Online Journal
Front Page 
 
 Donate
 
 Submissions
 
 Announcements
 
 NewsLinks
 
 Special Reports
 
 News Media
 
 Elections & Voting
 
 Health
 
 Religion
 
 Social Security
 
 Analysis
 
 Commentary
 
 Editors' Blog
 
 Reclaiming America
 
 The Splendid Failure of Occupation
 
 The Lighter Side
 
 Reviews
 
 The Mailbag
 
 Online Journal Stores
 Official Merchandise
 Amazon.com
 
 Links
 
 Join Mailing List
Search

Special Reports Last Updated: Sep 28th, 2007 - 01:07:08


International narcotics agenda behind Myanmar instability
By Larry Chin
Online Journal Associate Editor


Sep 28, 2007, 01:05

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

For the past month, the military government of Myanmar has been the focus of increasingly strident demonstrations, resulting in violent military crackdowns in recent days. What must be noted is the Bush administration's open support for the dissidents, in conjunction with growing international (Western) support behind a coup attempt, and the likely parapolitical goals behind this agenda.

The demise of the Golden Triangle: bad for business

According to a report by Thomas Fuller of the International Herald Tribune, the Golden Triangle has, in recent years, lost its prominence as a narco-region. In fact, the legendary Triangle now accounts for as little as 5 percent of world opium supply, according to some estimates. [Notorious Golden Triangle loses sway in opium trade, Thomas Fuller, International Herald Tribune, September 11, 2007]

Not surprisingly, the Golden Crescent and Afghanistan, now under control of the US and its drug-intelligence proxies, are by far and away the world’s number one opium suppliers, as well as the top overall drug producing region, dwarfing Colombia and the Golden Triangle.

In fact, the demise of the Golden Triangle in recent years can be traced to geostrategic developments that run counter to the agenda of international interests whose financial and banking system depends on the multi-billion dollar cash flows of the criminal drug trade.

As noted by Fuller:

1. The United Nations credits Myanmar’s central government for leading opium eradication.

2. Militias with long-standing ties to the heroin business have also pushed eradication.

3. China has played a major role pressing opium growers to eradicate.

4. The Laotian government has led its own opium eradication campaign. Officials see the link between poverty and opium, and the fact that “it is mostly organized crime syndicates that profit.”

These narco-developments, parallel with 1) other financial and political reasons why a new Mynamar government would be preferred; 2) a fragile and teetering world economy facing numerous financial bubbles and insolvency; and 3) continued failure to control either the Middle East or contain the rising political and economic power of China, cast a different light on the sudden burst of interest on the part of the Bush administration to back a coup or regime change in Myanmar.

The Bush administration, the epitome of criminal political power, does not support “human rights.” It will utilize every means, including overt military force, to protect geostrategic interests that depend on the world drug trade.

The revitalization of the Golden Triangle drug trade, and the installation or support for an openly pro-US regime in Myanmar, benefits Western financial interests. Any geostrategic foothold in Southeast Asia also benefits efforts to contain China.

Copyright © 1998-2007 Online Journal
Email Online Journal Editor

Top of Page

Special Reports
Latest Headlines
Israeli gunboats seize Gaza aid ship
$2.775 billion in US aid supports Israeli nuclear weapons program
U.S. supplied Afghan insurgents for ‘Al Qaeda’ in Iraq
NSA’s cyber-security grab is a major expansion of web surveillance
Politicization of FBI continuing under Obama
BRIC & SCO summits: Reinventing the wheel
Twelve angry white people: Jury nullification in a Pennsylvania coal town
Mossad still stalking malls near U.S. military bases
Bush political appointees serving in Obama administration appoint GOP cronies to senior civil service jobs
Cheney tied to cash theft and possible murder in Iraq
The past, present and future of commercial aviation
Down and out in Shah Mansoor
North Korean missiles missing in Africa’s Horn
Israel rejects Obama’s call for freeze on settlements
DOJ moves to reverse AIPAC espionage case guilty plea and jail time
Bilderberger treason goes unpunished!
Now showing: The EDL Security Show
Abu Zubaydah, alleged 'Al Qaeda' mastermind, is a CIA veteran
Super-secret organization remains elusive as ever
Active and retired top military brass met to discuss what really happened on 9/11