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
4 - Showing the British Out (September 1945 to December 1947)
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
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.
Attributed to Sun TzuNot surprisingly, war and the threat of war, in all their varieties, punctuated the life of General Ne Win. After all, warfare is the trade of the military. War also creates strange alliances. Alliances of partners who have fundamentally conflicting goals place great strains on the relationships formed. These strains grow out of not only conflicting goals, but contradictory understandings of the history and nature of the societies from which and over which they are contesting, even if they are nominal allies. If the relationship between the Burmese Independence Army and their Japanese mentors deteriorated to disgust and then hatred in less than a year, the British and the Burmese had had thirteen decades to grow to dislike each other by the end of the Second World War. Ne Win, who had started his political career as an acolyte of one of the most radical nationalist leaders of the Dobama Asiayon, had now to serve under, take orders from, and accept the terms of service of the organization he had sworn to remove from his country, the British colonial state and its armed forces. However, conditions change as politics evolve, and while at the beginning of the next phase of Ne Win's career he may have felt he was working with his enemy, by the end he had learned to work with the British and even adopt some of their ways, if unwittingly.
In September 1945, Colonel Ne Win and other officers of the Patriotic Burmese Forces (PBF) were once more rebranded. From being officers of the Minami Kikanof the Japanese Imperial Army, to being officers of the Burma Independence Army (BIA), the Burma Defence Army (BDA), the Burma National Army (BNA), followed by the Patriotic Burmese Forces (PBF), they were sworn in as loyal officers of His Britannic Majesty's Army in Burma. Ne Win was Burma Commission Number Two, with Number One being Bo Let Ya. This was the result of decisions finalized at a conference held at the headquarters of the Supreme Allied Commander, South East Asia, Lord Louis Mountbatten, in Kandy, Ceylon (Sri Lanka), which was, in turn, required as a result of the earlier Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League (AFPFL) resolution at the Naythuyein meeting that Aung San had convened in August.
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- General Ne WinA Political Biography, pp. 81 - 106Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2015