Friday, October 02, 2009

Policy Advice for Addressing the Myanmar Nuclear Issue

PacNet #66 – Thursday, Oct. 1, 2009

by Mark Fitzpatrick

Comment: Myanmar's secretive project for nuclear proliferation, if it was true, it tests the inability of Asean again. This association cannot handle with junta administration of Myanmar as well as their nuclear proliferation initiative. However, Myanmar has developed its national interests far beyond Cambodia. When Asean cannot stop Thailand from trespassing into Cambodia's territory land, Cambodia has to plan nuclear energy, nuclear reactor that can possibly build nuclear weapons to protect itself from Vietnam and Thailand in the future. Is this vision beyond Hun Sen's administration? Or Hun Sen's administration is good only in propaganda with foreign invaders as well as gunless SRP?

Mark Fitzpatrick (Fitzpatrick@iiss.org) is director of the Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Program at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, and editor of Preventing Nuclear Dangers in Southeast Asia (London: IISS, 28 Sept. 28, 2009), from which this article is taken.


As the nuclear renaissance comes to Southeast Asia, the countries of the region face an important turning point. Decisions taken today will help determine whether nuclear energy will play a positive role in their economic development or whether a shadow of nuclear danger will accompany the benefits of this energy source. There are worries about nuclear safety, the opacity about Myanmar’s nuclear plans and its growing connections with North Korea, and the extent to which vulnerabilities in national trade controls have been exploited by outside states and non-state actors. ASEAN states have an opportunity to reinforce global standards aimed at minimizing the safety, security, and proliferation risks of nuclear energy. With ASEAN’s tradition of cooperation, the region’s relatively benign strategic environment and the nonproliferation norm epitomized in the Southeast Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty (Bangkok Treaty), the region can develop strengthened arrangements for safe and secure nuclear energy that can be a model for others. ASEAN states have an opportunity to reinforce global standards aimed at minimizing the safety, security, and proliferation risks of nuclear energy. With ASEAN’s tradition of cooperation, the region’s relatively benign strategic environment and the nonproliferation norm epitomized in the Southeast Asian Nuclear-Weapon-Free Zone Treaty (Bangkok Treaty), the region can develop strengthened arrangements for safe and secure nuclear energy that can be a model for others. For Myanmar, three recommendations should be considered.


Keep close watch

The Bangkok Treaty requirement for members to share information about nuclear-development plans is nowhere more important than with Myanmar. Elsewhere in Southeast Asia, concerns about nuclear projects are focused on safety and security issues. Those concerns are relevant to Myanmar as well. However, the prospect of that country having an interest in nuclear weapons causes the most concern. Although reports of a North Korea nuclear link are unconfirmed, Myanmar’s relationship with Pyongyang, the leadership’s secretive nature, paranoid perspective, and disregard for international norms along with the North’s record of onward proliferation are ample reason for others to be closely attentive.


Insist on openness

Myanmar can help address these concerns by adopting international standards of nuclear transparency. This means accepting and fully implementing the IAEA Additional Protocol and amending the Small Quantities Protocol (SQP) to Myanmar’s safeguards agreement. Myanmar currently adheres to an old version of the SQP, which holds in abeyance most of operative provisions of the IAEA’s verification tools.The country’s neighbors should encourage this transparency, and those that also have the outdated SQP (Brunei, Cambodia, and Laos) should follow the lead of Singapore and adopt the September 2005 version of this protocol promulgated by the IAEA to close the loophole. Although the Myanmar government has not shown itself to be susceptible to external pressure in its treatment of domestic opposition, it does care about its international reputation and may be more amenable to persuasion in selective cases, as demonstrated by its apparent agreement to adhere to UN Security Council resolution 1874 banning arms exports from North Korea. Fellow ASEAN members may wish to consider invoking the Bangkok Treaty Article 13 provision to request a fact-finding mission to Myanmar to clarify some of the questions that have been raised. Myanmar should also allow the IAEA to investigate credible reports of clandestine nuclear cooperation with other countries. Other states should be willing to share with the IAEA any intelligence information about such reports, so that the agency has good grounds for conducting an investigation. Myanmar’s nuclear cooperation with Russia is not itself of proliferation concern, given the plutonium-production limitations of the planned 10MWt reactor. The possibility cannot be dismissed, however, of Myanmar having a hidden nuclear agenda. National pride is the most logical explanation for why such an impoverished country would seek such a high-tech facility, but it is conceivable that secondary motivations might include providing a cover for a parallel military nuclear effort or as a step in a program to build up a cadre of technical expertise that might be used for weapons-related work. Myanmar is aware of what North Korea accomplished in the nuclear field after starting in the early 1960s with a small research reactor. It would behoove Russia to insist on full transparency – as well as strict adherence to international safety conventions – before a final contract is agreed. Russia and Myanmar should also share with the IAEA details of discussions on site selection and provide design information before any construction begins on the reactor.


