The Chinese and Russians have put the world on notice. Domestic denial of democracy and human rights is not a threat to international peace and security. So the U.N. Security Council had better stay out of Myanmar.
What business did the United States have pushing through a resolution it knew it couldn’t back up – diplomatically or militarily? John Bolton’s departure as ambassador deprived Washington the ability to even mount an effective rhetorical defense.
For the first time since the 1970s, Beijing and Moscow have forged a front to challenge the United States. They didn’t unite so audaciously before the resolutions preceding the Anglo-American invasion of Iraq four years ago. China, for its part, had begun abstaining from key votes, exhibiting a pragmatism that allowed others to interpret in their own ways. The Russians, never shy about projecting their national interests over international questions, saw the veto as one of the last remaining symbol of their superpower status and were determined to use it.
Why Myanmar?
Ever since the military junta in Yangon invalidated Aung San Suu Kyi’s massive electoral victory and threw her into jail, the world has been able to do little else than stand by. China, a key ally, provided diplomatic cover.
Myanmar’s neighbors in the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, no great models of democracy themselves, were fed up with American lectures on morality. They granted Myanmar membership of the regional organization and cushioned the regime from international pressures.
The Nobel Peace Price didn’t get Suu Kyi anywhere. The vast reserves of natural gas have made the junta the darling of China and India. Had New Delhi gotten that vaunted Security Council privilege, it might have vetoed the U.S. resolution too.
Admittedly, the Russians and Chinese could defend Myanmar so openly because there was little cost in doing so. The United States wasn’t about to severe ties with Moscow or Beijing over that Asian outpost. Nor could Washington be expected to ignore the Security Council and launch a military expedition to turn Myanmar into a beacon of democracy and human rights.
Yet it would be wrong to consider the Sino-Russian alliance as an aberration. The two governments are the staunchest defenders of national sovereignty, for their own reasons. Neither wants U.N. missions in Tibet or Chechnya.
In building this façade of virtue, Beijing and Moscow have read the American public’s mood very well. After the Iraq debacle, democracy and human rights are extremely unlikely to rouse Americans into any form international intervention. Let there be no mistake, this reaffirmation of the sanctity of national sovereignty was carefully planned.
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