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
Epilogue: What to Make of Ne Win?
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
History not Theory.
Patriotism not Internationalism.
Evolution not Revolution.
Direction not Destruction.
Unity not Disruption.
Razumov's Credo in Joseph Conrad's Under Western EyesDespite what is known of his life, in many ways, Ne Win remains an enigma. There is too much unknown to form a rounded and satisfactory understanding of the man. He was a man of his time, and that time is now gone. The issues which inflamed nationalist politicians in Myanmar and other colonies in the 1920s and 1930s are all but forgotten, except by historians. The changing alliances and the violence of war and revolution in the 1940s throughout Europe and Asia are now the romance of movies and historical documentaries. The global Cold War and the anti-colonialist, anti-capitalist rhetoric of Third World leaders of the 1950s and 1960s are now marketed as Che Guevara and Ho Chi Minh T-shirts. The collapse of socialism and Communism is now taught as inevitable by the sons and daughters of the neoclassical economists who developed monetarism and privatization in the 1970s and 1980s. Men and women born in this century will find it hard to understand how once white skin was a necessary badge for admission to the centres of global power and wealth, or that men brought the world to the cusp of nuclear war over ideological shibboleths of Communism and Democratic Capitalism. Even if we knew more about Ne Win, it is doubtful we would know how to understand the world as he and his generation of Myanmar nationalists did.
However, some aspects of his character, purposes and intent do show through his words and actions. Of course, over a lifetime of more than nine decades, his opinions changed as he learned new things, experienced new sensations, and observed the world around him alter, seemingly imperceptively, but cumulatively, significantly. However, like most people, Ne Win was probably not as adaptable to change as he thought he was or perhaps he should have been, particularly towards the end of his political career. He was born in a township in the middle of a province of British India and died in a nation whose government was considered a pariah by the Western governments which had seen him for twenty-six years as a champion of anti-Communism and the nation he governed, the quiet hub around which the international politics of South, Southeast and East Asia's conflicts were waged.
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- Information
- General Ne WinA Political Biography, pp. 541 - 564Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2015