(David Mathieson’s article from The ASIA TIMES on 12June 2024.)
Myanmar’s dictator Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
showcased a major infrastructure project on June 8, opening the Thanlyin Bridge
3 across the Bago River, linking the commercial capital Yangon with the Thilawa
Special Economic Zone.
Started in 2019 with a 31 billion yen (US$197 million) loan from the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA), the bridge symbolizes economic progress under the State Administration Council (SAC) junta that is largely at odds with widespread armed conflict and economic decline its coup has caused.
Just days later,
however, military-controlled media announced that security forces had thwarted
a plot to attack the bridge opening ceremony. Several people were arrested with
two 107mm rockets and launching gear in a workers’ housing area close to the
bridge. Two more were arrested the following day with another rocket.
SAC-aligned
media claimed that “on the morning of June 8, 2024, in an old wooden cabin in
the shipyard workers’ housing area in Ward 61 of Dagon Myothit (Seikkan)
Township… several UG (underground) members were apprehended…according to a
report from a concerned resident opposed to terrorism.”
The military
media, which can never resist displaying a “perp-chart” of mug shots and
alleged connections between the conspirators, designated some of them as
“rocket shooter”, “shooter assistant”, and “situation monitor.”
It claimed that
a man called “Arkar Min (yet to be apprehended) of the Brigade Drone Force PDF
(People’s Defense Force) provided instructions on how to use rockets via
Instagram in the third week of April 2024.” Another alleged leader, Phyu Hnin
Aye, was designated as “Rocket shooting director (at large from Mae Sot).”
The SAC has accused
the exiled National Unity Government (NUG) of being behind the alleged plot but
stopped short of designating it as an attempt on Min Aung Hlaing’s life. If
that was the intention, it raises questions over the ability of the resistance
forces to mount an operation that could have decapitated the SAC’s topmost
leadership.
Two days after the incident, in a speech published in state media, Min Aung Hlaing “stressed the need to wipe out terrorists in Yangon Region…(he) underscored that as terrorists attempt to commit terror acts, taking a chance in unguarded moments of security forces, individuals have to monitor the movements of terrorists with security awareness and knowledge to ensure peace and stability.”
A rare admission of instability or the fears of a war
criminal who just lived through a possible assassination plot? How many other
attempts have been made to target who must be the most hated man in Myanmar?
There was an
initial optimism among many Myanmar resistance forces that the SAC second in
command, Vice Senior General Soe Win, had been killed in a drone strike in
mid-April at the military Southeast Command in Mawlamyine.
Not seen for
several weeks, speculation swirled that he had been severely injured, that he
was in intensive care in Yangon, or that he had been transferred to a hospital
in India but he soon resurfaced in apparently fine health.
The anti-SAC
resistance has been making increasing use of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs),
such as the largely symbolic drone attack on the military fortress capital of
Naypyidaw in early April, which didn’t cause much damage but must have jarred
the military leadership to some extent.
But the bridge
plot reveals several larger trends in the war against the SAC. On the one hand,
it illustrates that urban operations, which have been largely low-level,
sporadic and in decline over the past year, are still viable if an urban cell
can form, operate, plan and surveil a target, and smuggle into Yangon ordnance
to carry out an attack. More dramatic would have been an actual launch of the
rockets.
Another
interpretation would suggest that the security services’ intelligence
capabilities are sufficient to thwart such resistance operations, as they have
managed to do in many large urban spaces such as Yangon and Mandalay.
There were numerous predictions that a surge of
urban uprisings would follow the successful Operation 1027 in northern Shan
state in October, which saw insurgents seize scores of towns and over 200
military positions. But this failed to materialize, partly because of the
difficulty in staging urban operations in Myanmar’s proficient and ruthless
police state.
The incident
also reveals the air of twisted normalcy that hums through Yangon, where the
regime’s top leader, Japanese engineers from the Nippon Koei Company and
reviled SAC members like the former Karen leader Mahn Nyein Maung open new
infrastructure as if the situation is stable.
The regime
blithely claimed the bridge “will help utilize the East-West Economic Corridor,
which will benefit the Hpa-an/Myawady area, as well as the development of Mon
and Kayin states and the improvement of connection with regional countries” –
areas the embattled regime has largely lost control over, including that
crucial section of the Asia Highway.
But the bridge operation also raises important
questions about resistance targeting choices. 107mm rockets (Burmese called
them rockets - SHOCK ROCKETS) have been used in multiple battlefronts in
Myanmar, and are notoriously inaccurate and prone to malfunction.
Originally developed by the Chinese military in the 1960s, in a multiple launch system called a Type 63, the rockets can be used in very low-tech mode, often simply propped on a stand or sandbag and ignited using a simple battery in a “fire and forget” fashion. They have a range of several kilometers with a blast radius of 12 meters and were popular with the Mujahideen in Afghanistan in their resistance against the Soviets.
