(Staff article from The JAMES TOWN FOUNDATION on 30 May 2024.)
China has been arming both sides heavily. |
These successes
have not brought down the ruling regime, however, and Myanmar’s ethnic militias
will likely not be ready to launch another large-scale offensive anytime soon,
prolonging the conflict further.
China is playing both sides of the civil war,
supporting anti-junta ethnic militias in order to extract ever-greater economic
and political concessions from the very regime that it supports militarily.
The ethnic militias and the forces of the Western-supported National Unity Government share a common enemy, but disagree over what a final political settlement should look like, particularly over how confederal the country should be if they succeed.
The strategic
pause offers the Tatmadaw a chance to recover from its losses as well, and the
mood of the country’s civilian population is turning toward peace and the status
quo, which will constrain the ethnic militias’ ability to find recruits.
In January, the
Myanmar National Truth and Justice Party/Myanmar National Democratic Alliance
Army (MNTJP/MNDAA) captured Laukkaing in northern Shan State following the
surrender of troops of the Tatmadaw (junta’s) Regional Operation Command.
Myanmar’s northern regions have seen major retreats by the junta since October
2023.
This area
includes the Shan and Karenni (Kayha) states, which share a border with China;
Rakhine and Chin states, which share borders with Bangladesh and India,
respectively; and the Sagaing region, which is adjacent to India.
For example, the Arakan Army (AA) has taken control of crucial military bases in Rakhine State. Meanwhile, Karen forces currently control 80 percent of the country’s eastern region, while Chin forces control over 70 percent of Myanmar’s western state bordering India.
Emerging
developments in the initial weeks of 2024 have introduced the possibility of
unpredictable scenarios, such as humanitarian crises and a dangerous power
vacuum that can enable insurgent factions to escalate fighting against the
junta for territorial dominance. These developments will have consequences for
neighboring countries and may very well pose challenges for the region and
beyond.
Myanmar’s Geopolitical Significance
Myanmar is a key
member state of the Association for Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its
alignment and stability are of geopolitical significance for the region.
Several major ethnic militias in northern and eastern Myanmar (Kachin State and
Shan and Kayah states, respectively) launched a synchronized offensive against
the military junta called “Operation 1027” (so named for the month and day of
its launch in 2023). This was an unprecedented move to wrest control of
critical infrastructure, transportation corridors, and townships from the
Tatmadaw.
These ethnic
militias joined forces to form the Three Brotherhood Alliance (3BA), which
consists of the AA, MNDAA (also called the Kokang Army), and Ta’ang National
Liberation Front (TNLA). By impeding Highways 3 and 34—the main trade routes
with China—they effectively demonstrated their ability to hold their own
against the junta’s forces.
Beyond that,
wresting control over essential transportation routes allowed the 3BA to exert
economic pressure on the junta, which was struggling under the weight of the
various rebel groups’ strategic military operations. The 3BA’s fighters
successfully captured 161 positions from the junta along a 260-kilometer frontline
as a result of the offensive (IISS Myanmar Conflict Map, November 2023).
These events
also caused a domino effect in western Myanmar (Chin and Rakhine states) and
central Myanmar (Mandalay and Sagaing regions). For example, several ethnic
militias, including the People’s Defense Force (PDF) of Myanmar launched their
own offensives, including most notably “Operation 1111” and “Operation 1107”.
The PDF can be
understood as an ad hoc army of the National Unity Government in exile and is
composed primarily of civilians. These combined offensives prompted rumors that
the State Administrative Council (SAC), the junta’s official name, would
collapse. Following a half-year of continuous hostilities since October 2023,
however, it appears that rumors of the junta’s death may have been exaggerated.
This can be explained in part by the fact that Myanmar’s many ethnic militias
have divergent end goals.
Factions and Forces
Understanding
the full scope of the conflict necessitates a review of the military coup that
overthrew the civilian government in February 2021 and installed Senior General
Min Aung Hlaing as the present chairman of the SAC. Several prominent civilian
leaders were apprehended, and a wave of widespread demonstrations ensued,
especially in major cities and townships.
The junta
responded with a brutal crackdown, firing on protestors in the streets and
leading to numerous civilian casualties. Consequently, the deposed civilian
leaders established the National Unity Government (NUG), which subsequently
elevated the PDF as its armed wing.
The SAC’s ease
in conducting brutal attacks against ethnic militias and civilians in conflict
zones was largely attributable to the ceasefires, armistices, and peace
treaties it entered into with ethnic militias throughout all of Myanmar. These
measures included the establishment of autonomous regions of governance for
certain ethnic militias and their integration into the paramilitary Border
Guard Forces (BGF).
Consequently,
the junta was able to administer and function in central Myanmar with a degree
of autonomy, unencumbered by major ethnic tensions in the country’s north,
northeast, and west. Due to the temporary nature of the armistice, the AA,
TNLA, and MNDAA exploited the time to amass their forces and logistics in
anticipation of an eventual conflict with the Tatmadaw.
They eventually identified a window of opportunity
to launch an assault, when the government’s forces were vulnerable in terms of
manpower, firepower, and logistics. This occurred because government forces
were drawn away from the country’s internal ethnic borderlines in order to
focus their efforts on defeating the PDF in central Myanmar.
