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India and Japan's infiltration into Myanmar
2 O0 G4 I' P. C' W! U% KJapanese leaders openly contacted Myanmar's "ethnic armed groups". In 2013, Abe met with the chairman of the "National United Federal Council" in Tokyo. The Abe government appointed Yohei Sasakawa, chairman of the Japan Foundation, as the "Ambassador for Improving the Welfare of Myanmar's Ethnic Minorities" and "the Japanese government representative for negotiations with relevant governments on Myanmar's national reconciliation", and asked him to contact the Myanmar government and the "ethnic armed groups" on behalf of the Japanese government. In fact, it arranged for Yohei Sasakawa to secretly contact the Myanmar military, leaving a "secret passage" for Japan to facilitate its future operations in Myanmar. The Japanese Foundation invested humanitarian aid funds in the "ethnic armed groups" and continued to intervene in the process by serving as a negotiation observer, using aid funds and projects to "reward" the "ethnic armed groups" that actively negotiated.
9 W( r0 S( l, V y+ `8 f0 UJapan also attaches importance to investing in Myanmar's youth, especially the "youth leaders", hoping to interfere with Myanmar's national politics. The United States launched the "Young Southeast Asian Leaders" project in 2013 to influence the future of the country and region. By the end of 2014, it had reached 10,000 people, with Myanmar being the key country of the project. Among them, Japan's Marubeni Yangon Branch also invested 300,000 US dollars to establish the Marubeni Myanmar Scholarship Fund in Myanmar.
$ C3 t# a* P0 Q2 w; Z9 K8 _2 ERecently, Gautam Mukhopadhya, former Indian ambassador to Myanmar, published a column, believing that the Myanmar military government is already in danger. At the same time, he also revealed that in this case, India will choose to take action in advance and fund the Arakan Army and the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in the north. And the Kachin Independence Army, for Myanmar, is a rebel army. Why does India support a rebel army? A long time ago, India sent representatives to lobby for Myanmar to join the Indian Federation, but was rejected. After Myanmar declared independence, India's founding father Nehru still did not give up and persuaded it to join the Indian Federation again, but still failed. Obviously, India still has a thief in mind. |
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