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US triggers sanctions on Myanmar by calling military takeover a coup

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myanmar_military_1137674761.jpg

© Getty Images

BY LAURA KELLY - 02/02/21 11:54 AM EST

The Biden administration declared on Tuesday that the military takeover of the government in Myanmar was a coup, triggering sanctions and a review of U.S. assistance to the country.

President Biden and senior administration officials had earlier condemned the military takeover that occurred Monday morning but refrained from immediately calling it a coup.

A State Department official said the designation was made following a review of Monday's events, when the military in Myanmar instituted a state of emergency and arrested democratically elected officials who were set to open the first parliamentary session following the November election.

The military had called the November elections fraudulent despite local and international observers saying they were largely free and fair.

The arrests on Monday included Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate and leader of the ruling party, the National League for Democracy. President Win Myint was among the other officials apprehended by the military.

The State Department official said Tuesday that the elected government in Myanmar, also referred to as Burma, was deposed in a coup d'état.

“We continue to call on the Burmese military leadership to release them, and other detainees [from] civil society and political leaders immediately and unconditionally,” the official said.

The coup designation triggers certain restrictions on foreign assistance to Myanmar and directs the State Department to initiate a broader review of assistance programs to the country, the official said.

The U.S. lifted a broad set of sanctions against Myanmar in 2016 in support of the government's steps towards democracy, but maintains targeted sanctions against officials found to have engaged in human rights abuses and corruption.

Those officials include senior military commanders like General Min Aung Hlaing, who took over as head of the government with this week's coup. He was blacklisted by the U.S. in 2019, along with three other top military commanders, for his role in the ethnic cleansing of the Muslim-minority Rohingya population in 2017.

Most of the U.S. assistance to Myanmar, an estimated $108.65 million requested for 2021, goes to civil society organizations and humanitarian assistance. The State Department official said that very little of that assistance, “almost none,” goes to the government of Myanmar.

Humanitarian assistance will not be affected by the sanctions, the official added, in particular assistance to support the Rohingya.

The U.S. is has been in contact with allies like Japan and India over the situation in Myanmar as part of its efforts calling for the release of detained government officials, but has not been in direct contact with military leaders in Myanmar.

“We have certainly been in frequent contact with our like-minded allies and partners in the region ... Japan and India,” the official said. “We're having daily, ongoing conversations with them and we certainly appreciate that some other countries have better contact with Burmese military than we do, so we're continuing those conversations.”

 
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myanmar_military_1137674761.jpg

© Getty Images

BY LAURA KELLY - 02/02/21 11:54 AM EST

The Biden administration declared on Tuesday that the military takeover of the government in Myanmar was a coup, triggering sanctions and a review of U.S. assistance to the country.

President Biden and senior administration officials had earlier condemned the military takeover that occurred Monday morning but refrained from immediately calling it a coup.

A State Department official said the designation was made following a review of Monday's events, when the military in Myanmar instituted a state of emergency and arrested democratically elected officials who were set to open the first parliamentary session following the November election.

The military had called the November elections fraudulent despite local and international observers saying they were largely free and fair.

The arrests on Monday included Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel laureate and leader of the ruling party, the National League for Democracy. President Win Myint was among the other officials apprehended by the military.

The State Department official said Tuesday that the elected government in Myanmar, also referred to as Burma, was deposed in a coup d'état.

“We continue to call on the Burmese military leadership to release them, and other detainees [from] civil society and political leaders immediately and unconditionally,” the official said.

The coup designation triggers certain restrictions on foreign assistance to Myanmar and directs the State Department to initiate a broader review of assistance programs to the country, the official said.

The U.S. lifted a broad set of sanctions against Myanmar in 2016 in support of the government's steps towards democracy, but maintains targeted sanctions against officials found to have engaged in human rights abuses and corruption.

