STAFF NOTES: EAST ASIA

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
S
Document Page Count: 
20
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
June 21, 2005
Sequence Number: 
1
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
January 13, 1975
Content Type: 
REPORT
File: 
AttachmentSize
PDF icon CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7.pdf651.53 KB
Body: 
25X1 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 :CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R0003001100 1-7 secret "-V ?rArro or 0 / East Asia Secret 1O 25X1 January 13, 1975 No. 0056/75 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/1111 IK-P W'86T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 January 1 3 ; 1975 SOUTHEAST ASIA Indonesia-USSR: Warming Trend . . . 1 The Thai Student Movement--A Current Assessment . . 3 . . . . . . . . . . Burma: Government Under Fire . . . . . . . . 6 Malacca Strait Oil Spill Reopens Controversies . . . . . . . 11 Malaysia: Insurgent Squabbling . . . . . . . 13 25X1 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 :t .191,q,4 fpt16T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 War:ni.nc 't' rend F0re.1.gn P1 i n:i s ter Adam P1a 1.1k success Cu 1 vi.:;.i. L to Moscow in I ato Uccatnbcr J.'VociucOd no :;urpri :; e:; but did provide furt?hor evi.clonco that Moscow- Jakar La relation:; are imi>r.oy.inci. r_ trip Capped year o i Lcac i .y increasing contact:; bctwoen the two governments. A lone-delayed trade agreement, which the Sov i.e t:, had sought for several. year,,;, was signed in March. Jakarta has now agreed to let the Soviets begin construction of their large now embassy building, first agreed to by Sukarno but in limbo since 1965. Exchanges of official visitors also increased markedly in 1974, even though Jakarta remains cool to Soviet desires for cultural exchanges and other nonofficial visits. During Malik's trip, he signed a general economic and technical cooperation agreement with Moscow. 't'he agreement does not specify the amount of credits the Soviets wi1.1 provide nor the proj- ects to be assisted; details will be negotiated later. Indonesia is interested in projects that will not require large numbers of Soviet technicians, whom Jakarta views as potential. subversives. Mos- cow, however, favors sonic sort of large showy proj- ect that would provide maximum publicity for its new friendliness with Jakarta. Agreement was also reached for a visit to Indonesia during 1975 by Soviet Foreign Minister Gromyko. Seeking better ties with the Soviet Union is part of a general Indonesian effort to improve re- lations with European Communist states--a con- scious policy decision made in 1973 to end almost eight years of frosty relations caused by the ag- gressively anti-Communist outlook of Suharto and January 13, 1975 SE CREI Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Iti;'I Lary co I le"(11le :. Du.rinq hi:; recent travels, for exelmJ)le, Mr.l].i.N: al. ,o v.it;i.t:.e%l J.:-,t e;ernlnny and 11Un,Ja1.'y, where he n.LCJncCi 1:rack a(J1-comC`.nL:;. till:licY. the year, Jakar(:a ,;idneci ac;reenlent:, wiL?h Yu(jo- :~li"V.i.a, 170111ani;l, and l'olan(d. In addition to the Lr lde pact., I ndono::;Ia has disco;;coed the prospects economic and Lechnlccl 1. assis Lance from these :i i 'at Cs, . 25X1 The warming trend is thus partly a re-.turn fi:C) Jakarta's traditional nonaligned foreign policy t.nat prevailed until 1965. Uut the decision also stems rom Indonesia's perception of a changing world situ- .3,tion. Jakarta', leaders have noted the more moderate foreign policy of the Soviet Union in its relations with Western states. They also see a need to balance growing Chinese influence in Southeast Asia. In prac- tical terms, moreover, they want to explore new sources of credit in the expectation that Indonesia's existing aid donors will begin reducing their com- mitments. More solvent financially as a result of the recent dramatic price increases in oil and other export products, Indonesia can now accept Soviet credit terms, which are stiffer than those January 13, 1975 -2- Approved For Release 2005/07/0 '~&AZRIJ'P86T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/07/01,FI~q rj Pf6T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 The Tllat student rlicvem}.'nF_ on tl.~t ..I.:,ccndancy throughout 1972 and into late 0 *13, gja ned a.nr.stant wor Ldwide notoriety wa.t.h the 1:.111 Jt the military regime in October. 