Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04RANGOON1359
2004-10-19 11:08:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Rangoon
Cable title:  

BURMESE PRIME MINISTER OUSTED? CRESCENDO OF

Tags:  PREL PGOV MOPS PINR BM 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 RANGOON 001359 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/BCLTV; PACOM FOR FPA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/18/2014
TAGS: PREL PGOV MOPS PINR BM
SUBJECT: BURMESE PRIME MINISTER OUSTED? CRESCENDO OF
RUMORS REACHES A FEVERISH PITCH

REF: A. RANGOON 1345

B. RANGOON 1337

Classified By: COM Carmen Martinez for Reasons 1.4 (b,d)
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 RANGOON 001359

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/BCLTV; PACOM FOR FPA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 10/18/2014
TAGS: PREL PGOV MOPS PINR BM
SUBJECT: BURMESE PRIME MINISTER OUSTED? CRESCENDO OF
RUMORS REACHES A FEVERISH PITCH

REF: A. RANGOON 1345

B. RANGOON 1337

Classified By: COM Carmen Martinez for Reasons 1.4 (b,d)

1.(C) Summary: Rangoon is abuzz on October 19 with rumors
that a Burmese regime internal power struggle, pitting Prime
Minister General Khin Nyunt's Military Intelligence (MI)
against the regular military led by Senior General Than Shwe
and Vice Senior General Maung Aye, may have resulted in
significant changes within the ruling junta. According to a
senior diplomatic contact with excellent GOB access, PM Khin
Nyunt "is no longer in his position." Reports are credible
that tensions within the SPDC are serious and competing
economic interests and/or corruption may be at the root of
current internal struggles.


2. (C) As of COB, the streets and sidewalks of Rangoon
bustled with a normal amount of activity and there appears to
be no immediate danger to AmCits or Embassy personnel. We've
seen several truckloads of troops being mustered in downtown
Rangoon (a fairly common sight) and have heard of one
regiment being moved into the capital from an outlying area.
According to a variety of sources, numerous senior MI
officers have been taken in for questioning, and police and
military units have been placed on standby alert. Khin
Nyunt's whereabouts are currently unknown and his office
shelved a meeting scheduled for October 19 with the dean of
the diplomatic corps. His abrupt ouster or detention would
be significant, although we would not expect an immediate
change in current SPDC policies that are aimed at
consolidating power, achieving national unity, suppressing
the democratic opposition, and bolstering legitimacy through
regional support. End Summary.

The Army versus MI?
--------------


3. (C) The long-simmering economic rivalry (refs) between MI
and the rest of the military apparently came to a head
October 18 and 19 in Rangoon with numerous senior MI officers
reportedly being arrested, detained, and/or taken in for
questioning by regular army troops. Some relatively light
troop deployments around Rangoon are about the only outward

indication of anything amiss, although such movements are
quite common in the capital and elsewhere in Burma. We have
heard no reports of violence associated with the rumored
detentions or of any threat to AmCits or U.S. Embassy
personnel.


4. (C) According to Embassy sources, soldiers and police have
been placed on stand-by alert and we observed six or eight
truckloads of soldiers gathering at a muster point in
downtown Rangoon. According to a reliable diplomatic source,
one regiment of troops has been brought into the capital from
a base just north of Rangoon. Some contacts tell us that
cell phone usage was cut for a little over an hour on the
evening of October 18, but we cannot independently verify
that.


5. (C) Some government offices, including the Ministry of
Home Affairs which oversees the Burmese Police, canceled
routine meetings scheduled with diplomats on October 19.
However, the Rangoon international airport, official media,
and commercial sector all functioned normally. Throughout
the day, Rangoon bustled with a routine amount of activity,
including markets, schools, offices, public transportation,
and rush hour commuting.

PM Khin Nyunt,s Fate?
--------------


6. (C) Well-placed sources variously claim that Prime
Minister Khin Nyunt has been detained for questioning, placed
under house arrest, sacked, and/or outright arrested. On
October 18, the Prime Minister reportedly made an official
trip to and from Mandalay (Burma's second largest city) and
was detained or questioned upon his return in the evening.
According to a senior diplomatic contact with excellent GOB
access, the Prime Minister "is no longer in his position."

7. (C) Khin Nyunt's office postponed a meeting previously
scheduled for the early evening of October 19 with the dean
of the diplomatic corps (the Singaporean Ambassador, who
noted that the PM's office was "ambiguous" when advising him
of the postponement). As of COB October 19, the Prime
Minister's actual whereabouts are unknown. Of note, however,
Khin Nyunt and other senior SPDC members are rarely seen
about town, other than via daily official media coverage of
SPDC meetings, inspections, and "delivering of instructions"
to subordinate troops or government entities.

Comment: Opaque and Murky
--------------

8. (C) There are no immediate signs (as of COB Tuesday,
Rangoon time) that a "coup" has taken place. By all accounts
and appearances, the Burmese military junta, the State Peace
and Development Council (SPDC),remains firmly in control and
under the continued leadership of Senior General Than Shwe
and Vice Senior General Maung Aye. Developments within the
13-member SPDC, however, are typically more opaque. We have
no reason to doubt that recent tensions within the military
(reftels) may have, over the past 36 hours, led to the
detention and/or interrogation of senior military officials,
a possible shuffle within the SPDC itself, or even the arrest
and/or ouster of council members.


9. (C) The preponderance of information suggests that PM Khin
Nyunt is either detained or out of a job, although we cannot
verify this with full certainty. Khin Nyunt, an original
member of the military junta that seized power in 1988, is
the SPDC's third highest-ranking official and the regime's
primary liaison with the country's 17 cease-fire groups as
well as with important international partners such as China.
His abrupt ouster or detention would be significant, although
we would not expect an immediate change in current SPDC
policies that are aimed at consolidating power, achieving
national unity, suppressing the democratic opposition, and
bolstering legitimacy through regional support. The
situation may remain murky for the foreseeable future.
Further clarification could come from the SPDC itself in the
form of an official statement, a public appearance by Khin
Nyunt, or the undertaking of planned SPDC activities, such as
the anticipated travel to India of SPDC Chairman Than Shwe
o/a October 24. End Comment.
Martinez