The seizure of
large swathes of territory has come at the cost of a catastrophic depletion of
the ethnic militia’s manpower and ammunition. As a result, the militias have
resorted to using human wave tactics, further amplifying the loss of life in
anti-junta operations.
Moreover, the
financial resources available to the ethnic militias are dwindling, challenging
their ability to maintain the necessary stockpiles of armaments for protracted
conflict. Myanmar’s harsh and frequently impassible terrain and the location of
the various ethnic groups’ homelands severely constrain many of the militias’
room for maneuver.
For example, the AA is facing a renewed blockade of
Rakhine State by the Tatmadaw, rendering movement in and out of Rakhine
practically impossible.
Common Enemies, Conflicting Aims
The objective of
the shadow NUG, which is based in Washington D.C., is to establish a
centralized government that safeguards a unified democratic Myanmar. The NUG
and 3BA disagree over the concept of federal sovereignty and confederation. The
NUG and the majority of the country’s larger ethnic groups share a common
adversary, but not a common objective.
Due to a lack of international funding, however, the
NUG is constrained, making it necessary for most of its PDF forces to
coordinate their military actions against government forces with the assistance
of local ethnic militias.
Since ethnic
militias have significant leverage in determining further action against the
current regime, it is reasonable to assume that any future behavior on their
part will support their own self-interests. Engaging in a full-scale war
against the Tatmadaw would necessitate the stretching of the militias’ forces
across ever more territory, risking overextension and expending already-scarce
supplies of materiel. Until the ethnic militias are able to recover and restore
their strength to what it was prior to “Operation 1027,” a significant
escalation in violence against government forces is improbable.
Most
importantly, numerous ethnic militias, excluding 3BA, have attempted to replicate
“Operation 1027” with considerably less success. The fact that both government
forces and 3BA have targeted civilians also exacerbates the difficulties of
achieving victory.
Since civil
conflicts frequently result in civilian losses and can cause enormous and
intolerable population displacement, Myanmar’s population increasingly appears
to prefer peace and the status quo over continued war. Thus, heightened
tensions could lead to a loss of support from the ethnic militias’ own
communities, limiting their ability to recruit in the future.
The SAC and External Actors
The SAC’s
increased force size and air cover for its ground forces present formidable
challenges to the inadequately armed ethnic militias and PDF units. The SAC’s
air force can obliterate any major rebel advance, notwithstanding the
accumulation of troops and numerous high-level defections.
Outside actors’ influence is also crucial. Western
actors, including the European Union, the United States, and Canada, have
recognized the NUG as the legitimate government. The SAC, on the other hand,
maintains a dual posture and receives substantial support from China. The port
infrastructure of Myanmar, for example, which provides direct access to the Bay
of Bengal, has attracted considerable economic and strategic attention from
China.
In pursuit of
its own interests, China seeks a stable, predictable, and at least unaligned
Myanmar. To assure the continued allegiance of ethnic militias in the event of
a change in central authority, China discreetly furnishes the major militias
like TNLA and MNDAA—as well as the Chinese-speaking militias like the United Wa
State Army—with weaponry and logistics.
Given that the preponderance of the NUG’s support
comes from its alignment with Western states and values, China possesses a
significant stake in exerting influence over the ethnic militias, which have
jurisdiction over many PDF units. Thus, China supports the junta in the long
run but utilizes Myanmar’s ethnic militias as leverage to pressure the junta
into allowing greater Chinese influence over the country and its future.
Using a
combination of carrots and sticks, China encourages the SAC to grant Beijing
more economic and political concessions, thereby advancing Chinese interests.
China continues to provide the Tatmadaw and the SAC with most of its military
hardware and (growing) economic support, even while it arms ethnic militias.
Similarly,
Myanmar has pledged to back China’s economic interests and adhere to the “One
China” policy. Despite this, Beijing is finding it increasingly difficult to
promote peace along its border due to the ongoing conflict between the junta
and the 3BA.
This became
especially apparent following the drone attacks on the Jin San Jiao (Kyin San
Kyawt) border gate in northern Shan State by the 3BA, which caused over $14
million in damages. In response to the worsening security situation, the
Chinese embassy in Myanmar issued an urgent call for its citizens to leave the
border region.
Conclusion
The struggle to
end authoritarian rule in Myanmar is far from resolved and remains rife with
challenges, including the risk of escalating regional and international
tensions. A sudden breakthrough toward the overthrow of Myanmar’s junta seems
exceedingly improbable.
The only
possibility for this would be a massive and intricate offensive by a larger
alliance of militias like 3BA with the NUG-controlled PDF units in such a way as
to directly disrupt Myanmar’s capital, severely destabilizing the governing
junta.
(Blogger’s Notes: The Jamestown Foundation is a Washington, D.C.-based conservative defense policy think tank. Founded in 1984 as a platform to support Soviet defectors, Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Director William J. Casey helped back the formation of the Jamestown Foundation, agreeing with its complaints that the U.S. intelligence community did not provide sufficient funding for Soviet bloc defectors.
Its stated mission today is to inform and educate
policy makers about events and trends, which it regards as being of current
strategic importance to the United States. Jamestown publications focus on
China, Russia, Eurasia, and global terrorism.
This article sounds like the CIA has decided to notch
up its clandestine support to the NUG to the next level by funding a major
offensive against Myanmar Army. Our Burma will become a proy for CIA to launch
the so-called NEW COLD WAR against China-Russia Axis Alliance.)