Deep in the heart of Southeast Asia, the Golden Triangle is notorious
for opium production and lawlessness. Straddling the three nations of
Thailand, Burma and Laos, this area was also the scene of low-key but
tense and complex geopolitical and military struggles involving Taiwan,
China, the United States and the three Southeast Asian nations.
“The
Secret Army” by Richard M. Gibson and Wen H. Chen is the story of the
fugitive forces of the KMT (Kuomintang) that fled to Burma from the
Chinese province of Yunnan after the Communist defeat of the KMT in the
Chinese Civil War in 1949.
Southeast Asia was a cauldron of
turmoil and instability during the early 1950s. Post-World War II Burma
was newly independent and struggling to keep itself together in the face
of various ethnic insurgencies. Neighboring countries, such as Laos,
were coping with domestic communist threats and coups, as well as with
American, mostly CIA, interference. The KMT forces took advantage of
this precarious state of affairs to set themselves up, establishing
bases and recruiting local militias.
The main goal was to retake
Yunnan and help the KMT invade and regain mainland China. Despite aid
from the United States and Thailand, they failed miserably in two
attempts, being pushed back easily by mainland Chinese troops without
ever winning a battle. But they proved adroit in exploiting Burmese
instability, as well as getting into the bustling local narcotics trade.
Taipei and the leaders of this Southeast Asian “army” were also
adept in exploiting the regional geopolitical web. They constantly
refused to leave Burma, which launched several campaigns against them
and threatened several times to bring this issue before the United
Nations.
Forced out of Burma eventually by a joint
Burmese-Chinese campaign in 1961, many of these soldiers went to Laos to
fight as mercenaries in the civil war. Others went to Thailand, where
they helped end a communist insurgency and founded villages in the
sparsely populated northern highlands.
Taipei loosely controlled
these forces, which were at times almost autonomous. For all their
tenacity and adaptability, these forces were generally a nuisance,
incapable of doing much to fulfill their original mandate of invading
China. The refusal of Taiwan to remove its troops from a sovereign
country (Burma) because of a stubborn aim to maintain a presence against
China on its southern border is a black mark on the foreign policy of
Taipei of that era.
“The Secret Army” is meticulously researched
and footnoted, with the authors having drawn from English and
Chinese-language material. This extensive research means the book is
full of detail on battles, campaigns, high-level meetings and political
maneuvering. Unfortunately, the details overshadow the story itself as
readers are overwhelmed by facts, statistics, and minutiae. In contrast
to the detailed writing, the simple black-and-white maps do not provide
much help in understanding local terrain or troop movements during
battles.
The book also provides little historical background or
insight into any of the main people described and only limited narrative
of what is a fascinating story. The drug trade features less
prominently than the “drug warlords” in the book’s subtitle would lead
one to expect.
The last few chapters provide some detail on the
soldiers’ involvement in drug smuggling, with commanders forming drug
armies with their troops. Even then, readers are not provided with much
knowledge of how the drug lords built up their armies or came to take
control.
Readers will nonetheless come away with insights into
the duplicity of the Taiwanese leadership, which took advantage of
corrupt Thai officials and the threat of Communist China to maintain its
army in Southeast Asia.
Also striking is the CIA’s use of its
own airline (the predecessor to its Air America that became famous in
Vietnam) to provide supplies and arms to the KMT force and assist in
drug smuggling. More pertinent to current geopolitics is the use of
ethnic militias and conscripts in Burma by the KMT forces. At that time,
several ethnic minorities were engaged in conflicts with the Burmese
state, which the KMT exploited by recruiting and training minority
militias.
“The Secret Army” is an impressive addition to the
historical record but fewer details and more narrative and personal
profiles would have given it more impact. The existence of the KMT army
in Southeast Asia might be an interesting piece of recent Asian history,
but this book unfortunately does not fully convey why.
The Asian Review of Books
Hilton Yip is a writer based in Taiwan and former book editor of The China Post.
The Secret Army: Chiang Kai-Shek and the Drug Warlords of the Golden Triangle
By Richard M. Gibson and Wen H. Chen (John Wiley & Sons, October 2011)
http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/opinion/when-taiwan-had-a-secret-army-in-burma/502400
Thursday, March 8, 2012
When Taiwan Had a Secret Army in Burma
12:31 PM
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