Myanmar’s location shows its strategic importance: Suu Kyi

September 19, 2012 08:24 am | Updated June 28, 2016 09:14 pm IST - Washington

Myanmar Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. File photo

Myanmar Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. File photo

Myanmar’s Opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi has noted that her country’s location between India and China makes it a key stakeholder in the region, and this factor which should be take into consideration in developing bilateral ties with Myanmar.

“Because we are situated between China and India, the two biggest powers in Asia, and because we are on the border of South and South-East Asia, our position is unique, and any relationship with Myanmar must take into consideration this situation,” Ms. Suu Kyi said on Tuesday in her first public appearance after her U.S. arrival.

Regarding questions raised as to whether the U.S. engagement with Myanmar was aimed at “containing” the influence of China in Asia, she said people “naturally associate” U.S.-China relations with U.S.-Myanmar relations.

“This is a natural question. One that I think cannot be answered simply, because I do not think that any country could claim, either the US, China or Myanmar, that our relations have nothing to do with the relations that we have with other countries around us,” she said.

The U.S. relations with Myanmar should “naturally have some impact” on U.S. relations with China, she said, noting that in a similar way, her country’s relations with the US will also “impact on its relations with China” to a certain degree.

She, however, said that Myanmar’s growing relationship US should not be seen as a “hostile step” towards China.

“We can use our new situation to strengthen relations between all three countries. For us, to put it very simply, it would be to our advantage for the U.S. and China to establish friendly relations. This will help us a great deal, and this is what I look forward to,” she observed.

Ms. Suu Kyi said her country has a good history of preserving friendship with different countries following different ideologies.

“Myanmar was one of the first countries to recognise Communist China back in the 1950s, it also had particularly warm relations with India to its west,” she said.

“When we became independent, we were considered the country most likely to succeed in South-East Asia. This is an honour that we have lost over the last few decades, but we think that we can regain this honour with the help of our friends, including the US,” she added.

Later, the leader received the Global Vision Award of Asia Society that was announced in 2011.

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