| Written by Our Correspondent | |
| Monday, 23 May 2011 | |
     ![]() Such good friends  Hidden in thousands of pages of US diplomatic cables obtained by  WikiLeaks and made available to Asia Sentinel, is a years-long battle  for Malaysian political primacy between Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak  and opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim.    It is a battle that Najib appears to have won, at least for now, having  been named prime minister while an embattled Anwar remains in the dock,  fighting charges that he sodomized an aide.    The cables, more than 900,000 words long and covering 15 years from 1993  to 2008, depict an Anwar who from the start saw Najib as a danger to  him personally. He was in frequent touch with US Embassy officials,  warning constantly that Najib was the perpetrator of a long series of  corrupt acts in the procurement of defense equipment and that he was a  danger to the exercise of democracy.     Equally, the cables depict an American legation determined to avoid  becoming ensnared in Malaysian politics by taking sides. Christopher  LaFleur, US ambassador from 2004 to 2007, wrote in a July 31, 2007 cable  to US Army Gen. George W. Casey that “Malaysia is important to us  because it is an economically successful, stable, predominantly Muslim  country that, over the longer term, may be able to support us more  strongly in places like the Middle East… The overall tone in  Malaysian-American relations has improved considerably since Abdullah  Badawi became Prime Minister in late-2003, and we seek to translate this  into substantive improvements.  Bilateral relations eroded under  Abdullah's vituperative predecessor Dr Mahathir Mohamad, but Abdullah  brought with him a friendlier style and an interest in projecting a more  moderate image, both for himself and for his country. “    The embassy, however, watched closely as Anwar forged an unwieldy  opposition coalition from the Islamist Parti Islam se-Malaysia, the  Chinese Democratic Action Party and Anwar’s own Parti Keadilan Rakyat,  made up largely of urban Malays.     From the time Anwar was released from prison after a 1999 trial on what  were widely seen to be bogus charges of corruption and sexual deviancy,  the cables show a United Malays National Organisation paralyzed by  inaction and led by an ineffective Abdullah Badawi while opposition  forces raise enthusiastic crowds of tens of thousands of cheering  spectators demanding political reform.    The need for Anwar’s crucial leadership of the awkward coalition is  underscored by a Feb. 23, 2007 cable signed by LaFleur. “PAS valued  Anwar as the ‘bridge’ between the non-Malays especially the Democratic  Action Party (DAP) and PAS, and as a name-brand figure able to attract  voters,” La Fleur wrote.     PAS elders, he wrote, found it impossible to communicate with the DAP  and other non-Malay parties. He quotes Azizan Abdul Razak of PAS saying  that PAS and DAP were “like chickens and ducks, feeding at the same  trough, but unable to talk to one another.” Anwar was seen as the only  one who could blunt the “ruling National Front juggernaut.”    Anwar, LaFleur wrote on July 17, 2007, was concentrating his attacks on  then Deputy Prime Minister Najib as a way to “open up fissures in UMNO  middle ranks that will give him other opportunities.”     As pressure continued on the ruling coalition, Anwar led enthusiastic  rallies all over the country, culminating in the March 2008 national  elections that ended the Barisan Nasional’s 50-year two-thirds hold on  parliament.  The cables in general seem to indicate a sense of growing  panic and paralysis on the part of Barisan leaders, particularly in  UMNO, and a desire to drive Abdullah Badawi from the premiership to make  way for Najib.  Anwar compounded the fears by displaying an  eight-minute videotape of a prominent lawyer, VK Lingam, apparently  telling a Supreme Court judge to fix key appointments in the  government’s favor, thus spurring a royal inquiry into judicial  corruption.    According to Ambassador James Keith, who succeeded LaFleur in July 2007,  UMNO leaders worried “about Anwar's drawing power on the streets.  That  Anwar and other opposition leaders proceeded successfully in the face  of PM Abdullah's personal warnings should bolster the opposition's  resolve and embolden them to plan further events.“     After Anwar returned to politics by taking back his Penang parliamentary  seat in a by-election, it was only a matter of time before UMNO  replaced a faltering Abdullah Badawi with Najib.  As Mahathir goaded  Najib to act in April 2007, Anwar was telling the diplomats that his  opposition coalition “had a ‘realistic’ opportunity to topple PM  Abdullah's government by bringing over 30 or more BN MPs for a  no-confidence vote in Parliament,” Keith wrote.     All of that was brought to a halt on June 30, 2008,when former aide  Mohamed Saiful Bukhary Azlan, charged that he had been sodomized by  Anwar, a case that goes on to this day.  The charges brought the  opposition’s momentum to a halt.    On July 23, 2008, apparently aware that this second sodomy arrest was  being viewed skeptically by the international community, Malaysian Home  Minister Syed Hamid Albar assembled a flock of foreign diplomats to give  them the government’s view.     According to a cable on that date signed by Keith, Syed Hamid dismissed  claims of conspiracy, defended the police handling of the case and  emphasized that Anwar was “being treated fairly.”    “The Government of Malaysia is becoming aware of the negative impact the  Anwar case has had on its international reputation and is acting to  change the negative foreign perceptions,” the cable read.     “Today's briefing was an attempt by the GOM to influence the diplomatic  community, counter Anwar's own messaging the day before, and work  against critical international media attention.”     The skeptical tone of the cable is difficult to miss. Syed Hamid, the  cable said, “shared no new information with the group as a whole and we  doubt the briefing swayed diplomats to change their prior opinions;  indeed, we heard a good measure of cynicism from some of the gathered  diplomats. The government's decision to hold the event and the  Ambassador's discussion with the Home Minister afterward served to  reinforce our belief that the Government of Malaysia already has decided  to charge Anwar for sodomy, and it will take this next step by  mid-August.”     The cables take note of the fact that Anwar filed a police complaint on  July 1, 2008 against the national police chief and the Attorney General.   He held a press conference and later headlined a mass rally, using the  podium to attack Najib and his wife Rosmah Mansor, “whom he believes to  be behind the current sodomy allegations.”      Anwar's wife Wan Azizah met with Abdullah Badawi, the cable notes, “to  provide him with information on Najib's connection to Anwar's accuser,  and receive Abdullah's assurances her husband would be treated fairly…  The sodomy case highlights that the risks for Anwar from the political  status quo are significant and very personal, and provides impetus for  Anwar to move ahead more aggressively to try to topple the BN government  and stop Najib from becoming the next Prime Minister.”    That was 2008 and that is pretty much where the political situation  still stands three years later.  Frustrated with the sodomy case and  hamstrung by internal political squabbling within his coalition, Anwar  may not be a spent force, but Najib has the far stronger hand.  The  cables contain no smoking guns about the sodomy case. But the trial  itself, with the prosecution’s numerous missteps and admissions that  Najib, his wife and police officials met with Saiful before he made the  allegations against Anwar, provides enough evidence of that.    | 
