Why are Myanmar ‘realists’ desperate for compromise?

Posted By : Telegraf
9 Min Read

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Bill Hayton, associate fellow with the Asia-Pacific Program at Chatham House, has earned some flak over his argument that the international community should simply accept the Myanmar junta’s coup as legitimate and allow it to prepare for fresh elections, even if, expectantly, that outcome sets back democratic progress by decades.

Writing in early March in Nikkei Asia, he argued: “The time for hard choices is now, before more blood flows in the streets and the country enters another dark decade. The international community must open avenues for dialogue to achieve difficult compromises.” 

His claim is encapsulated thusly: “Could something be done now to persuade the military leadership to step back and revert to its still powerful background role? This could only happen if it is reassured that its political position is safe. It is vital that Myanmar’s neighbors and its friends around the world rapidly engage with the military leadership. Some will find the discussions distasteful, but the alternatives are worse.”

Joining him – non-figuratively when they both talked on the Asia Matters Podcast last week – is Bilahari Kausikan, a Singaporean academic and retired diplomat, who treated us to his five apparent “hard truths” about the Myanmar crisis, published in an article on April 2.

Kausikan’s similar argument is that the international community’s goal “should be restoration of some form or semblance of civilian and constitutional rule. This is not the same thing as the restoration of ‘democracy.’” 

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