Joseph Thomas
New Eastern Outlook
27 August 2017
Left: US knows best. NDI "teaches" Cambodians how to run their nation.
The US, conversely, has provided few incentives beyond its failed Trans-Pacific Partnership scheme and coercion through networks like NDI and the myriad media and political proxies they fund and operate in Cambodia.
With NDI shuttered, its foreign staff expelled and the organisations and publications it was funding facing similar closures and evictions, it appears what little the US had on the table has been swept away. Cambodia’s particularly bold move may be replicated across Southeast Asia where similar US networks are maintained to manipulate and coerce the political processes of sovereign states.
New Eastern Outlook
27 August 2017
Left: US knows best. NDI "teaches" Cambodians how to run their nation.
The
government of Cambodia has exposed and expelled a US network attempting
to interfere in the nation’s political processes. The US National
Democratic Institute (NDI) was reportedly ordered to end its activities
in the country and remove all of its foreign staff.
In a statement, the foreign ministry
accused the National Democratic Institute (NDI) of operating in Cambodia
without registering, and said its foreign staff had seven days to
leave. Reuters in an article titled, “Cambodia orders U.S.-funded group to halt operations, remove staff,” would claim:
Authorities were “geared up to take the same measures” against other foreign NGOs which fail to comply with the law, the ministry added.
The article also noted that:
Prime Minister Hun Sen, who has ruled Cambodia for more than three decades, on Tuesday ordered the English-language The Cambodia Daily newspaper to pay taxes accrued over the past decade or face closure. The paper was founded by an American.
He also lashed out at the United States and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and accused them of funding groups attempting to overthrow his government.
The American-owned Cambodia Daily newspaper in its own article titled, “NDI Ordered to Halt Operations, Foreign Staff Face Expulsion,” would note that:
The announcement comes less than a week after documents leaked on Facebook and circulated on government-affiliated media appeared to show political cooperation between NDI and the opposition party, amid increased tension in recent weeks between the government and U.S.-backed NGOs and media outlets.
NDI could not immediately be reached for comment.
Radio Free Asia and Voice of America have also both been accused of not fulfilling tax and registration obligations. The Cambodia Daily, whose publisher is a U.S. citizen, was hit with a $6.3 million unaudited tax bill and threatened with imminent closure if it is not paid by September 4.
Reuters would cite NDI’s own website in an attempt to inform readers about what its role is in Cambodia claiming, “the NDI works with political parties, governments and civic groups to “establish and strengthen democratic institutions.””
NDI is a US government and US-European
corporate-funded organisation chaired by representatives from America’s
business and political community. Of the 34 listed members of NDI’s
board of directors, virtually all of them either have direct ties to US
corporations and financial institutions, are members of corporate-funded
policy think tanks or previously were employed by the US State
Department, or a combination of the three.Yet, even a cursory
investigation of NDI and the media and political organisation in its
orbit and the very nature of even its proposed role in Cambodia’s
political process indicates impropriety and subversion Reuters is
intentionally failing to convey to readers.
What NDI Really is and What it Really Does
Directors with particularly prominent conflicts of interests include:
Madeleine Albright: Albright Stonebridge Group and Albright Capital Management LLC
Harriet Babbitt: Council on Foreign Relations
Robert Liberatore: former senior vice president of DaimlerChrysler, an NDI financial sponsor
Bernard Aronson: former Goldman Sachs adviser
Howard Berman: senior advisor at Covington & Burling
Bernard Aronson: former Goldman Sachs adviser
Howard Berman: senior advisor at Covington & Burling
Richard Blum: chairman of Blum Capital Partners
NDI director Thomas Daschle, for
example, actually has foreign political parties as paying clients
through is “Daschle Group,” including VMRO DPMNE based in Macedonia as revealed by The Hill. NDI is likewise active in Macedonia, providing support directly to VMRO DPMNE, even co-hosting events in the country according to NDI’s own social media account on Facebook.
In Southeast Asia, Freedom House, yet
another subsidiary of NED, would provide extensive aid to opposition
groups in Thailand led by ousted former prime minister Thaksin
Shinawatra, with Freedom House director Kenneth Adelman (PDF) concurrently providing paid-for lobbying services to Thaksin Shinawatra himself.
