TY - BOOK AU - Larry Jagan AU - Renaud Egreteau AB - This book argues that the Burmese military regime has always favoured an isolationist-type policy that finds its grassroots in Ne Win’s autarchic and xenophobic era as well as in Burma’s royal traditions, but without being completely cut off from the outside world. This policy approach is well suited to the Burmese authoritarian state which boasts an important strategic position in the region. In the past decade, the politics of “isolationism without isolation” has been skilfully developed by Burma’s military elite in order to preserve itself from both internal and external threats. Since the Depayin crackdown in May 2003, every step the Burmese junta has taken indicates that it has been consciously defining both its foreign policy and its internal political agenda according to these isolationist tendencies, as the recent fallbacks that followed the “Saffron Revolution” (September 2007) and the Cyclone Nargis (May 2008) illustrate. Not only does the military regime tend to strategically withdraw itself from the regional scene, by choosing only a few but crucial diplomatic and commercial partners like China, India, Singapore, Russia or Thailand, but it also gradually isolates itself from the rest of the Burmese society, by opting for a strategic and nationalist entrenchment which was perfectly highlighted by the purge of the pragmatic Military Intelligence Services (2004), the transfer of the capital to Naypyidaw (2005) and the strict control over the transitional process initiated by its own “Road Map towards a disciplined democracy” and undisrupted by the recent crises. DO - 10.4000/books.irasec.498 ID - OAPEN ID: 40238 KW - army KW - Civil Society KW - freedom KW - autarchy KW - junta KW - democracy L1 - http://books.openedition.org/irasec/498 LA - English LK - https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/41770 PB - Institut de recherche sur l’Asie du Sud-Est contemporaine PY - 2008 SN - 9782956447061 TI - Back to Old Habits : Isolationism or the Self-Preservation of Burma’s Military Regimenull ER -