By
Scott Stearns
Barack
Obama is the first U.S.
president to visit Burma .
It is part of a trip to Asia meant to reinforce Washington 's
so-called "Asia pivot" which has raised concerns in Beijing
about greater U.S.
influence in the region.
Tom
Donilon, Obama's national security advisor, says the president believes
engagement is the best way to encourage further reforms.
"There’s
a lot more to be done, and we are not going to miss this moment in terms of our
opportunity to push this along and to try to lock in as much reform and lock in
this path forward as best we can," he said.
Donilon
says the United States
is encouraging Burmese authorities to collaborate further with both the
international community and domestic civil society. It is part of what the
Obama administration calls a "rebalancing toward the Asia-Pacific" -
a move toward greater U.S.
military, diplomatic, and commercial presence in Asia that has caused anxiety
in China .
"The
idea is to persuade the Chinese that the American rebalancing is good for China ,"
said Michael Pillsbury, a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute who worked for
former Presidents Ronald Reagan and George Herbert Walker Bush.
He
says Chinese leaders see the Burma
visit as further evidence of U.S.
deception about the aims of its Asia pivot.
"The
U.S. is portrayed basically
to Chinese youth and to Chinese university students and I am afraid to Chinese
officials as a very crafty, dangerous, highly-coordinated, ruthless, cunning
power that in many ways China
would like to emulate," he added.
"Every move the American government is
taking, including Obama's visit to Burma
is now clearly taken as a geo-strategic move," said professor Xiang
Lanxin, who chairs international affairs studies at Shanghai 's
Fudan University . "It is not something
promoting Myanmar
democracy. That's not even the issue here. The issue is to wean Myanmar , Burma away from the Chinese
strategic borders. You keep on saying this has nothing to do with China . But the
Chinese exactly think everything has to do with China . You keep on using this kind
of language to try to reduce the psychological burden on the China side.
It's not working."
Michael
Pillsbury says China 's view
of President Obama's trip to Burma
shows how much the Asia pivot has roiled relations between Washington
and Beijing .
"What
I think both Professor Xiang and I are trying to convey is the idea of two
sides with some degree of distrust, even paranoia, each focusing on events and
activities that may in fact be innocent but no one quite knowing," he
said.
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