Begin contingency planning

If concerns are borne out and it is discovered that Myanmar is, in fact, engaged in secretive nuclear cooperation with North Korea or any other country or non-state actor, ASEAN and the SEANWFZ will be put to the test. If Myanmar were to pursue nuclear weapons, the Association as it stands today and its dispute-resolution mechanisms alone would not be able to dissuade Myanmar from that path.Prudent planning for such a contingency could lead ASEAN members to take steps now to improve these mechanisms, starting with enforcing the information-sharing requirements of the Bangkok Treaty. Meanwhile, India and Myanmar’s other closest neighbors along with outside powers with regional interests may wish to consider sharing analysis of Myanmar’s nuclear intentions.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Cambodian must learn or adopt some kind of self defenses just like Israel that has had living and surrounding by Arab (enemies) for so many years. They learn how to rely on themselves.

We must invent something for our own.
I must encourage HUN SEN just to collect or gather all educated Khmer to team up with development and research.

That is the only way to put up these ambitious neighbors.

We must send all the team to learn it either from China or North Korea.

Khmer Intellectual,

Anonymous said...

Ah Hun Sen is NOT smart ENOUGH to come up with such a scientific mechanism defense....an ass hole, STUPID MOTHER FUCKER, AH HUN SEN CAN ONLY EXPLODE HIS SPERM BANK IN THE VIET. CONG PU..SS..Y! and barks like a Viet. Cong bull dog. Burn in hell..MF.

Anonymous said...

i know, cambodia should invite israel to come teach khmer people how to defend our country from siem and youn historical, greedy enemies of the khmer people, really.

by the way, the person on 1:57 am is a drug head who can't seem to talk nice to anyone for his/her tone of voice deserves a slap in the face, really. we understand he/she hates youn, of course, i do too, but common, be civilized for a change in their dealing with others. then they wonder why cambodia is hard on people like them. talk about an extremist? by the way, if he/she talk like this to youn and siem, we don't care, but to our own khmer people, it is questionable to his/her educationl level, really. wake up, people. be smarter for a change, really!

Anonymous said...

6:07 am, you sound like a smart stinggy ass...Clean your own stinggy ass first before you clean mine. I don't need to talk nice nor do I need to respect ah Hun Sen, ah Sihanouk, and/or any other Cambodian useless leaders.

Judging from the way you wrote! I give your credits from graduating from a community college with C-!

Education does not have anything to do with choice of words and/or preferences Dumb ass! what a fool!

Anonymous said...

Oh, by the way.., 6:07am, just so you know that my comments are NOT directing at people who wrote comments here..except someone like you who decided to be a smart ass and took a shot at me...then the reciprocity will be disappointed on your ass...fool! you want to be civilized...don't take a shot at people who NEVER made any comments about you...otherwise, you are at peril...! Once again, eudcational level does not have anything to do with choice of words....it is a preferences in which I decided to use. It is my personal choice of word to dash at ah Hun Sen, ah Sihanouk, and other incompetent Khmer leaders....

Anonymous said...

Please try to use constructive criticism to improve the quality of lives for all individuals, like all for one and one for all and try not to focus on personal conflicts level OK! e.g, if you hate Hun Sen, then you need to say, I believe Hun Sen is not a capable Prime minister and he needs to step down and let other do the jobs because he fails in this area e.g no extra roads, schools, hospital in place yet......or if you like Hun Sen, this is what you need to say, I believe Hun Sen is an exceptional Prime Minister because he has proven in this area e.g. he had placed this infrastructures such roads schools or hospital or his regime is less dramatic than Pol Pot regime, people are happier now than before..dadada.Finally, please try to respect each other's opinion by giving each other constrictive criticism e.g. where do you get that information from? prove it? etc. No need to swear or we will be judged by other races like we are a bunch of "crazy people" in which we are not, accept we are yet knowing how to use the words and language properly. Finally,thanks bro/sis, all the best my friends, cheers, smile. Aust

Anonymous said...

Cambodian leaders don't need to reinvent the wheel to come up with something to protect their country...What Cambodian leaders have to do now is to choose if they want to go nuclear or not! If they want to go nuclear and just go with the program!!!!!!!!!!