Mahathir: The comeback statesman is Prime Minister Again


June 20, 2018

Mahathir: The comeback statesman is Prime Minister Again

by Phar Kim Beng

http://www.malaysiakini.com

Image result for dr mahathir mohamad

COMMENT | With the exception of a Mahathir studies centre in University Utara Malaysia, which may have been disbanded at the height of Dr Mahathir Mohamad’s feisty tussle with Najib Razak, there seems to be no monument or roads to remember Mahathir. This is a novelty in so far as the indulgence of Malaysian VIPs to praise themselves, often affixing their names with YB, Dato, Tan Sri and the likes.

Mahathir seems to be comfortable with people screaming “Mahathir,” or “Hidup Mahathir”, both online and in actual briefings before and after cabinet meetings. But so far there has been no sign (as yet) that all that adulation has gone to his head. At the very least, he has taken to the new tenure as the seventh Prime Minister of Malaysia with gusto.

Be it his regular interface with members of the Council of Elders, or, the party’s presidential council, indeed, key members of Bersatu, such as Muhyiddin Yassin, indeed policy strategists like Rais Hussin and youth leader like Syed Saddiq Syed Abdul Rahman, there has been no stopping Mahathir. He is nothing less than a comeback statesman beyond the talismanic description of former President Bill Clinton as the comeback kid.

But those who have had the privilege of working with Mahathir before ought to know why he is a force unto his own: he is superbly systematic. How?

Before one wants to brief Mahathir on any issues, as I did when he received an honorary doctorate in letters from Waseda University, the first Japanese university to admit former Universiti Malaya Vice Chancellor Royal Professor Ungku Aziz too, invariably the father of Zeti Aziz, one has to brief Mahathir ahead of time.

Meetings with Mahathir can last anything from a simple 10 to 15 minutes, but the follow up from his team is exceptional, especially from secretary like Madam Adzlin or his special assistant Sufi Yusof. Even Badariah Arshad, Mahathir’s loyal manager, is excellent in keeping his schedule organised.

 

When Mahathir was awarded the honorary doctorate in 2006 by Waseda University, it was arranged and done through me, with close coordination with the Department of Political Science and Economics in Waseda University, while the award ceremony would be handled and supported by the Graduate School of Asian Pacific Studies.

The honorary degree itself was in recognition of Mahathir as the ‘inspiration’ or ‘father’ of Asian regionalism; which Waseda University fully supports. Unlike Keio University which tends to encourage Japan to Look West, Waseda University has always believed that the future of Japan rests with Asia, ideally a peaceful and prosperous one.

When I made the case for Mahathir to be made the recipient of the Waseda honorary doctorate, I briefed Mahathir that I was a product of Look East too. After my graduate studies at University of Cambridge I had taken to his advice to learn from Japan, at which point, I ended up first in University of Tokyo in 1997 before further stints in the Japan Institute of International Affairs (JIIA), a think-tank embedded in the structure of Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs that is nonetheless independent from it.

Meticulous attention to detail

In my meeting with Mahathir in 2006 at the Petronas Twin Towers, I noticed that his desk was clean and meticulous. Eight years later, when I met Mahathir again at the Perdana Leadership Foundation, to encourage him to build a Look East University, potentially with Albukhary International University as an anchor, I still saw the same meticulous attention to detail. His desk would be supremely well-organised, and in less than five minutes, he would be able to absorb every detail one can explain to him.

Indeed, should Mahathir be needed in any meeting two days later, invariably as a chair of the intended meeting, all that one has to do is to brief him 48 hours before the prospective meeting with the simplest dossier.

Two days later, when Mahathir does chair the meeting, in my case from 9am to 5pm, invariably, on the practicality of a Look East University – which Mahathir endorses and has always agreed, as marked by his recent trip to Japan to encourage more Japanese academic institutions to establish their branches in Malaysia – one will be shocked to know that Mahathir has studied all the materials. But more importantly, Mahathir is capable of throwing more ideas and suggestions on how such Look East endeavours are important.

Unknown to many, Mahathir is adept at chairing meetings that are noisy, full of contradictory views and opinions too. Indeed, Mahathir usually stays away from tea and sweets that are common in many government meetings. Thus, when Mahathir chairs any meetings, he will just go right down to the business, and he allows you to speak too. The more informed and intelligent one is, with facts and numbers, the more one will prevail too.

But, in truth, what Mahathir wants is a strong dose of patriotism. One of the strongest reasons why Mahathir can co-exist with PKR de facto leader Anwar Ibrahim and Pakatan Harapan is their sense of common mission: that Malaysia needs to be saved. If all of them agreed that Asia Pacific needs to be redeemed and made more prosperous too, as is the gut feeling of Mahathir, who is an ardent anti-colonialist, one can get a stronger hearing from him too.