It appears that such conflicts of
interests are not the exception, but the rule indicating that NED and
its subsidiaries including NDI pursue the collective corporate and
financial interests of their boards of directors merely behind the guise
of “strengthening democratic institutions.”
An examination of NDI’s corporate
sponsors casts further doubts upon its alleged mission statement. Its
financial sponsors, according to NDI’s 2005 annual report (PDF), include:
- British Petroleum
- Bell South Corporation
- Chevron
- Citigroup
- Coca Cola
- DaimlerChrysler Corporation
- Eli Lilly & Company
- Exxon Mobil
- Honeywell
- Microsoft
- Time Warner
Donors also include convicted financial
criminal George Soros’ Open Society Foundation as well as the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) of which NDI is a subsidiary of, as well
as the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and the US State
Department itself.
Corporations like BP, Chevron,
Citigroup, Coca Cola, Exxon, defence contractor Honeywell and IT giant
Microsoft are not interested in promoting democracy. They are using
democracy promotion as a means behind which to create conditions more
conducive to expanding markets and increasing profits. This includes
undermining governments impeding foreign corporate control of national
resources and markets, or entirely removing and replacing governments
with more obedient client regimes.
The contemporary history of American
foreign wars and its practice of “regime change” and “nation building”
provides self-evident confirmation of the motives and means used to
expand US hegemony and clearly illustrates where organisations like NDI
fit into the process.
In
Cambodia’s case, a much larger, overarching agenda is in play than
merely national resources and markets. US activities in Cambodia to
coerce or replace the current government in Phnom Penh is done
specifically to encircle and contain China through a united front of
client states assembled by the United States across Southeast Asia.
Cambodia, along with the rest of
Southeast Asia, has begun strengthening ties with Beijing economically,
politically and militarily. Large infrastructure programmes, weapon
acquisitions, joint-training exercises and trade deals are all on the
table between Beijing and Phnom Penh.
The US, conversely, has provided few incentives beyond its failed Trans-Pacific Partnership scheme and coercion through networks like NDI and the myriad media and political proxies they fund and operate in Cambodia.
With NDI shuttered, its foreign staff expelled and the organisations and publications it was funding facing similar closures and evictions, it appears what little the US had on the table has been swept away. Cambodia’s particularly bold move may be replicated across Southeast Asia where similar US networks are maintained to manipulate and coerce the political processes of sovereign states.
“Democracy Promotion” From Abroad is a Contradiction
The notion that NDI is “promoting
democracy” is at face value an absurdity. Democracy is a means
self-determination. Self-determination is not possible if outside
interests are attempting to influence the process.
A political party funded and directed by
US interests through organisations like NDI, supported by media outfits
and fronts posing as nongovernmental organisations likewise funded from
abroad preclude any process of self-determination and is thus not only
in no shape, form or way “democracy promotion,” it is a process that is
fundamentally undemocratic.
In the US where it is widely understood
that money dominates campaigns and wins elections, it is difficult to
perceive the US pouring money into opposition parties abroad for any
other reason besides skewing electoral outcomes in favour of US
interests.
Additional irony is provided by the fact
that should any other nation attempt to pursue similar programmes aimed
at America’s domestic political process, those involved would be
quickly labelled foreign agents and their activities halted immediately.
The mere allegations that Russia
attempted to interfere with America’s domestic political processes
resulted in sanctions and even threats of war. Cambodia is a nation that
cannot afford nor effectively impose sanctions upon the United States
nor wage war against it, but shuttering a flagrant example of foreign
interference in its internal political affairs is something Cambodia and
its neighbours in Southeast Asia can and are beginning to do.
Cambodia’s use of existing laws
regarding taxation and the registration of foreign entities has been
effectively used to deal with these organisations. Neighbouring nations
may begin to require foreign-funded organisations to register as foreign
lobbyists, subject them to taxation and more stringent regulations and
taking away from them the smoke screen of “democracy promotion” and
“rights advocacy” they have cloaked their activities behind for decades.
Joseph Thomas is chief editor of Thailand-based geopolitical journal, The New Atlas and contributor to the online magazine “New Eastern Outlook”.
Source: https://journal-neo.org/2017/08/27/cambodia-exposes-expels-us-network/
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