
only on the writer.
Day One. Wednesday, 3
August 2016.
When the owl says the
crow’s black
The crow finds fault with
the owl’s protruding eyes
(Shan proverb)
The workshop’s title is “Building
Decentralized Security Systems in Myanmar,” a continuation of last month’s
“Merging of Former Adversarial Armed Forces.” The resource person is Steve
Hege, United States Institute of Peace (USIP).
According to USIP website, he
has over 15 years of experience working with the UN, international NGOs, think
tanks and governments on issues related to security sector reform (SSR) and
disarmament, demobilization and reintegration (DDR), among others.
There are both positive and negative
aspects to merging of adversarial forces (as it is with everything elsein this
world), he tells us.
The positive side
1. Difficulty
for the two sides to revert to war
2. No
need to surrender to each other. Both sides continue to be able to defend
themselves
3. Employment
for all combatants
4. Symbolizes
National Reconciliation and (mutual) forgiveness
5. Facilitates
political negotiations
6. Fills
certain gaps in capacity (In Nepal’s case, the armed forces gain terrain skill,
which had come naturally to the Maoist guerrillas)
7. Leads
to greater representation and credibility
8. Better
relations with community
At the same time, there are
negative aspects that have to be dealt with such as:
1. Discord
and rivalries within security services
2. Parallel
chains of command
3. Perception
of marginalization for former non-state actors who have become subordinate to
the army
4. Undermined
professionalism
5. Other
challenges include the government army’s typical reluctance to recognize the
military ranks of its former opponents, their difference in political
ideologies/mindsets, and the former guerrillas attachment to their localities.
(I remember reading in Barbara Tuchman’s March of Folly the British
unwillingness to address the George Washington, the American rebels’
commander-in-chief as ‘General Washington’, calling him instead as ‘Mr
Washington.’)
Luckily,
there are ways to deal with them, such as joint training, joint study tour,
establishing quota for officers training and short time deployment.
Here are some of the input
from the participants:
§ Positive
discrimination for former guerrillas during the mutually agreed transitional
period (For example, high school graduates for Burmans, but middle school graduates
for non Burman cadets)
§ Pre-training
training for former guerrilla officers
§ New
indoctrination (what is derogatorily known as brainwashing) curriculum
Before the day ends, Steve
asks us to do some thinking exercise:
§ What
are Tatmadaw’s core interests?
§ What
are its fears?
§ What
are its ‘low hanging fruits’, which it considers no big deal to offer the EAOs?
So how do the
participants respond to them? But that is for tomorrow.
Tags: Opinion