缅甸:庇护政权下的军民关系

Marco Bünte
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引用次数: 1

摘要

缅甸是世界上统治时间最长的军事政权之一。缅甸武装部队直接或间接地统治了50多年,已经能够渗透到该国的主要政治机构、经济和社会中。缅甸是研究过去七十年来军民关系发展轨迹的一个极具启发性的案例。缅甸直到2011年才结束了军方的直接统治,当时军方已经成为社会上最强大的机构,严重削弱了反对党政党,吸纳了几个少数民族武装团体,并建立了一个商业帝国,使其能够保持经济独立。在2003年宣布了“纪律和繁荣民主”的路线图,2008年颁布了新宪法,2010年举行了(严格照本宣科的)选举之后,2011年建立的新保护国政权允许民选政治家和军方在10年内分享一定程度的权力。虽然经济、金融和社会领域的决策转交给民选政府,但军方仍然牢牢控制着外部和内部安全,并继续完全自主地管理自己的事务。作为一种否决权,军方还能够保护其特权不受强势地位的影响。尽管在政府中占据主导地位,但文武关系仍然充满敌意,并导致了2021年2月的政变。由于平民摧毁了军方为保护其在庇护政权内的核心利益而设置的护栏,军方越来越感到受到威胁和羞辱。军方也感到越来越疏远,因为军方建立的政党在选举中一再失败。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Myanmar: Civil–Military Relations in a Tutelary Regime
Myanmar has had one of the longest ruling military regimes in the world. Ruling directly or indirectly for more than five decades, Myanmar’s armed forces have been able to permeate the country’s main political institutions, its economy, and its society. Myanmar is a highly revealing case study for examining the trajectory of civil–military relations over the past seven decades. Myanmar ended direct military rule only in 2011 after the military had become the most powerful institution in society, weakened the political party opposition severely, coopted several ethnic armed groups, and built up a business empire that allowed it to remain financially independent. The new tutelary regime—established in 2011 after proclaiming a roadmap to “discipline flourishing democracy” in 2003, promulgating a new constitution in 2008, and holding (heavily scripted) elections in 2010—allowed a degree of power-sharing between elected civilian politicians and the military for a decade. Although policymaking in economic, financial, and social arenas was transferred to the elected government, the military remained in firm control of external and internal security and continued to be completely autonomous in the management of its own affairs. As a veto power, the military was also able to protect its prerogatives from a position of strength. Despite this dominant position in the government, civil–military relations were hostile and led to a coup in February 2021. The military felt increasingly threatened and humiliated as civilians destroyed the guardrails it had put in place to protect its core interests within the tutelary regime. The military also felt increasingly alienated as the party the military had established repeatedly failed to perform in the elections.
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