WASHINGTON'S CREATURE IN MALAYSIA? THE MYSTERIOUS CASE OF THE SULU SULTAN
Here’s another article by Nile Bowie on the Lahad Datu incursion, taken from the Counterpunch
site. Bowie touches on the circumstantial evidence linking Malaysian
opposition figures to this incursion - evidence which should not be
ignored given that all the sources are non-Malaysian in origin.
Washington's Creature in Malaysia? The Mysterious Case of the Sulu Sultan
By Nile Bowie, Counterpunch, 17 March 2013.
By Nile Bowie, Counterpunch, 17 March 2013.
Malaysia has been
in the midst of an on-going security crisis since early February, when a
group of 235 rag-tag militiamen from the neighbouring southern
Philippines slipped into the eastern state of Sabah and began occupying
several villages.
While engaging
police in several fire fights, the insurgents beheaded and mutilated
several captured Malaysian security personnel, prompting Malaysian
forces to deploy fighter jets in an unprecedented air assault over the
area in an operation to flush out the intruders. The gunmen call
themselves the “Royal Army of the Sulu Sultanate”, representing the
heirs of a long-defunct kingdom which once controlled the territory up
until the late nineteenth century. The so-called Sultan of Sulu, Jamalul
Kiram III, who is believed to be directing the militant incursion from
Manila, insists that Sabah is rightfully part of his kingdom and has
vowed not budge on his claims even if his personnel are killed in the
standoff.
Malaysians,
who are preparing to vote in a pivotal general election just around the
corner, have been fixated on events in Sabah as they unfold. The
Philippines are soon expecting congressional elections as well, and
given the timing, local analysts are wondering how exactly did this
elderly self-proclaimed Sultan obtained the resources needed to
establish his own private army. Both the Malaysian and Philippine
governments have launched official investigations into allegations that
figures within Malaysia’s political opposition had a hand in aiding the
Sulu gunmen. Reuters cited an anonymous Filipino military officer who claimed that Sulu rebels were “invited to Sabah by a Malaysian opposition politician”.
The blame has been
laid on Malaysia’s de-facto opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, who
Malaysian reports say has links to Filipino insurgent networks that have
long eyed the resource-rich state of Sabah in northern eastern Borneo.
Local journalist Adrian Lai recently unearthed classified diplomatic
cables from the US embassy in Manila brought to light by WikiLeaks,
which document ties between Nur Misauri, former chairmen of the Moro
National Liberation Front (MNLF), and Malaysia’s main opposition leader
Anwar Ibrahim. The MNLF is a political movement that pitted itself
against predominately Christian Manila by seeking political autonomy for
Muslim majority provinces in the islands in the southern Philippines.
In 2001, Manila accused Misauri of terrorism when he led an MNLF unit
that attacked an outpost of the Philippine army, prompting him to seek
refuge in Sabah on the assumption that authorities in Muslim-majority
Malaysia would empathize with him and block his extradition. Misauri was
detained by Malaysian security forces in Sabah and sent back to the
Philippines where he was jailed until 2008.
WikiLeaks cables
claim that Misauri detested the Malaysian government for turning him
over to Philippine authorities and that he was “a strong advocate for the recovery of Sabah”.
The cables claim that Misauri boasted that his militias could invade
Sabah in the span of two hours. WikiLeaks has also confirmed that
Misauri maintained close connections to Anwar Ibrahim, and that the two
had met on several occasions. A separate report issued by AFP cited US
diplomatic cables that implicate a Saudi Arabian ambassador to the
Philippines of funding Muslim groups seeking autonomy in the southern
islands. Misauri recently criticized Philippine President Benigno Aquino
for siding with Malaysia in his firm stance against the Sulu militants,
warning the Aquino government of chaos if Sulu Sultan Jamalul Kiram III
is apprehended.
Anwar Ibrahim, who
has vehemently denied all accusations, has long been considered a
darling of the West. Mr. Ibrahim is a slippery character of sorts; he
was once Malaysia’s deputy prime minister prior to being sacked for
getting too close to the IMF, among other things. Anwar also has friends
in high places, from billionaire financier George Soros to senior
neo-cons from the Bush administration. In recent times, Ibrahim has
appealed to Carl Gershman, president of the US-Government funded
foundation, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), requesting that
he send a US observer team to Malaysia to monitor the upcoming
elections. Ibrahim enraged many when he stated he would support policy
to protect the security of Israel, and while his political party has
long received training and backing from the International Republican
Institute (IRI) chaired by Republican Senator John McCain, there is
little doubt that Anwar - a creature of Washington’s taxpayer funded
“Democracy Promotion” overseas - would be the trusted ally that the
White House is looking for as it refocuses its military muscle and
political influence to the Asia-Pacific region.
