(Jonathan Head’s post from the BBC NEWS on 23 October 2025.)
Myanmar's
army is taking back territory with relentless air strikes - and China's help: When
insurgents finally gained control of the town of Kyaukme - on the main trade
route from the Chinese border to the rest of Myanmar - it was after several
months of hard fighting last year.
Kyaukme
straddles Asian Highway 14, more famous as the Burma Road during the Second
World War, and its capture by the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (TNLA) was
seen by many as a pivotal victory for the opposition. It suggested that the
morale of the military junta which had seized power in 2021 might be crumbling.
This month, though, it took just three weeks for the army to recapture Kyaukme. The fluctuating fate of this little hill town is a stark illustration of how far the military balance in Myanmar has now shifted, in favour of the junta.
Kyaukme
has paid a heavy price. Large parts of the town have been flattened by daily
air strikes carried out by the military while it was in the hands of the TNLA.
Air force jets dropped 500-pound bombs, while artillery and drones hit
insurgent positions outside the town. Much of the population fled the town,
though they are starting to return now the military has retaken it.
"There
is heavy fighting going on every day, in Kyaukme and Hsipaw," Tar Parn La,
a spokesman for the TNLA, told the BBC earlier this month. "This year the
military has more soldiers, more heavy weapons, and more air power. We are
trying our best to defend Hsipaw."
Since the BBC spoke to him the junta's forces have also retaken Hsipaw, the last of the towns captured by the TNLA last year, restoring its control over the road to the Chinese border. Follwing is the map showing Myanmar's border with China, and the towns of Kyaukme, Lashio and Hpisaw along Asia Highway 14.
These
towns fell primarily because China has thrown its weight behind the junta,
backing its plan to hold an election in December. This plan has been widely
condemned because it excludes Aung San Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy,
which won the last election but its government was ousted in the coup, and
because so much of Myanmar is in a state of civil war.
That is why the military is currently trying to take back as much lost territory as it can, to ensure the election can take place in these areas. And it is enjoying more success this year because it has learned from its past failures, and acquired new and deadly technology.
In
particular, it has responded to the early advantage enjoyed by the opposition
in the use of inexpensive drones, by buying thousands of its own drones from
China, and training its forward units how to use them, to deadly effect.
It
is also using slow and easy-to-fly motorised paragliders, which can loiter over
lightly-defended areas and drop bombs with high accuracy. And it has been
bombing relentlessly with its Chinese and Russian supplied aircraft, causing
much higher numbers of civilian casualties this year. At least a thousand are
believed to have been killed this year, but the total is probably higher.
Devastation from the air in Myanmar's brutal civil war
This
photo taken on August 15, 2025 show students studying in a classroom in a
concrete bunker to protect against airstrikes at a village in the Sagaing
region. On the other side, the fragmented opposition movement has been hampered
by inherent weaknesses.
It comprises hundreds of often poorly-armed "people's defence forces" or PDFs, formed by local villagers or by young activists who fled from the cities, but also seasoned fighters from the ethnic insurgent groups who have been waging war against the central government for decades.
They
have their own agendas, harbouring a deep mistrust of the ethnic Burmese
majority, and they do not recognise the authority of the National Unity
Government which was formed from the administration ousted by the 2021 coup. So
there is no central leadership of the movement. And now, more than four years
into a civil war that has killed thousands and displaced millions, the tide is
turning once again.
How the junta recouped its losses
When
an alliance of three ethnic armies in Shan State launched their campaign
against the military in October 2023 - calling it Operation 1027 - armed
resistance to the coup had been going on in much of the country for more than
two years, but making little progress.
That
changed with Operation 1027. The three groups, calling themselves the
Brotherhood Alliance - the Ta'ang National Liberation Army (The Palaung Army),
the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (The Kokang Army) and the Arakan
Army - had prepared their attack for months, deploying large numbers of drones
and heavy artillery.
They
caught military bases off-guard, and within a few weeks had overrun around 180
of them, taking control of a large swathe of northern Shan State, and forcing
thousands of soldiers to surrender. These stunning victories were greeted by
the broader opposition movement as a call to arms, and PDFs began attacks in
their own areas, taking advantage of low military morale.
As the Brotherhood Alliance moved down Asian Highway 14, towards Myanmar's second-largest city of Mandalay, there was open speculation that the military regime might collapse. That did not happen. "Two things were overstated at the start of this conflict," says Morgan Michaels, a research fellow at the International Institute of Strategic Studies.
"The
three Shan insurgent groups had a long history of working together. When other
groups saw their success in 2023, they then synchronised their own offensives,
but this was misread as some sort of unified, nationwide opposition steaming
towards victory. The second misreading was how bad military morale was. It was
bad, but not to the extent where command and control was breaking down."
The
junta responded to its losses in late 2023 by starting a forced conscription
drive. Thousands of young Burmese men chose to flee, going into hiding or exile
overseas, or joining the resistance.
But
more than 60,000 joined the army, replenishing its exhausted ranks. While
inexperienced, they have made a difference. Insurgent sources have confirmed to
the BBC that the new recruits are one of the factors, together with the drones
and air strikes, which have turned the tide on the battlefield.
