(David Scott Mathieson’s article from The LOWY INSTITUTE on 03 April 2024.)
Myanmar’s gruelling civil war grinds on as euphoria
over the stunning surprise offensive launched by opposition forces in October
2023 (Operation 1027) gives way to alarm at the State Administration Council's
(SAC) imposition of a military service law could lead to widespread forced
recruitment.
The SAC has so far managed to cling to power, even as it loses territory, bases and soldiers in battles with multiple armed opponents in the borderlands and increasingly on the plains of Rakhine, Karen, Karenni, Shan and Kachin states.
The SAC holds on
in the centre as its frontiers collapse, relying on strategic depth that
protects its arms production, and utilising widespread airpower and the absence
of urban uprisings. Overly optimistic analysis predicting imminent junta
collapse persists, but it’s becoming less convincing.
It is
irrefutable that an estimated 50 towns have fallen to the Three Brotherhood
Alliance, Arakan Army and the Karen National Union, as well as other anti-junta
forces. Yet no state capital or Myanmar military regional command centre has
fallen.
There have been
multiple cases of Myanmar soldiers fleeing into India, Bangladesh and Thailand
to escape insurgent attacks. But even as its frontiers collapse, the SAC holds
on in the centre, relying on air power and on strategic depth that protects its
arms production.
There is
relative stability in urban centres, from the commercial capital Yangon to the
military industrial manufacturing belt at Pyay in Magway Region to the capital
Naypyidaw and the city of Mandalay, as well as the major military cantonment
areas and air bases such as Meiktila.
Maintaining trade links by sea will not replace the disrupted overland routes with Thailand and China, but they are crucial for jet fuel and military supplies. No state capital city has fallen to insurgents in Myanmar. In fact, there is relative stability in the commercial capital Yangon.
The Defence Services Industries (or Ka Pa Sa) continue to manufacture bombs, bullets, artillery rounds and other lethal materials, despite the massive amount of ordnance seized by the resistance. The production zone and the transport network that sustains it, plus the system of hundreds of facilities and bases in central Myanmar, are formidable defences that so far appear stable, allowing the military to increase its punishing bombardments in multiple locations.
Myanmar conflict think tank Nyan Lynn Thit Analytica
recently compiled stark analysis on SAC air strikes since the coup, and their
surge following Operation 1027. In 2021, there were 85 documented strikes, with
339 the following year. In 2023, there were 1,228 air strikes: over a 122-day
period between September to end of December, the SAC conducted 750 air strikes,
averaging six per day.
The tempo of
attacks has increased markedly, as has accuracy. In some cases, it is alleged
that thermobaric weapons have been used, delivering greater payloads of
destructive power. The recent killing of more than 20 Rohingya Muslims in Minbya
township of Rakhine, and the razing of towns in Hsihseng in Southern Shan
State, underscore the destructive capacity of the SAC’s firepower, buttressed
by widespread use of heavy artillery and increased use of weaponised drones.
In recent days,
there have been multiple air strikes in four different states across Myanmar.
According to an account from Karenni State, civilians were bombed 32 times in
two hours.
Amnesty International reported in late January that several jet fuel sales to Myanmar’s military in 2023 were facilitated through storage facilities in Vietnam via Chinese and Liberian flagged tankers, but whose ownership could not be determined.
On 1 February,
Australia imposed sanctions on three Myanmar companies supplying the military
with aviation fuel. US sanctions specifically targeting Myanmar’s foreign arms
supplies have been imposed regularly since the coup, with specific sanctions on
jet fuel supplies in March and August 2023. These measures should be
coordinated and expanded in light of the surge in air strikes.