Bush In Bangkok Blasts Burma & China
A billboard, advertising English language lessons, hopes to attract customers who want to understand Americans.
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BANGKOK, Thailand -- U.S. President George W. Bush arrived Wednesday (August 6) to meet a tantrum-prone Thai prime
minister, express America's "opposition to China's detention of political dissidents," and later plot with Burmese to
force regime change in Burma.
Bluntly using Bangkok to blast China -- a very close friend of Thailand -- President Bush plans to say in a major
speech on Thursday (August 7): "America stands in firm opposition to China's detention of political dissidents, human
rights advocates, and religious activists.
"We speak out for a free press, freedom of assembly, and labor rights, not to antagonize China's leaders, but because
trusting its people with greater freedom is the only way for China to develop its full potential.
"And we press for openness and justice not to impose our beliefs, but to allow the Chinese people to express theirs,"
President Bush says in the text of a speech released in advance by the White House.
Washington and Bangkok officially celebrate 175 years of diplomatic relations during the two-day visit by the president
and first lady Laura Bush.
They arrived from South Korea and travel north to the Beijing Olympics when they depart from Bangkok on Thursday
(August 7).
The Bushes were welcomed by Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, winner of a December 2007 election after voters turned
against military leaders who seized power in a bloodless September 2006 coup.
Prime Minister Samak is perceived by many Thais as a staunch, wily, rightwing politician who frequently inflicts verbal
abuse on anyone who crosses him, despite repeated complaints by Thailand's media demanding he curb his tongue.
Mr. Samak's latest outburst erupted in a public market on Sunday (August 3) after he stayed in a public toilet for
about one hour, while journalists waited to ask about his cabinet reshuffle and problem-wracked administration.
"The prime minister was in the toilet, and they were standing in his way, blocking him from exiting," Mr. Samak
complained, referring to himself in third-person while venting his infamous anger.
"Can't I have any privacy? Should I be filmed inside [a toilet] while emptying myself?"
"The prime minister's tantrums make him unfit to serve," an English language newspaper, The Nation, responded in an
editorial on Wednesday (August 6), echoing sentiments expressed elsewhere.
Domestic political wrangles, and Thailand's smoldering border- demarcation feud with Cambodia, have kept many Thais
from focusing on President Bush's visit to this modernizing, Buddhist-majority, Southeast Asian nation.
"I think Bush is a good political leader, he is lively and active, but I don't know much about his policies in Iraq
because that is far away from," a middle-class businesswoman said in an interview.
"I heard many American people don't like Bush, but I just want to see what he is like, and what his personality is,"
she said, hoping to watch him on TV.
On Thursday (August 6), President Bush visits the Mercy Center, a slum-based group of schools, AIDS hospices,
orphanages, and medical clinics in Bangkok run by a high-profile American Catholic priest, Rev. Joe Maier.
Burma's pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, inside her home in Rangoon, Burma, in 1995 where she still languishes
today under house arrest. photo credit: © by Richard S. Ehrlich
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Later that day, President Bush will eat lunch with Burmese "activists" in the U.S. ambassador's stately residence, and
be interviewed there for a radio station which broadcasts into Burma.
Mr. Bush apparently hopes to boost morale among Burmese dissidents who have tried for decades to topple Burma's
military regime.
Washington's aggressive intervention in Burma -- and China -- dates back to the 1950s when U.S. President Eisenhower
reportedly installed thousands of armed Chinese Nationalists in northern Burma, to wage cross-border assaults against
China's communists.
President Bush recently tightened economic sanctions against Burma, an impoverished nation also known as Myanmar.
But Washington allowed a loophole for Chevron Corp. -- the biggest U.S. investor in Burma -- to continue doing business
with the military regime and extract natural gas via Chevron's stake in a Yadana pipeline project.
"If they think they are politicians who really love the nation and the people, they should not call for any economic
sanctions against the nation," Burma's regime said last week in its New Light of Myanmar newspaper.
In a bizarre twist, the regime quoted recently published comments by U.S. Professor Noam Chomsky, "who is held in
highest esteem among the world's live scholars."
"When asked what are the consequences of the enormous U.K. investment in Myanmar, of earlier U.S. weapons sales, of
recent Israeli weapons sales, and of Chevron Oil's continued supply of millions and millions of dollars in oil money, he
[Chomsky] said that the consequences of the U.S.-U.K.-Israeli operations are, of course, to strengthen the Myanmar
government.
"That indicated the policy of 'double face and double tongue'" by America, Britain and Israel, said the paper, which
mirrors the regime's perception.
First lady Laura Bush, meanwhile, was scheduled to travel west to the Thai-Burmese border and meet people working with
Burmese refugees.
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Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist who has reported news from Asia since 1978. He is co-author of "Hello My
Big Big Honey!", a non-fiction book of investigative journalism, and his web page is
http://www.geocities.com/asia_correspondent
ENDS