1973 AL That time, stu- dent power and i.nfluence Wa::?, at. Lto zenith and many Thai observers belicvac: r.naat the, once apo! i tical students represented a now ant important addition to the Thai pol i tlcal. equation . This assc5:;rnent proved generally accuratr_ during much of 1.974. Pr. j. me Minister. Sanya Thamma:;ak, appointed to head an interim government and unsure of his public mandate, turned often to the student leadership in the early months of his adrnini.` trat: ion before making important policy de- cisions Today, student leaders are largely ignored by the government, reflecting the precipitous decline in public support for the student movement in genera.. There can be little doubt that the uni.versity- based Nat.ion:al Student Center of Thailand, which pro- vided the crucial organizational backbone to the stu- dent movement in its formative years, has fallen on hard times. The group's executive committee, which once provided the leadership that brought thousands into the streets, is so rent with ideological and factional rivalries that it has been unable to choose a secretary general since last August. Moreover, although on-again off-again elections to choose a secretary general are now set for January 12, no candidates are as yet registered for the contest- Equally humiliating to the once proud organization was the discovery last month that the chief of its financial department had embezzled scree $28,000 The revelation received headline Treatment in the Bangkok press, which has become ir~_-Leastngly critical of the student movement. January 13, 1975 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/01 i .f TPp6T00608R000300110001-7 'IThe rea:ion for the doe I itie in 1:11df!nt. .1 of 111- o11cC qon'"- 11I11.:11 decpur than tina11eial r;cand:.l) n ilnd inter.ll:!cine st:rugaler; wi.t.1ii.n the Nat.i.onal S'Ludent Cent:er. Simply put., the studontr; lo""t- Widespread public Sympathy for the.i r cause once it. became ap- parent. that they could ot:fer no mcaningfu1 alter.na- Live to the old political order. they helped bring down. The 'Phoi people had Looked to the un.i.veri~i.t j students ?ind their academic mentors to provide some direction in a country shorn of political leadership; instead, they got more student domonstrati.ons, some of them turning violent and others serving to keep Bangkok in a state of tension during much of 1974. Student activists, such as Thirayut I3unmi and Seksan Prasertkun, found it easier and more fulfilling emo- tionally to organize new street demonstrations than to work with the new S anya government to ensure an orderly transition to civilian rule. The public, moreover, .`.ailed to perceive any distinction between the activism of university stu- dents and the lawlessness of various youth gangs, including vocational. students. Thus, the public and press looked upon university-sponsored demonstrations --such as those protesting the visit of Prime Minister Tanaka, the US military presence, and the Sanya gov- ernment's new constitution--as n1.:nifestations of a broade- breakdown in hubl'.c order. The leftward drift of the student leadership also contributed significantly to the decline of the movement. As the public became increasingly irritated with the ,tudents' protests, their leaders became in- creasingly radical in their political viewpoint. In public rallies, student leaders attacked Thailand's close relationship with the US, the military's role in politics, and the conservative elite's stranglehold over the power structure. In private, activists such as Thirayut criticized the monarchy and called for the January 13, 1975 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 Approved For Release 2005/07/FIR-f 9P86T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 While the student movement is clearly in a state of disarray, it is still capable of being a ma- jor disruptive force Former prime minister Thanom's sudden return to Bangkok in late December, which al- most immediately sparked a large st'ident demonstra- tion, served as a reminder that certain highly emo- tional issues can unite the various student factiox: into a cohesive political force. Large numbers of students are unlikely to take to the streets again in the near future unless provoked by an army coup d'etat or the return of the ousted military rulers, but growing public intolerance of student dissidence could lead to an early and perhaps bloody confrontation between students and the government. The police and army have been particularly resentful of the pruminer.t political role student leaders have played over the past year and they may seize on any convenient pretext to arrest the "radical" leadership. January 13, 1975 SECRET Approved For Release 2005/07/01 : CIA-RDP86T00608R000300110001-7 25X1 Approved For Release 2005/07/b4'