(Blogger's Notes: Burmese are well known as crazily-haughty natural-born killers. They have been killing each others for thousands of years till British came and colonized them in 1824. They stopped killing each other during more than 100-years-long British colonial-rule and then immediately resumes killing each other happily again once British left in 1948. The longest unbroken-continuous civil war on this planet. Encyclopaedia Britannica once sadly cited: Give any young Burmese man a rifle and he would willingly kill and be killed without a serious reason, and Burmese villages are full of them. The new forced conscripts are the perfect example of that brutal Burmese trait.)
Drones have given the junta a decisive advantage, reinforcing its supremacy in the air, according to Su Mon, a senior analyst at the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (Acled), which specialises in gathering data on armed conflicts. She has been monitoring the military's use of drones.
"The
resistance groups have been telling us that the almost constant drone attacks
have killed many of their solders and forced them to retreat. Our data also
shows that military air strikes have become more accurate, possibly because
they are being guided by drones."
Meanwhile,
she says tighter border controls and China's ban on the export of dual-use
products are making it harder for the resistance groups to get access to
drones, or even the components to assemble their own drones.
Prices
have risen steeply. And the military has much better jamming technology now, so
many of their drones are being intercepted.
A war on many fronts
The
TNLA is not the only ethnic army which is retreating. In April, after strong
Chinese pressure, another of the groups in the Brotherhood Alliance, the MNDAA,
abandoned Lashio, previously the headquarters of the military in Shan State and
a much-heralded prize when the insurgents captured it last year.
The
MNDAA has now agreed to stop fighting the junta. And the most powerful and
best-armed of the Shan insurgent groups, the UWSA, has also buckled to Chinese
demands and agreed to stop supplying weapons and ammunition to other opposition
groups in Myanmar.
To
force MNDAA to meet that impossible demand China did severely blockade the
Kokang Territory as their so-called Cut-5-Cuts Operation along the Chinese
Border since last September. Strictly No Electricity, No Water, No Internet, No
crucial supplies such as rice, fuel, medicines, and essential-consumables, and
No Cross-border Movement. The whole Kokang-China border has been tight shut by
a division of PLA, the People Liberation Army.
These
ethnic armed groups operate along the border and need regular access to China
to function. All China needed to do was close border gates and detain a few of
their leaders to get them to comply with its demands.
Further
south, in Karen State, the junta has regained control of the road to its second
most important crossing on the border with Thailand. The insurgent Karen
National Union, which overran army bases along the road a year and a half ago,
blames the new conscripts, new drones and betrayal by other Karen militia
groups for its losses.
It
has even lost Lay Kay Kaw, a new town built with Japanese funding in 2015 for
the KNU, at a time when it was part of a ceasefire agreement with the central
government.
In
neighbouring Kayah, where a coalition of resistance groups has controlled most
of the state for two years, the military has retaken the town of Demoso, and
the town of Mobye, just inside Shan State. It is also advancing in Kachin State
in the north, and in contested areas of Sagaing and Mandalay.
However, there are many parts of Myanmar where the junta has been less successful. Armed resistance groups control most of Rakhine and Chin States, and are holding the military at bay, and even driving it back in places.
One
factor in the military's recent victories is that it is concentrating its
forces only in strategically important areas, Morgan Michaels believes, like
the main trade routes, and towns where it would like to hold the election.
Tellingly
Kyaukme and Hsipaw are both designated as places where voting is supposed to
take place. The regime has acknowledged that voting will not be possible in 56
out of Myanmar's 330 townships; the opposition believes that number will be
much higher.
'China opposes chaos'
China's
influence over the ethnic armies on its border could have stopped them mounting
the 1027 operation two years ago. That it chose not to is almost certainly down
to its frustration then over the scam centres which had proliferated in areas
controlled by clans allied to the junta. The Brotherhood Alliance made sure
shutting down the scam centres was at the top of its list of goals.
Today,
though, China is giving its wholehearted backing to the junta. It is promising
technical and financial aid for the election, and has given visible diplomatic
support, arranging two meetings this year between the junta leader Min Aung
Hlaing and Xi Jinping. This despite China's unease about the 2021 coup, and its
hugely destructive consequences.
"China
opposes chaos and war in Myanmar," said Foreign Minister Wang Yi in
August, which more or less sums up its concerns. "Beijing's policy is no
state collapse," Mr Michaels says. "It has no particular love for the
military regime, but when it looked like it might teeter and fall, it equated
that with state collapse, and stepped in."
China's
interests in Myanmar are well-known. They share a long border. Myanmar is seen
as China's gateway to the Indian Ocean, and to oil and gas supplies for
south-western China. Many Chinese companies now have big investments there.
And
with no other diplomatic initiatives making any headway, China's choice, to
bolster the military regime through this election, is likely to be endorsed by
other countries in the region. But even China will find it hard to end the war.
The devastation and human suffering inflicted by the military on the people of
Myanmar have left a legacy of grievances against the generals which may last
generations.
"The
military has burned down 110 or 120,000 houses just across the dry zone,"
Mr Michaels says. "The violence has been immense, and there are few people
who have not been touched by it. That's why it is difficult to foresee a
political process right now. Being forced into ceasefire because you literally
cannot hold your front lines is one thing, but political bargaining for peace
still seems very distant."






