The Chinese have the money and desire and want to do it. Get it done. The military complaints are pure nonsense unless everyone has forgotten Japan's WWII clean sweep through the area. Rail is useful only after you have won the war. While we are at it, link the system fully into India as well. Goods need to travel and the only thing better is more goods.
It is also the best available routing as well for an India China rail link and has the particular plus of traveling through mostly inhabited country thus producing huge gains along the corridor. once completed it will trigger a huge renewal of India's own rail system which surely needs heavy investment similar to what China has been engaged in.
China has built out an admirable system of rail corridors that can naturally be extended into India through Southeast Asia while creating port facilities in the Indian Ocean. No one should be looking this gift horse in the mouth at all even if you think your mother in law is behind it all.
China Looks to High-Speed Rail to Expand Reach
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/08/09/world/asia/china-looks-to-high-speed-rail-to-expand-reach.html?_r=1
BEIJING
— A favorite export from China to its neighbors these days are
high-speed rail lines designed to make trade routes in the vast
stretches of Asia more accessible and fortify Chinese dreams of turning
its southern reaches into the capital of mainland Southeast Asia.
But not everyone wants to be bound so close.
A
rail project that would pass through the mountains of northeast Myanmar
to the coastal plains on the Indian Ocean would give China a shortcut
to the Middle East and Europe. For China, the strategic importance of
the proposed line can barely be overstated: The route would provide an
alternate to the longer and increasingly contentious trip through the
South China Sea.
However,
the Myanmar government viewed the project as a one-sided proposition
and put it on the back burner last month, allowing a memorandum of
understanding to lapse. It gave no timeline for when it might
reconsider.
It
is the second major Chinese project to be suspended in Myanmar, once an
unquestioning client of China, since a nominally civilian government
took over there three years ago, setting off a tussle for influence in
the country between China and the United States and its allies. In 2011,
soon after the new government took office, construction of the
Chinese-financed Myitsone hydroelectric dam at the headwaters of the Irrawaddy River was suspended.
The
latest setback in Myanmar was not all bad news for China. With
considerable gusto, the new junta in Thailand gave approval on Aug. 1
for two Chinese high-speed rail projects that
had been shelved because of financing difficulties under the previous
government. The head of the junta, Gen. Prayuth Chan-ocha, announced the
revival of plans that call for more than 620 miles of rail links from
Thailand to Kunming, the capital of Yunnan province, by 2021.
In
all, China wants to build thousands of miles of track that will loop
through Laos, Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia and head south to
Singapore as part of a grand trans-Asian rail accord signed by nearly 20
Asian countries in 2006.
“When
the people of the mainland countries soon find through the convenience
of high-speed rail that Kunming is their closest neighbor but a few
hours away, the Yunnan capital will eventually become, in effect, the
capital of mainland Southeast Asia,” said Geoff Wade, a visiting fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific at the Australian National University.
The
gravitational pull of Southeast Asia toward China through its
well-developed and relatively inexpensive high-speed rail technology was
almost inevitable, despite opposition in some places, Mr. Wade said.
China’s
powerful prime minister, Li Keqiang, serves as chief salesman, showing
off exhibits of Chinese-made high-speed tracks and trains wherever he
travels in the region. He pitched them to Quentin Bryce, then the
governor general of Australia, when she visited Beijing last year, even
though Australia, ever more economically tied to China, is a rich
country.
In
Myanmar, the rail project was designed to run close to two
Chinese-built pipelines for oil and gas that were completed last year,
despite widespread opposition from farmers living along the route.
Residents and “social organizations” were also opposed to the railway,
Myint Wai, the manager of the ministry of rail transportation, said last
month.
Resentment
against China is widespread in Myanmar, and the grass-roots discontent
about the rail project was of great concern to the military junta
because the generals who retain seats in Parliament face elections in
2015, Myanmar media reports said.
“China has not been the flavor of the month for some time,” said Thant Myint-U, a Myanmar historian.
Investment
from China has dropped since the height of its influence under the
junta, but China remains Myanmar’s top investor, according to Myanmar
government figures. And the growth of Chinese exports, which results in a
flood of cheap consumer goods, continues to explode, up by more than 50
percent since 2011.
The fear of Chinese domination is pervasive. “The China railway project is a national security issue,” said U Than Htut Aung, the chief executive of Eleven Media,
a group that publishes newspapers that have campaigned against the
project. “Through the Sino-Myanmar railway, China can easily access the
Indian Ocean, and Myanmar’s security would be threatened. Because of the
rail, Myanmar could become a second Crimea.”
Japan,
concerned about the economic strength of its archrival, China, across
Southeast Asia, is presenting itself as an alternative benefactor. It
has increased its investment in the region and targeted Myanmar with its
largess, particularly in the rail projects that are so dear to China.
Japan
recently won the contract to upgrade a track, built more than a century
ago, from Yangon, Myanmar’s commercial capital, to Mandalay, a job that
China was originally scheduled to do. Japan has also offered to
modernize Yangon’s decaying urban transit system.
Still, the Chinese have not given up. The Chinese ambassador to Myanmar, Yang Houlan,
said at a recent news conference in Yangon that even though the
memorandum of understanding on the rail project had expired, China was
ready to work with Myanmar at any time.
So
confident is China that Myanmar will eventually sign up for the
project, plans are going ahead to gouge an 18-mile rail tunnel out of
the rugged Gaoligong Mountains that straddle the border with Myanmar and
serve as the entry point to Yunnan Province and Kunming.
The
engineering challenge of constructing the tunnel through the mountain
range is similar to building on the permafrost in Tibet, said Wang Mengshu, a tunnel expert at the Chinese Academy of Engineering.
Myanmar
will inevitably come to its senses and agree to the Chinese railway,
said Zhu Zhenming, a professor at the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences,
and an expert on Southeast Asia, for the simple reason that it will
serve as a conduit for even more Chinese goods on the Myanmar market.
“Poorer people cannot buy American goods, or Japanese goods,” he said. “Chinese goods are cheaper.”
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