Philippine
President Benigno Aquino has recently conceded that events in Sabah
showed signs of a conspiracy. A recent statement issued by Malaysian
political-scientist Dr. Chandra Muzaffar alludes to reports of Malaysian
opposition figures promising land, titles and other sinecures to the
Sulu Sultanate if they emerged victorious in the upcoming elections.
Muzaffar argues that a security crisis in Sabah, regarded as a political
stronghold for the Barisan Nasional (BN) government, could weaken the
ruling parties hold over the state, leading to a hung parliament or a
narrow victory for the BN, prompting in his words, “massive street
agitation which could pave the way for a regime change, which is the
goal of not only the Opposition but also its foreign backers.” When Chandra talks of “foreign backers”, he is referring to the US political establishment.
The MNLF, under
its current chairmen Muslimin Sema, has issued statements declaring that
it disagreed with the incursion into Sabah, but acknowledged that MNLF
forces aligned to Misauri were present there. Reports issued by Reuters
also cited Malaysian officials who claimed that the Sulu terrorists had
links to factions that were unhappy with the Philippines’ recent peace
agreement with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), an Islamist
MNLF offshoot. The Malaysian government facilitated these peace talks,
and Misauri made no secret that he publically opposed them. The Philippine Daily Inquirer
reported that some ten thousand MNLF fighters from the southern
Philippines planned to join the insurgency in Sabah in solidarity with
the Royal Sulu Army.
Sulu Sultan
Jamalul Kiram III has told media in the Philippines that he wants the
United Nations, the United States and the United Kingdom to intervene in
his claim over Sabah. The Sultan claims that the US must intercede, as
agreed upon in a 1915 agreement signed with Washington’s then-colonial
government in the Philippines that mandated the US provide “full
protection” to the Sulu Sultan in exchange for exercising sovereignty
over the kingdom as the colonial administration. Let’s not forget, the
strategically located state of Sabah is abundant in natural gas
reserves, and its oil reserves are the third highest in the Asia-Pacific
region after China and India. Sabah’s fifteen oil wells produce as many
as 192,000 barrels a day, while the country has holds over 4 billion
barrels of proven oil reserves. In 2010, Malaysia was the world’s third
largest exporter of liquefied natural gas (LNG) after Qatar and
Indonesia. The Malaysian government had paid a modest annual cession
payment to the Sultanate (which the Sultan argues is a “rent”) since
gaining independence from Britain, and one of the motivations for the
Sultan’s push to reclaim the territory is definitely profit-driven.
While the Pentagon refocuses over 60% of its naval presence to the Asia
Pacific region, conflicts of this nature - which deal with obstructions
to the flow of abundant energy resources to US companies - are exactly
the sort that could coax the eventual involvement of US personnel if
Sabah were to deteriorate into a hotbed of Sulu-terror.
Tun Dr Mahathir Mohamad with the Malaysian General Operations Force in Felda
The fact that
individuals in the highest levels of the Malaysian and Philippine
governments are suspicious of a conspiracy does much to lend credence to
the possibility. Former Malaysian PM Dr. Mahathir Mohammad, an ardent
critic of Israel and US imperialism, warned months prior to the standoff
in Sabah that the opposition’s Western backers sought to bring Anwar
Ibrahim to power through Arab Spring-style street riots and even the use
of fire power, citing recent examples in Egypt and Syria where NATO
states backed political opposition figures and supported al-Qaeda-linked
rebels to act on their behalf in overthrowing governments they were
tired of. Reports of Saudi Arabia financially supporting Philippine
terrorists should also not be taken lightly, as Gulf States have moved
in-step with the US and NATO as the main financiers of Salafist
terrorist networks active in west Asia, north Africa and elsewhere.
Without resorting
to elaborate conspiracies in the absence of hard facts, it would be
entirely negligent to ignore circumstantial evidence linking Malaysian
figures to this insurgency, especially considering all sources of this
nature are non-Malaysian in origin. There is no doubt that the Sultan
has no legitimate legal claims over Sabah since the International Court
of Justice has long recognized Malaysia’s rights and sovereignty over
the territory, and the highly unusual timing of the Sulu operation being
so close to elections in both countries will naturally be perceived as
suspect. Militancy and terrorism undermines the Sultan’s claims entirely
and lends much credibility to suspicion that the Sultan has not acted
alone. Even if the US isn’t involved, the fact that a figure who
received blatant US support has been implicated is significant. There is
much at stake in Sabah, and in the words of the Sultan, “The only thing that could end the conflict is an intervention.”
Nile Bowie is an independent political analyst and photographer based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. He can be reached at nilebowie@gmail.com
AMUKANMELAYU - Malaysia is small TIGER from ASIA..............