by
Joel Barlow.   
     The bulwark of heroin supply originates in places where people
need the income for survival. East of Mandalay in  the  Shan  
State, profits from poppy cultivation and narcotic refining  are
the backbone of resistance to Rangoon's oppressive,  arguably
racist military regime. The armies protecting  production  areas
and trade routes, however, have been more competitive than united
against the junta, the State Law and Order Reclamation  Committee
(SLORC). 
     The SLORC renamed its country Myanmar, supposedly in order  to
display inclusion of the country's many  ethnic  groups.  The
name, like the junta, is a bit questionable.  The name of the
national airline, Myanma, would be better, referring as it  does
to the majority lowland rice cultivators. Preferable  should  be
"Bama," which gives inclusion to all the tribal groups. 
Here is a map of Burma ... provided by our CIA. 
     Nationwide elections in 1990 showed overwhelming support
(outside of Shan State, which voted for Shans) for Daw Aung  San
Suu Kyi, now six years under house arrest.  Her father was
independence hero Aung San, who persuaded independent  ethnic
leaders to accept his negotiation for terms ending  Britain's
colonial rule.  He promised choice for secession, after ten
years, to the Shan and Kachin states, which had never  submitted
to authority from Rangoon. He was assassinated before
independence, however, and his promises were made void.  She  is
English educated, married to an Englishman, and her children  are
in England.  This English influence is of deep concern to
military leaders, the foremost of whom date from the  country's
colonial days. 
     Burma contains perhaps 135 ethnic groups (over twice as  many
as China). Besides the Myanmars or Burmans, there are the  Kachin,
Karenni (Kayan), Karen, Chin, Arakanese, Mon and Shan, for  which
states have been named, other tribes of some relation to one  of
them, and tribes of Mongoloid origin, including Mizo, Lahu,
Palaung, Naga and Wa.  Most of these have their own ethnic
independence armies; additionally there are descendent  remnants
of the Kuomintang Chinese (KMT), the now mostly defunct  Burmese
Communist Party, an All-Burma Students Democratic Front,  and
totally mercantile opium-trade protection organizations and  small
groups of armed bandits, of which in the last few decades  there
have been several hundred. The total of ethnic  or  ideological
rebel armies once exceeded 26, but 14 of the remaining have  now
agreed to a cease-fire with the government, in hopes of
development help. Non-governmental armed, trained,  organized  and
active forces are estimated from approximately 75,000 to  above
125,000 (some merely boys); figures quoted for insurgent  fighters
are much lower as these do not include the opium armies.  In  the
SLORC's army of almost 300,000, the Tatmadaw (pronounced  Tah-mah-
doe), moral is not high, especially as there is little if any
civilian support (except from many families dependent on army
money). If the insurgent armies would unite, overthrow  of  the
SLORC could happen. Variant politics, however, along  with  lack
of geographic commonalty, historic animosities, communication
difficulties, religious differences, and conflicting financial
support bases make this very unlikely. For  example,  in  addition
to entrenched and opposed Buddhists, Moslems, and Christians,
there are animistic and charismatic cults, and many strong  clan
rivalries. Most Karen and Mon are decidedly  anti-narcotic,  but
also competitive, even sometimes combative, with each  other,  and
sometimes even internally, as seems to have been the case with
the recent fall of the Karen headquarters at Mannerplaw, due  at
least in part to Buddhist soldiers' dissatisfaction with their
Christian leadership.
 
     The largest insurgent forces in Burma, the Mong Tai Army
(MTA), also referred to as the Shan United Army (SUA) (since
recent Khmer Rouge defections it is the largest insurgent army in
Southeast Asia) is headed by Zao Khunsa (referred to in media
usually as Khun Sa, originally named Chan Cheefu or Zhang  Qifu,
and heriditary Loimaw headman). He is on America's  "Most  Wanted"
list, although he has never set foot on American soil.  A
Brooklyn, New York court indicted him on heroin trafficking
(narcotics racketeering) charges. He is a charismatic  leader  and
protector to millions in Shan State. For almost  twenty  years  he
has offered to eradicate Shan opium/heroin supply in return  for
such security and stability, for his people, that at present  only
narcotics trade efficiently supplies. The price for  this  is  but
a tiny fraction of the "street value" of the product, or  American
tax dollars spent in response to the narcotics problem (on
surveillance, interdiction, incarceration, rehabilitation,
hospitalization, etc).  But such requests for help with crop
substitution, schools, hospitals, and some  infrastructuring  have
prompted little response.
 
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