107mm rockets
have become a weapon of choice for many Myanmar resistance groups, before and
after the coup, used in multiple attacks on built-up areas or airfields.
Resistance forces deployed 12 against Mandalay’s Tada-U airport in January,
with only five actually igniting.
The military
airfield at Nam Paung near the Kachin state capital of Myitkyina was targeted
in April, but it’s not clear how much damage was inflicted. The rockets are
plentiful, easy to use and indicative of the asymmetric nature of Myanmar’s
scattered armed conflicts.
But two recent
incidents deserve greater scrutiny over the decision-making protocols of
anti-military resistance forces. The SAC claims that a large number of 107mm
rockets were captured in early February in the city of Bago, and that the “Dark
Side Revolution Burma” (DSRB) PDF was planning attacks on tea shops and
restaurants where large crowds were gathered to watch the annual Myanmar
Academy Awards ceremony on television.
There is no
confirmation that the group was actually planning such an attack against
civilians. The DSRB is not a widely active organization, so this could
potentially be a false flag accusation of the SAC.
Yet in April in Pyin U Lwin, during the annual
Thingyan water festival, the Mandalay PDF fired nearly a dozen rockets into the
large town, striking a military academy and wounding several cadets, but also
hitting a monastery and hospital, killing two Buddhist monks and severely
wounding a number of civilians including children.
It wasn’t widely
raised at the time but this is potentially a war crime committed by resistance
forces. The use of indiscriminate weapons, especially in built-up areas, could
also be in breach of international humanitarian law.
The targeting of
Min Aung Hlaing with such unguided munitions in a large crowd of civilians
could also have constituted a war crime if it had not been thwarted. But the
“bridge plot” should also serve as a moment of clarity for the resistance.
Targeting large crowds with indiscriminate weapons is something the SAC does on a daily basis, murdering civilians across the country with airstrikes and artillery. For anti-SAC forces, even those plotting the assassination of senior regime figures, extreme or desperate measures may have a counter-productive effect if innocent civilians become collateral damage.
(David Scott Mathieson is an independent analyst
working on conflict, humanitarian and human rights issues on Myanmar.)
107mm Type 63 Chinese Rockets
This is the
Chinese 107mm Type 63, a White-Phosphorus Incendiary (WPI), spin-stabilised,
electrically-initiated, Ground-to-Ground Rocket (GGR). The rocket contains
Incendiary (INC) pellets which are spread over a radius of 21m on detonation. The
material burns at a temperature of over 700ºC for more than 40 seconds.
It is normally fired from a trailer or truck-mounted multiple launchers, but may also be fired from single-tube launchers mounted on small boats. It is a barrage weapon used against personnel and material. Rockets of early manufacture are painted battleship grey or dark green with later rockets painted olive drab.
They have been
exported widely, usually in association with the towed Type 63 12-tube
launcher. Copies or derivatives of the rockets are also produced in Iran, Iraq,
North Korea and Turkey.
The Type 63
HE-Fragmentation Spin-Stabilized Rocket is an electrically initiated, rocket
incorporating a high-explosive fragmentation warhead. It is normally fired from
a trailer- or truck-mounted multiple launcher, but may also be fired from
single-tube launchers mounted on small boats. It is a barrage weapon used
against personnel and material.
Rockets of early
manufacture are painted battleship gray or dark green; later rockets are olive
drab. The bourrelets and nozzle plate are unpainted. Markings, stenciled in
black and providing manufacturing data and nomenclature, may vary on individual
rockets. Setscrews lock the adapter to the warhead and the adapter and nozzle
plate to the rocket motor.
The nozzle
closure screws over the base of the nozzle plate. A hole in the center of the
nozzle closure is crimped around an insulated stud in the center of the
initiator assembly, thus waterproofing the base of the rocket motor. The
initiator assembly electrical contact is exposed through the center of the
insulated stud. The nozzles are canted to provide spin.
The Type 63-2 Rocket is an 18.8-kilogram (41.5-pound) rocket containing a main charge of TNT weighing 1.3 kilograms (2.9 pounds). The rocket is olive drab with black markings. The warhead is made of metal.
The 107mm spin
stabilized incendiary rocket contains an unknown amount of White Phosphorous
(WP). The rocket is painted olive drab with black markings. The warhead is made
of metal.
Tactically
speaking, AK-47, RPG-7 and 107mm rocket launchers each have their own division
of labor. For targets beyond 300 meters, the 107mm rocket launcher is a simple,
practical, cheap and reliable weapon.
The front-line
officers and soldiers of the US military who have fought against 107mm rocket
launchers on the battlefield are generally in awe of this simple-looking
Oriental rocket launcher. In Afghanistan and Iraq, the US military pays great
attention to collecting these three weapons.