How to be a patriot and democrat and stay alive within the Burmese military!

23 September 2021
How to be a patriot and democrat and stay alive within the Burmese military!
File) Myanmar government troops board a military helicopter in Muse located in Shan State of Myanmar. Photo: AFP

Tun Myint, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Political Science, Carleton College and James C. Scott a.k.a U Shwe Yoe, Sterling Professor of Political and co-Director of the Agrarian Studies Program. Yale University.

Soldiers in the Burmese military forces (Tatmadaw) face an agonizing dilemma. Most of them know that the generals who staged the coup have betrayed both the Burmese people and their democratic future. They know that the atrocities and repression the ethnic minorities have suffered for more than a half-century is now being experienced by civilians in the Burman heartland. If they follow orders to kill, rob and torture peaceful civilians, then they, too, are complicit in the daily crimes the generals are committing against both their people and against the obligation of the army to defend its people and free institutions.

What to do? Some brave soldiers have defected to the democratic opposition to military dictatorship; the Civil Disobedience Movement (CDM) and to various Peoples Defense Forces (PDF). Over one thousand military personals have joined CDM according to CDM groups. The National Unity Government and Chin National Front have both been promoting such a path by offering a financial reward and safe zones to soldiers who joined CDM. Their acts follow what most Burmese parents have taught them: to be good citizens and to avoid cultivating bad karma for their next lives. For them, it is a moral act not to carry out the orders of top military leaders to arrest, torture, and murder the very public they pledged to protect and serve when they enlisted to be soldiers of the military.

Some have gone into hiding; some have fled to third countries. These are patriotic acts of refusal to participate in crimes against the people. They are not, as the generals would have it, acts of desertion but rather heroic decisions to remain faithful to a free people and the sanctity of democratic choice.

There are two ways to avoid collecting bad karma in the military. The first is, whenever possible, to flee from the military posts and join Civil Disobedience Movement. The second is to find ways to delay or stop military’s leaders’ campaigns to unjustly arrest, torture, and murder civilians. Stopping or minimizing military leaders’ campaign of destruction of life and property is not only a moral act in itself but is also a moral act to not let the military leaders further commit unnecessary destruction and killing of civilians. Deterring someone’s bad deed under the calculus of karma is helping that person. As many Burmese now frame it, getting rid of the military dictatorship is dharma vs. adharma or just vs. unjust. Thus, taking away weapons from madmen who are about to commit atrocities at a different scale not only helps the targeted but also helps those who would commit such heinous acts.

But for many, these choices seem too dangerous. Deserting soldiers might be detected, denounced and then imprisoned or murdered. They have families whose lives and livelihoods will be ruined, brothers or parents also in the military who will be punished. They have families who fear that the education, health care, pensions, property, and standard of living guaranteed to them in the insulated world of the armed forces would leave them destitute and helpless. They dare not take the risk.

Is there anything at all that they can do to avoid being complicit in the violence and repression of their fellow citizens? Is there a way for those who feel trapped in the military to avoid cultivating bad Karma for themselves? Yes, there is! It is to practice a quiet, undeclared, and safer resistance while remaining

in uniform. Such resistance has been practised throughout history whenever ordinary soldiers have found themselves torn between their conscience and their fear of punishment or death, whenever they have found themselves torn between their obligation to their families and their sense of duty to their nation’s citizens. It might be called clandestine, patriotic resistance. It is aimed at avoiding as much violence as possible and impeding, in hundreds of small ways, military plunder, and repression.

Such small acts, seemingly trivial in themselves, can and have added up over time to become something of a vast by a quiet social movement that weakens, by a thousand cuts, the viciousness of the repression. It may take thousands of forms: deliberately aiming weapons to miss hitting protestors; misreading the address or taking the wrong route for an arrest, arriving late for an operation, so the intended victims have a chance to flee, feigning illness, disabling weapons and vehicles, not taking part in military robberies and arson, purposely misunderstanding orders in ways that minimize repression, providing misleading intelligence to save lives, delaying taking calls from their superiors, delaying the response, and so on ad infinitum. In the delta region of South Vietnam for example, there was little bloodshed between the South Vietnamese government troops and the Viet Cong. It is said that they devised a tacit truce: whenever government troops were ordered to conduct an offensive, they made sure the Vet Cong knew in advance so they could temporarily withdraw. In return, the Viet Cong did not directly attack the provincial towns where the government troops were stationed. Peace had been, de facto, declared while a civil war continued on paper.

In life, it is rare to have opportunities to be rewarded and morally respected publicly for underperforming professional responsibilities and duties. For true patriots in the Myanmar military, this rare opportunity presents them not only to save their lives but also to save the lives of others while helping their bosses commit fewer bad-karma ridden deeds.

The resistance to tyranny must always understand that many of their allies, many of their partisans, many of their heroes may wear the uniform of their enemies. Their help and cooperation must be cultivated and cherished. They collectively represent a good karma-seeking, though clandestine, movement for Myanmar’s freedom.