But, as a medical doctor, Mahathir looks for symptoms and solutions. One cannot just focus on the former without offering the latter. At the pre-award ceremony in Waseda, Mahathir also conforms to many Malay adat or customs, such as speaking softly and politely, which led some Japanese to wonder if this was due to his age. I explained to the president and vice-president of Waseda, that this was due to Mahathir’s concept of humility. They immediately understood it as a Japanese practice too, and embraced Mahathir as one of their own to this day.

In looking East, Mahathir is not against the West. In fact, Mahathir appreciates the game changer in the form of the investigation of 1MDB by the US Department of Justice.

Like any top doctors, Mahathir believes in following the facts, which is a quality the cabinet seems to have in abundance right now, though it helps when the likes of Rais Hussin, Liew Chin Tong, Ong Kian Ming, Nurul Izzah, Rafizi Ramli, Darryl Leiking, and Dr Mujahid Rawa can all make it to the cabinet too. Under the leadership of their respective party presidents, they all rock – as Mahathir does for Bersatu.

If this Hari Raya provides Malaysians with any sense of hope, it is the fine leadership accumulated in the cabinet, coalition and council of elders, all of which Mahathir and Deputy Prime Minister Dr Wan Azizah Wan Ismail have galvanised together, with Prime Minister-in-waiting Anwar patiently urging calm and composure. The latter is key as Mahathir is going after one of the worse kleptocratic regimes the world has ever seen.


PHAR KIM BENG is a Harvard/Cambridge Commonwealth Fellow, a former Monbusho scholar at the University of Tokyo and visiting scholar at Waseda University.

The views expressed here are those of the author/contributor and do not necessarily represent the views of Malaysiakini.

11 thoughts on “Mahathir: The comeback statesman is Prime Minister Again

  1. I agree with Kim Beng’s views. As a former PTD officer who had some official dealings with Dr. M, I found him to be a sage. Y must know all yr facts for Dr, M is widely read. May almighty god grant him a few > yrs. He can make M’sia a tiger again.

  2. All I can say is that Tun’s long life has a lot to say why Cobbald and Reid Comission still could not be found in any official Malaysian website, in spite of his coming back. There is no Harapan for the NonBumi in Malaysia.

    • Since there is no Harapan for nonBumi, there is little reason to believe there is any Harapan for the Bumi also, since nonBumi does constitute 30% of the population, and mostly a very production portion of the nation. When the nonBumi has no Harapan in Malaysia, there is little reason to believe that Malaysia would ever get respected anywhere. I could never imagine any rational for any honest Indian and Chinese officials to respect any officers from Malaysia. We are just retarding Malaysia’s growth, for not pursuing Constitutional Equality after 4 generations since she gained her independence.

    • @JL: Exactly, all Bumi are borned to be first caste without needing any earnings (pun intended). All nonBumi are borned to be second. So, what are you talking about earning harapan, Jeffrey Lim? Good luck in your effort. I found my hope in the first shall be last. I am helping you, so that you shall not be second. If bashing me help you in actual gain, I am glad to be of help. If it didn’t, and constitutional equality becomes a reality, you gain also. I have nothing to gain, but all to loose. Reason? My hope lies in the notion of the first shall be last. Good choice to be at peace in being second caste, for yourself, your children, and great-grandchildren.

  3. Hard-working, smart and patriotic. No doubts about this.

    But he did choose Abdullah Badawi and MO1 as his replacements.
    Chose MO1 because of his gratitude to MO1’s father ?

    I hope that Dr M will pay more attention to environmental issues, including
    Malaysia’s role in meeting the challenge of “global warming” (anthropogenic
    adverse climate change).

  4. He does all the citting and cooking in the kitchen. At the dinner table the guest eat their meal and go home satisfied, I think.

  5. “…. there seems to be no monument nor roads to remember Mahathir. ” Kim Beng

    Cannot fathom how Kim Beng can come to this conclusion. How can someone who has done so much damage to the country during his first 22 plus years as prime minister deserve a monument or a street named after him?

    Kim Beng is either naive or a malaysian with a pretty short memory.

    • Shakespeare in Julius Caesar said through Mark Antony “The evil that man do live long after them, but the good is interred with their bones”

  6. Comparing TDM with DSAI and DSNR, TDM is a poor judge of the people he had elevated to positions of authority. DSAI panders too much to the royalty and DSNR is a corrupt kleptocrat.

  7. I suspect Mahathir has a like-dislike relationship with royalty. He is a man of his own but ritually respectful of royalty. But ultimately he decides. When he picked Tommy Thomas as AG and forwarded his name to the King for approval, the King was reportedly said to have asked for more names to be submitted. But Mahathir stood his ground and said he had only one choice and that was Tommy Thomas – period!

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