Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Formative Years (July 1910 to December 1941)
- 3 The BIA and the Resistance (January 1942 to August 1945)
- 4 Showing the British Out (September 1945 to December 1947)
- 5 Independence and Civil War (January 1948 to September 1950)
- 6 Relaxing and Rebuilding (October 1950 to March 1958)
- 7 Rehearsing and Reviewing (April 1958 to February 1962)
- 8 Coup d'Etat and Revolution (March 1962 to February 1964)
- 9 Cold War General (March 1964 to February 1967)
- 10 Preparation for Transition (March 1967 to February 1972)
- 11 Transition and Small Change (March 1972 to February 1978)
- 12 Purifying the Sangha, Unifying the Nation, and Maintaining Genuine Neutrality (March 1978 to February 1988)
- 13 Failure and Farewell (March 1988 to December 2002)
- Epilogue: What to Make of Ne Win?
- Appendix: Radio Address by Colonel Naywin (7–5–45), to the People of Burma
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
6 - Relaxing and Rebuilding (October 1950 to March 1958)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction
- 2 The Formative Years (July 1910 to December 1941)
- 3 The BIA and the Resistance (January 1942 to August 1945)
- 4 Showing the British Out (September 1945 to December 1947)
- 5 Independence and Civil War (January 1948 to September 1950)
- 6 Relaxing and Rebuilding (October 1950 to March 1958)
- 7 Rehearsing and Reviewing (April 1958 to February 1962)
- 8 Coup d'Etat and Revolution (March 1962 to February 1964)
- 9 Cold War General (March 1964 to February 1967)
- 10 Preparation for Transition (March 1967 to February 1972)
- 11 Transition and Small Change (March 1972 to February 1978)
- 12 Purifying the Sangha, Unifying the Nation, and Maintaining Genuine Neutrality (March 1978 to February 1988)
- 13 Failure and Farewell (March 1988 to December 2002)
- Epilogue: What to Make of Ne Win?
- Appendix: Radio Address by Colonel Naywin (7–5–45), to the People of Burma
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
Summary
When the enemy is close to your troops and each side does not know the combat efficiency of the other, you must guard against the inclination to fight the enemy who may lure your troops from the jungle before you are prepared.
Letwetthondra, VyuuacakkiAs Ne Win entered his 41st year, he might well have felt that he had done his share of creating and defending Myanmar as an independent state. During the previous decade, he had been part of six organizations and re-organizations of Myanmar's first army since 1885. He had climbed up and been lowered down the chain of command of armies led by Japanese, Burmese, British, and again Burmese officers. Always playing a leading role, whatever his rank, he rose to the pinnacle of military power and had political power within his grasp, but had refused to keep it. Seen by many as the “virtual dictator” of those parts of the country where the government's writ ran,1 rather than grab for power, he eased back and for the next eight years reverted to a man many people remember from his life in Yangon during and after his stint at Yangon University, a rather shiftless, easygoing playboy, intent on rather selfish and hedonistic pursuits, with little ambition and less energy for the details of government.
During the next eight years, he married, for the third time, the woman with whom he is most remembered in Myanmar and who bore him three children who were closest to him. To the extent that Ne Win had a normal domestic life, it was during this period. He travelled the world for business and pleasure, playing golf in Scotland, lunching with prime ministers and heads of state, taking what were in effect extensive holidays abroad, as well as visiting foreign military bases and holding high-level strategic and political discussions with governments of every political stripe, capitalist republics, Communist one-party regimes, and the mixed bag that came to be known as the Third World, of which Myanmar was a part. He clearly mellowed during these years and the intensity which had driven him in the 1940s, and especially during the height of the civil war, was gone, for a man taking a more measured view of matters, even a degree of detachment.
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- Information
- General Ne WinA Political Biography, pp. 159 - 206Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2015