(Based on Staff posts from the KHIT THIT MEDIA in April 2024.)
NUG Defense Minister announcing the attack. |
Min Aung Hlaing’s house, nearby War Office, and the
Aye-lar Airport of Myanmar Airforce were targeted by 28 fixed-wings suicide
drones. According to the NUG Defence Minister Yi Mon’s socialmedia posts, 12
drones each went to Myanmar Army’s War Office and Aye-lar Airport while another
4 drones went to the Dictator’s house.
The explosive power of each drone, according to NUG’s social media post, is 20% stronger than an average 107-mm shock-rocket. Altogether more than 20 Myanmar officers and soldiers were killed and there were many more wounded.
The rebel drones
had, for the very first time, successfully crossed the air defence barriers and
also the powerful jammer networks protecting the Naypyidaw. The attack has shocked
the dictator and his generals and the Russian Technical Assistance teams are
now assisting Myanmar Army engineers in reinforcing the aerial protection of
Nyapyidaw the Myanmar Capital City.
(Jonathan Head’s posts from the BBC BURMESE on April 5, 2024.)
The opposition
in Myanmar has claimed a rare mass drone attack on the country's embattled
junta government in the heavily guarded capital, Nay Pyi Taw. The National
Unity Government (NUG) - which calls itself the government in exile - said it
deployed 29 drones armed with explosives to the airport, air force base and
army headquarters.
The junta said it had intercepted the drones,
shooting down seven, including one which exploded on a runway. There were no
casualties, they said, The NUG represents the elected civilian government
previously led by Aung San Suu Kyi, which was toppled in a coup in 2021. Since
then it and other opposition groups have been fighting the junta regime, which
has begun losing control of large areas of the country.
The country's
three-year civil war has killed thousands and displaced about 2.6 million
people according to the UN. Thursday morning's attack on the capital marks
another bold, and rare incursion by the resistance groups who are mounting an
increasingly effective opposition to the junta.
Nay Pyi Taw is
the centre of power for the military regime which named it the capital,
replacing Yangon, after it came to rule. Heavily guarded, it has been shielded
from much of the fighting that has raged elsewhere across the country. Last week,
the junta even staged its annual Armed Forces Day parade in the city - but the
event which showcased tanks, armoured vehicles and thousands of soldiers took
place at night.
On Thursday,
representatives from the NUG told BBC Burmese they had planned and strategised
with several defence groups to conduct the drone attacks. "The
synchronised drone operations were simultaneously executed against Nay Pyi Taw
targeting both the military headquarters… and Alar air base," NUG's deputy
secretary Mg Mg Swe said.
The military
reported shooting down four drones at the airport in the capital and three
drones which it said approached Zayarthiri township. Officials made no
reference to the other drones reported by the opposition.
The NUG earlier
this year said more than 60% of the country's territory is now under the
control of resistance forces. Before Thursday's attack, the regime was seen to
have suffered its most serious setback last October.
An alliance of
ethnic insurgents overran dozens of military outposts along the border with
India and China. The junta has also lost large areas of territory to insurgents
along the Bangladesh and Indian borders. The fierce fighting has pushed the
junta to enforce mandatory conscription. In February - where men aged 18 to 35
and women aged 18 to 27 - would be forced to enlist.
Observers have
said the enforcement of the law reveals the junta's diminishing grip on the
country, and the high toll in fighting. There have also been reports of high
defection rates. The Tatmadaw, as the military is known, has not publicly
declared the size of its fighting force in recent years.
However the
junta still retain significantly more weapons and more advanced firepower than
the resistance fighter groups. As such, opposition groups have pivoted to using
commercial drones carrying bombs to target military holds, researchers say.
There have been several such "drop bomb" attacks in recent months.