Laos: The New Cold War Battleground You Don’t Know
About
Global Research, February 01, 2016
New Eastern
Outlook 1 February
2016
Region: Asia
Theme: US NATO War Agenda
The “New Cold War” could be a potential description
for the unfolding geopolitical lay of the planet as Russia reemerges as a world
power, and China rises as a new one in the face of a prevailing Wall
Street-Washington-London international order.
The most obvious battlegrounds taking shape in this
“New Cold War” are Ukraine, Syria, and the South China Sea. Perhaps not as
high-profile but no less important are the ongoing conflicts in and around
Libya, the proxy war being waged across Yemen, and America’s enduring
occupation of Afghanistan in Central Asia.
However, there are other struggles taking place that
go virtually unseen by the general public, or are briefly mentioned – out of
context in the news – before being quickly forgotten.
Laos – A Pivotal Battleground
For the Southeast Asian state of Laos, this is not the
first time it has played a pivotal role in the ongoing struggle between East
and West. It was bombed during the Vietnam War by the United States and
according to the UN-funded Washington-based “Legacies of War” organization:
…from 1964 to 1973, the U.S. dropped more than
two million tons of ordnance on Laos during 580,000 bombing missions—equal to a
planeload of bombs every 8 minutes, 24-hours a day, for 9 years – making Laos
the most heavily bombed country per capita in history.
Even as US diplomats find themselves today posing for
photo opportunities in Laos’ capital, Vientiane, nearly 100 people a year are
still killed or injured across the country from unexploded US ordnance.
Today, Laos serves as more than a mere extension of
the Vietnam War’s battlefield and subsequent legacy. Bordering Myanmar, China,
Vietnam, Cambodia, and Thailand, it is a crossroads between much of Southeast
Asia as well as the gateway into East Asia.
Though landlocked, Laos possesses immense hydroelectric
potential – potential that has been incrementally developed through cooperation
with Beijing. Not only do dam projects help manage water resources and provide
electricity for the people of Laos, it has allowed Laos to become an
increasingly important source of alternative energy for its neighbors as well.
In developing Laos’ potential as a gateway between
Southeast Asia and East Asia, China has undertaken or begun planning several
massive infrastructure projects across its territory including highways and
railways. Thailand has also played a role in developing Laos’ infrastructure.
It has invested in a China-Laos-Thailand highway connecting the three nations,
as well as constructed Laos’ first rail station across the border from Nong
Khai, Thailand.
In the capital Vientiane itself, one will find both
Chinese and Thai businesses investing in the city. And because Thailand and
Laos share linguistic similarities, much of the media consumed in the capital
is streaming directly from Thailand.
It would seem then, despite the destruction it
suffered at the hands of the United States decades ago, it is slowly on its way
back up, and thanks to strengthening ties with its neighbors.
America’s Proxy War with China
While called the “Vietnam War,” in reality, Washington’s
war in Vietnam was but a part of a larger proxy war aimed at encircling and
containing China. Exposed in the Pentagon Papers in the
early 1970’s, three important quotes from these papers would reveal this strategy.
It states first that:
…the February decision to bomb North Vietnam and the
July approval of Phase I deployments make sense only if they are in support of
a long-run United States policy to contain China.
It also claims:
China—like Germany in 1917, like Germany in the West
and Japan in the East in the late 30′s, and like the USSR in
1947—looms as a major power
threatening to undercut our importance and effectiveness in the world and, more
remotely but more menacingly, to organize all of Asia against us.
Finally, it outlines the immense regional theater the
US was engaged in against China at the time by stating:
…there are three fronts to a long-run effort to
contain China (realizing that the USSR “contains” China on the north and
northwest): (a) the Japan-Korea front; (b) the India-Pakistan front; and (c)
the Southeast Asia front.
While the US would ultimately lose the Vietnam War and
any chance of using the Vietnamese as a proxy force against Beijing, the long
war against Beijing would continue elsewhere. This includes all of Southeast
Asia today, with US attempts to put in place client regimes in Myanmar
through Aung San Suu
Kyi’s political
front, Anwar
Ibrahim’s in
Malaysia, Thaksin
Shinawatra’s in Thailand,
continued subjugation of the Philippines which had existed as a US territory
for nearly half a century (1898-1946), and of course, through more
subtle political subversion in Vietnam itself.
