By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Future Of Burma/Myanmar
Since a military coup
in 2021 toppled (Burma) Myanmar’s democratic government, the country’s army has
found itself contending with a tenacious and committed rebel insurgency. The
military junta’s opponents are varied and various, including armed
organizations representing Myanmar’s many ethnic minorities and militias loyal
to the ousted government. Many observers had written off such resistance groups
as too fractious and weak to present a genuine challenge to the junta. But that
all has changed in recent months. Rebels have been strikingly successful in an
offensive against the junta in the northern Shan State—which borders
China—called Operation 1027, named for the day it started, October 27, 2023.
The offensive has been led by a coalition of ethnic armies called
the Three Brotherhood Alliance, made up of the Arakan Army, the Myanmar
National Democratic Alliance Army, and the Ta’ang
National Liberation Army.
Thanks to their
efforts, the junta is rocking on its heels. The Three Brotherhood Alliance now
controls Laukkai, the capital of the Kokang region, and many other towns in
Shan State. Trade routes with China and other key arteries remain under rebel
control. Critically, Operation 1027 has spurred into action other
resistance groups, some independent and some led by the National
Unity Government, a shadow administration that includes many supporters of Aung
San Suu Kyi, the leader who was overthrown by the coup. The junta has lost control of its border
crossing with India near Mizoram and is struggling to dominate the heartland
region of Mandalay. In Kayah State, the junta is under pressure from the
Karenni Army, whereas the People’s Defence Force—an assortment of groups that
emerged to resist the junta, which are nominally under the control of the
National Unity Government—and the Karen National Liberation Army are harassing
the junta in the south Tanintharyi region and the eastern regions bordering
Thailand. In the sensitive Rakhine State—ground zero of the genocide against
Myanmar’s Muslim Rohingya minority between 2016 and 2018—the Arakan Army broke
a tenuous two-year cease-fire that it had signed with Myanmar’s army and struck
at their positions.
The junta is on the
back foot in most parts of the country. These rebel offensives have
proved so effective that Myanmar’s president warned in November that the
country risks “breaking apart.” Out of desperation, Myanmar’s army has become
increasingly violent. Beijing’s struggle to broker a fresh cease-fire between
the Three Brotherhood Alliance and the junta led an irate Naypyidaw to launch
punitive aerial strikes against civilians and insurgents alike. Even after a
cease-fire agreement was signed in January 2024, the junta continued to breach
it, according to the Ta’ang National Liberation Army. Such collective
punishment, though par for the course of the junta, continues to cement
Naypyidaw’s territorial and political losses. Morale in the army appears low,
and, unsurprisingly, the violence has triggered a fierce debate among Myanmar
watchers about the country’s future.
From Naypyidaw’s
view, Myanmar’s odds of breaking into ethnic statelets are real. Such a
scenario could play out regardless of the junta’s survival. But the defeat and
ouster of the junta altogether cannot be discounted either. From the
perspective of the motley resistance, Myanmar could be on the cusp of rewriting
its social contract along federal lines. The resilience, coordination, tactical
innovation, and strategic gains of the resistance are unprecedented. The
offensive took months of planning, and the coordination among disparate groups
inspired hope that the country could reach a model of interethnic unity framed
by federalism. Myanmar’s future will be determined as much by the success
of the resistance as by the underlying social and economic realities that broke
the union in the first place.
Drugs And Scams
The 2021 coup ended a
decade-long experiment with democracy. In ousting Aung San Suu Kyi’s elected
government, the coup’s architect, Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, miscalculated
on two counts. He underestimated the deep sense of attachment that Myanmar’s
youth had to the freedoms they experienced between 2011 and 2021. During those
years, majoritarianism marred the country’s incipient democracy and the
military largely dominated the parliament, but most people viewed
democratization as a work in progress and wanted it to continue. By launching a
coup, Min Aung Hlaing stripped an entire generation of a dream and drove away
the very social base he needed to preserve power. For decades, ethnic militias
had been fighting the Burmese government, which has been dominated by the
majority Bamar group. But after the 2021 coup, even people from the Bamar
heartland joined ethnic militias or launched their armed organizations,
resistance groups that are at the forefront of the current offensive.
When the junta
toppled Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021 and plunged the country into chaos, it assumed
that the ethnic armed organizations would quickly sue for peace. Myanmar’s army
believed it could compel them into submission because it was stronger and willing
to use indiscriminate force, while the ethnic armies were fractured and had
little foreign support. The junta still uses artillery and aerial bombardment
to soften resistance strongholds without regard for civilian casualties and
displacement of whole communities. In regions where it is stretched thin, the
junta hires private militias and border guard forces to attack resistance
fighters and terrorize civilians. Such proxies are paid using cash generated
from the regional drug trade and by turning a blind eye to vast illicit
enterprises, such as centers for online gambling and Internet scams that target
people in China. The excesses of one such scam center at the Chinese border in
Kokang helped trigger Operation 1027. These scam centers keep Chinese
nationals hostage for forced labor—including cleaning, cooking, and sex
work—and drain billions of dollars from the Chinese economy. On October 20,
guards shot at dozens of hostages trying to escape, killing several, some of
whom were undercover Chinese agents. The Three Brotherhood Alliance took this
event as an opportunity to launch Operation 1027, promising to “clean up” all
such scam centers in Kokang.
