Avoiding the Laos Trap.

AuthorKURLANTZICK, JOSHUA
PositionHuman rights, Laos

In a seedy Bangkok hotel, I found pimps, prostitutes, and the guy who makes America's foreign policy.

THE BANGKOK HOTEL TO WHICH I pulled up on a motorbike looked more like the kind of place you go for a full-body massage than for a foreign policy briefing. Johns loitered outside the building, occasionally disappearing into the alley. Shady-looking businessmen lounged inside the lobby, sipping Johnny Walker and toasting each other--at one in the afternoon. Porters alternately grabbed people's bags and unceremoniously dumped them on the floor.

I had been asked to the hotel to interview Vang Pobzeb, head of something called the Lao Human Rights Council, an organization in Eau Claire, Wisconsin, that lobbies on behalf of the Hmong, a Laotian ethnic minority, and against closer relations between our country and the government of Laos. Despite the fact that his chosen venue seemed longer on bargirls than conference rooms, Vang had managed to lure reporters from two of the three main newswires--myself and a Reuters guy--by dint of his Web site, a product that was a good deal classier than our hotel. The Reuters reporter and I quickly realized that Vang, who spoke so fast that he sounded like a Christies auctioneer, had little hard evidence to prove his points. To support his contention that the Lao government was massacring ethnic Hmong, Vang produced a grainy videotape that resembled a `70s snuff film minus the music. When I played the tape on a VCR, all I could make out were shadowy figures. I half expected Haley Joel Osment to appear suddenly and warn me that I was seeing ghosts.

Still, Vang was talking more about Lao-U.S. and Hmong-Lao relations than any of the local diplomats, most of whom wouldn't trouble themselves with such a tiny state. Since the U.S. embassy and the Lao government offered us nothing newsworthy to fill out wire quotas--as a wire service journalist for Agence France-Presse, I had to file stories constantly or risk having my sins catalogued in French by my indignant boss--we dutifully jotted down whatever Vang told us and used his briefing in stories. In this small way, our stories helped prevent the United States from strengthening its ties with Laos.

Hmong the Believers

The scene at the hotel encapsulates an important but little-understood shift in the conduct of post-Cold War American foreign policy. These days, ethnic lobbies are about the only American organizations actively engaged in many small countries around the globe. But while they can be helpful--to reporters like me, for instance--ethnic lobbies increasingly determine U.S. action 'towards these countries, sometimes pushing Washington into extremely inconsistent policies.

Ever wonder, for instance, why the U.S. government bends over backward to develop closer trade relations with a repressive communist regime like China, but maintains sanctions against Cuba...

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