Target Laos
What will strike any visitor to Laos’ capital of
Vientiane is not just the incremental progress being made by Chinese and Thai
development, or the expansion and evolution of Laos state enterprises, but also
the vast number of Western-funded NGOs present. Besides their numerous offices,
SUVs with NGO logos affixed to the doors, and scheming agents muttering in the
corners of Vientiane’s many cafes, there is no actual evidence of any positive
impact they are making.
The role of these NGOs besides building networks and
cultivating collaborators, is to leverage social and environmental facades to
oppose the construction of infrastructure across the country – especially dams
and transportation projects. The goal is to cut off China and preserve Laos’
natural and human resources for development by Western corporations who, so
far, have been late to the game.
A similar
formula has been used in Myanmar, where NGO opposition to dams in conjunction with
armed groups attacking construction sites helped delay or cancel many projects
that may have transformed Myanmar for the better. The war on Laos has gone from
mass bombing to mass propaganda, with US-backed NGOs coordinating activities
both in Laos and in neighboring countries pressuring the government in
Vientiane to delay or cancel dams that were to be built in cooperation with
Beijing.
Protesters paradoxically claim that the dams will
disrupt both the environment and traditional fishing communities along rivers
downstream from dams. Traditional fishing communities, however, are generally
synonymous with both unsustainable environmental destruction and poverty.
Conversely, environmental impacts by dam construction can be mitigated through
careful planning, while working to lift surrounding communities and the nation
as a whole from poverty through improved infrastructure and cheaper and more
accessible energy.
Protesters are not campaigning for careful planning,
or better oversight of projects, they are campaigning instead for arrested
development for Laos and its people – the sort of campaign only Wall Street and
Washington could benefit from.
Strangling Development
The impact China and Thailand have had on Laos is
self-evident. The roads under ones feet were put there by Chinese construction
firms, power running through the wires fed by dams built by joint Lao-Chinese
ventures, and a burgeoning economy built upon closer cooperation between Laos
and its neighbors, particularly China and Thailand. What the US and those
nations in Southeast Asia it is slowly turning against Beijing have done for
Laos is more difficult to enumerate – perhaps because there is nothing to
enumerate.
A recent article published by The Diplomat titled, “Leadership
Change in Laos: A Shift Away From China?,” attempts to frame recent political developments in
Laos as a potential shift in influence away from Beijing and in favor of
Vietnam as well as the international community (read: the West). In reality,
the author fails categorically to enumerate what influence Vietnam has in Laos
and through which vectors other than speculative political affiliations of
outgoing and incoming politicians in the Laotian government, that influence
moves.
The Diplomat claims:
Analysts said the changes will give Vietnam an edge in
its dealings with Laos. Hanoi has been angered by Thongsing’s plans for massive
dam construction projects across the Mekong River and its tributaries which
scientists say will impact badly on fish production and food security.
“That new slate at the top of the secretive one-party
state are all viewed to be pro-Hanoi while those who are exiting have been
allied with the Chinese,” RFA said in its dispatch.
Speculation is also rife that the Mekong River
Commission (MRC) – which has lost the support of many international donors –
will be forced to relocate out of Laos after claims the government had
abused its base in Vientiane to push for the widely unpopular dam construction
program.
It appears, at least from a Western point of view,
that it is hoped Laos’ government will move away from not only its ties to
China, but away from all development driven by these ties as well.
However unlikely that is to happen, understanding the
role NGOs play in arresting, not catalyzing development, and the role they play
in a wider US strategy to encircle and contain China – at the expense of the
nations it plans on using as proxies to execute containment – is key to
exposing them and flushing them out of Southeast Asia.
China is an immense nation with equally immense
potential. It plans on escaping Western containment policies aimed at it for
over a half century by bringing the rest of Asia up with it as it rises as
incentive for cooperation against containment. To combat this,
the US and its NGOs are determined to cut the ropes China has lowered down to
its neighbors – while providing no viable alternative for Southeast Asia to
hold onto except for domineering “free trade agreements,” entangling and costly
military alliances, and perpetual political meddling within each respective
state.
Considering the lopsided nature of incentives to
cooperate with China versus US attempts to dissuade cooperation, and despite
the wishful thinking exhibited by publications like The Diplomat, it is no
wonder that despite penning a containment policy as early as the 1940’s, the US
has failed to impede China’s progress or effectively create a united front
against China in Southeast Asia.
For readers, the next time anti-dam protests make the
headlines, they will know who is behind them, and why.
Tony Cartalucci, Bangkok-based geopolitical researcher and writer,
especially for the online magazine“New Eastern Outlook”.
The original source of this article is New Eastern
Outlook
Copyright © Tony Cartalucci, New Eastern
Outlook, 2016
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