(Lorcan Lovett’ article from ALJAZEERA MEDIA on 17 May 2024.)
Azad, a US national, (left) and an unnamed British
fighter (right) with the PDF Zoland. The two men are standing either side of a
desk where another fighter is sitting with weapons on display. There is a flag
behind them. The men are all masked. Azad, a US national, left, is among the
foreigners who have joined the armed resistance in Myanmar.
Bangkok, Thailand – An ex-British soldier and an American fighter are among a small but growing number of foreigners training and fighting alongside anti-coup forces in the war against Myanmar’s military regime.
The volunteers
say they were inspired by Myanmar’s resistance, which has stood up to one of
the most brutal and well-equipped militaries in Southeast Asia since the generals
seized power and killed peaceful protesters more than three years ago.
An infantryman
in the British army for four years from 2009, with a seven-month tour of
Afghanistan, Jason said he returned from eastern Myanmar in late April after
eight weeks on the front lines.
Jason – a pseudonym used due to security concerns – said the resistance fighters were “ready to die for the cause” in their all-or-nothing battle against the military. “It’s different from other places I’ve fought, where you see more fear in the eyes,” he said. “They’re brave people.”
Ethnic armed
groups, mainly in the country’s border areas, have been fighting the military
for decades, sometimes with the assistance of foreign volunteers. A close up a
Union Jack in camouflage colours on the shoulder of a foreign fighter.
But since the
coup on February 1, 2021, atrocities have spread from the peripheries to the
central regions. The military, with a largely Russian-made fleet of fighter
jets, has been accused of indiscriminate air strikes against civilians and had
burned villages to the ground in what the United Nations and human rights
groups have described as possible war crimes.
But the generals
have been unable to quell the uprising. The resistance has inflicted huge
losses and made large territorial gains, initially using slingshots and air
rifles against a military wielding a billion-dollar arsenal supplied by Russia
and China.
Ethnic armies,
public donations and weapon seizures partly as a result of last year’s
Operation 1027 offensive have opened the door to better equipment for the
resistance, which, even without foreign military assistance, has challenged the
military’s staying power.
Myanmar has not
experienced the same wave of international volunteers seen in conflicts such as
Ukraine or Syria, and there are no coordinated efforts to enlist foreign
recruits. Myanmar also has a dizzying number of armed groups scattered across
the country.
But foreign
fighters, acting in an independent capacity, have travelled to the east and
west of Myanmar in clandestine efforts that potentially put them at risk of
prosecution in their home countries, and have remained secret until now.
Al Jazeera has
seen footage and photos of Jason fighting alongside the resistance in eastern
Myanmar. Two sources also witnessed him on the ground. The British veteran also
fought for Ukraine soon after the start of the Russian invasion, spending about
a year and a half in the country, he said. “I’m not a mercenary,” said Jason.
“I do it purely for who I think is the right side.”
On seeing
untrained and inexperienced foreigners in Ukraine, he does not want the same
for Myanmar. “There’s always the worry that Myanmar could become the next
Ukraine with idiots going there,” he said, adding that he joined an unnamed
resistance force, which vetted him.
He now has plans
to organise a team of six to 10 former servicemen from the United Kingdom, the
United States, Canada and Australia and return to help the rebels. “We have
knowledge from four different armies that we can use to teach them,” he said.
“My experience there solidified even more my urge to help them. They just want
their freedom and democracy.”
He was reluctant
to baptise the brewing international unit with a name, which he expects to
arrive in Myanmar at an unspecified date later this year. “We don’t want to be
the white saviours, with our own team,” he said. “We would rather work in their
system than be our own entity.”
“We’re doing it
all for free,” he added. “People have to take time off work.”
‘All one struggle’
On the other
side of Myanmar, in mountainous Chin State, which borders India, the People’s
Defence Force Zoland (PDF Zoland) resistance group posted a photo on social
media on May 11 showing two foreign volunteers: Azad, from the southern US,
alongside a British volunteer, who declined to comment.
Azad said he was
teaching sniper and infantry courses as well as carrying out reconnaissance and
other military duties. “The junta has retreated to the towns,” he said by phone
from Chin State. “The whole countryside has been liberated. Sooner or later,
the resistance will start taking the population centres.”
PDF Zoland
declined to comment to Al Jazeera. Azad described himself as a “leftist
internationalist” who volunteered for four years with the Kurdish-led YPG (People’s
Protection Units) forces in northern Syria.
The 24-year-old
said he was involved in political activism while working at a cafe in the US.
He has not served in the military, much like his new Gen Z comrades, who are
powering Myanmar’s revolution. He said his rebel commander was “just a couple
of years older” than him and “lots of the soldiers were students before”.
Azad sees the fight for autonomy for the Kurds,
Arabs, Christians and other minorities in northern Syria as part of a global
struggle which includes the Myanmar revolution and Ukraine’s defence against
the Russian invasion.
Citing the close ties between the Myanmar regime and
Moscow, which analysts say includes a two-way transfer of weapons, Azad said,
“It’s all one struggle.” For him, volunteering in Myanmar was about “a
legitimate exchange in solidarity, realising that all our struggles are
connected”.
He has been in
Chin State for three months and expects more international volunteers to arrive
in Myanmar as the revolution shifts from rural guerrilla warfare to urban
areas. “As the rebels gain a stronger position, as the ways in and out of the
country slowly become easier, as logistics become better and better, it seems
natural there will be more people,” he said.
Although the revolution in Myanmar was “not
advocating for socialism in replacing the junta”, he said it was a “new 21st
century people’s resistance” that was “hitting on the same notes”.
“Learning about
these people, who, in the span of a few short years, went from literally
nothing to forming a force that can push the junta back, is really inspiring,”
he said. “People here are incredibly brave, putting themselves in situations
with ridiculous odds when clearing out bases.”
Outside foreign individuals, the Christian humanitarian
group, Free Burma Rangers (FBR), has been well-known since the 1990s for
bringing international and local volunteers into ethnic states of eastern
Myanmar where minorities have fought back against the military.
Its volunteers provide healthcare and aid to displaced communities and record human rights abuses. It has previously acknowledged that some of its rangers carry weapons for their own protection and to defend the displaced, given the dangerous environment in which they operate.
“We do humanitarian
training for all who want it – not military training,” FBR founder and former
US special forces soldier David Eubank told Al Jazeera in a text message from
Karen State. “We are not a militia nor part of any armed group. We are a
frontline relief group.”
Meanwhile, the
regime has its own small but powerful foreign support base. It said in April
that officials had visited Russia and China to buy combat drones. Army chief
Min Aung Hlaing met Vladimir Putin in Vladivostok last year, while Russian
officials have been welcomed as prominent guests at the annual Armed Forces Day
parade every March.
Russian military instructors have reportedly flown to the country and trained Myanmar soldiers on Russian-supplied weaponry. Resistance sources in eastern Myanmar say reports sometimes circulate of Russians training regime troops near the front line. Al Jazeera has been unable to confirm the accounts.
A Myanmar
resistance commander, who asked for anonymity, said the last report of a
Russian trainer was four months ago near his area of operations in Pekon, a
town in southern Shan state. “But we
heard he got airlifted as the attacks on the military camps there intensified,”
he added.