Those officials include senior military commanders like General Min Aung Hlaing, who took over as head of the government with this week's coup. He was blacklisted by the U.S. in 2019, along with three other top military commanders, for his role in the ethnic cleansing of the Muslim-minority Rohingya population in 2017.

Most of the U.S. assistance to Myanmar, an estimated $108.65 million requested for 2021, goes to civil society organizations and humanitarian assistance. The State Department official said that very little of that assistance, “almost none,” goes to the government of Myanmar.

Humanitarian assistance will not be affected by the sanctions, the official added, in particular assistance to support the Rohingya.

The U.S. is has been in contact with allies like Japan and India over the situation in Myanmar as part of its efforts calling for the release of detained government officials, but has not been in direct contact with military leaders in Myanmar.

“We have certainly been in frequent contact with our like-minded allies and partners in the region ... Japan and India,” the official said. “We're having daily, ongoing conversations with them and we certainly appreciate that some other countries have better contact with Burmese military than we do, so we're continuing those conversations.”

They dont want China to have a route through Myanmar
 
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And how would this stop that? If anything, this would help China, because China doesn't give a damn about US sanctions.
China doesnt but Burmese do... pressure tactic to stop Myanmar getting more close to China
Didn't they have port access before, though?
See the route in the picture..

 
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China doesnt but Burmese do... pressure tactic to stop Myanmar getting more close to China

See the route in the picture..

I'm telling you right now, that wasn't why these sanctions occurred. If anything, this will just push Burma closer to China.
 
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I'm telling you right now, that wasn't why these sanctions occurred. If anything, this will just push Burma closer to China.

I agree. The IMF gave these people $350 Million in emergency aid. The next day, they stage a coup.

Scummy as all get out.

They'll also try to swindle the Chinese, but that won't be so easy. Someone has to aid the Burmese opposition so this Minh Laing guy gets toppled. This is becoming a liability for the international community.

The US intends a lot of things, but their records for results aren't actually stellar.

The actions they seek through the Japanese and the Indians won't work either, these parties have their own selfish interests in Myanmar.
 
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China doesnt but Burmese do... pressure tactic to stop Myanmar getting more close to China

See the route in the picture..


Great post, thanks for the map.
 
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Now Asian politics has changed.
India and Japan will do nothing.
India is afraid to push Burma to China and India does not want to offend the Association of Southeast Asia.
.Japan is the biggest investor in Myanmar, and it will not give up there.India's foreign minister expressed only concern.Japan's foreign minister wanted the two sides to hold peace talks, and only a junior Japanese defense minister spoke in a private capacity.
ASEAN's politics are based on non-interference in the content of member States.ASEAN's political foundation is not to interfere in the internal affairs of member countries, speaking in one voice, so ASEAN countries will not interfere in Myanmar.ASEAN's political foundation is non-interference in the internal affairs of member countries, to speak in the same caliber, so ASEAN exclusion.

So who is the only person in Asia who is openly opposed to the military regime in Burma? Australia.
The top investors in Myanmar are Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore and China, and none of them will join the sanctions.
The US government is embarrassed in the world of the military coup in Burma, and sanctions are useless.Asia finds no allies in sanctions against Burma
India Expresses 'Deep Concern' on Myanmar Coup
 
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China is observing the situation and is as cool as a cucumber. 8-)

China's foreign policy over the past 50 years has been non-interference in the internal affairs of other countries.China says the same thing about all such matters. For example, India's farmers protest, China has not openly criticized India, which is India's internal affairs.
The Burmese handle their own internal affairs. There is an old Chinese saying that no judge is too good to judge family disputes.Not to mention a country.
India will not do anything, such as the Indian farmers' protests and Kashmir, where Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was previously sanctioned by the United States for similar reasons.
 
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If anything this makes myanmar more dependent on China and military dictatorship paradise since they get to buy more toys to stay in power. No matter what, military wins
 
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the effect will be 0. With China as a neighbour and ally there is nothing more than hot air from the west.
 
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