The junta was wrong
to assume that ethnic armies would crumble under pressure. The 2021 coup
exacerbated ethnic minority anxieties and pushed even signatories of the 2015
Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement—signed by Naypyidaw and nearly ten different
rebel groups—to the jungles. The coup birthed a rare consensus in the
resistance that the only way to liberate Myanmar from the military was to rid
the country of the junta by force, as opposed to a nonviolent approach
previously embraced by some groups, including the Karen National Union and the
Chin National Front. Such a defeat seems plausible for the first time since
1949 when the Burmese army lost control of the major city of Mandalay and the
town of Pyin Oo Lwin to the military arm of the Karen National Union. This
is because, in addition to uniting the resistance, the coup has also
debilitated Myanmar’s army.
Myanmar’s army views
itself as the vanguard of Burman-Buddhist nationalism. In the aftermath of the
coup, it witnessed a closing of ranks among its top brass, even including
reformists who had supported political and economic liberalization during the
prior decade. But as Myanmar’s civil war expanded, the army’s soldiers began
losing faith in their commanders. The rank and file began defecting en masse,
and 13,000 to 15,000 troops in Myanmar’s army were killed within two years of
the coup (the figure is higher today). The junta remains unpopular, hindering
its ability to recruit. In trying to please its senior ranks, the army has
allowed officers to benefit from criminal enterprises—the army helps preside
over Myanmar’s licit and illicit economies. But in turning a blind eye to
corruption, the army has undermined its system of command and control, lowered
morale, and caused high casualties. Although the military’s collapse is not
imminent, the coup has significantly reduced its political, military, and economic
power.
Rebels With A Cause
The resistance groups
say they want to do more than just defeat the junta—they have declared that
they will also remake Myanmar as a federal democracy, bestowing equal rights to
all communities regardless of their ethnic, religious, or racial configurations.
Even though the Three Brotherhood Alliance and the National Unity Government
are not formal allies, their willingness to coordinate military action can be
seen as an example of the kind of cooperation necessary to build a federal
republic. And there are signs that other militias are getting over internecine
conflicts and aligning against the junta. In November, the Restoration Council
of Shan State and the Shan State Progressive Party, two warring groups, signed
a cease-fire. The Shan State Progressive Party had been resisting the junta
since 2014, while the Restoration Council of Shan State had maintained channels
with Naypyidaw. But the success of Operation 1027 left the Restoration Council
isolated with little choice but to make peace with the resistance.
Myanmar’s resistance
has little regional diplomatic support and cannot expect meaningful help from
outside the country. The only way to overpower the junta is to transcend
divisions and exploit the junta’s internal crises. Resistance groups have
silently and effectively revamped coordination mechanisms. They have built
bodies—the Central Command and Coordination Committee and Joint Command and
Coordination Committee—to ensure that militias and ethnic armies can work
together more closely and effectively. Through these organizations, different
groups brainstorm tactics and coordinate military action. The National Unity
Government has formed a committee to support coordination with the Three
Brotherhood Alliance to plan attacks, train recruits, and supply weapons and
aid. To encourage defections from Myanmar’s army, the National Unity
Government has built camps that help defectors transition to civilian life. In
Kawlin, a town in the central district of Sagaing that recently fell to the
National Unity Government, political prisoners have been freed and food and
medical deliveries have resumed. Similarly, the Arakan Army has established
parallel governance systems in areas under its control. It has built
courts, policing mechanisms, and medical clinics, and it allows aid agencies to
operate on the ground, demonstrating an ability to govern. And it offers
aid to both Rakhinbeen.
Resource distribution
is another point of tension. The desire for autonomy among minority communities
is not just political, it is also economic. A functioning federal union would
need to dole out limited resources equitably. Like the junta, the resistance is
steeped in the drug trade and does not have the means to generate mass
employment. Fights over resources could propel different ethnic outfits to
practice protectionism when the war ends, leading to second-order frictions and
possibly breaking Myanmar into ethnic statelets akin to the situation that
prevails in Wa State. Though the state is nominally part of Myanmar, the Wa
have their political structures, use the Chinese renminbi instead of the kyat,
and have a separate armed force. Their quasi-sovereign existence is guaranteed
by China and could serve as a model for future ethnic statelets that may emerge
from Myanmar’s ruins. However such dependence on China will
undermine the federal model. It is not in Beijing’s interest to have a coherent
federal democracy in its backyard. China will likely play one group against
another to maintain its leverage within Myanmar.
The current moment
is, arguably, the most sensitive in Myanmar’s modern history. The junta is the
weakest it has ever been and the resistance has made unprecedented territorial,
political, and military gains. The various resistance groups will need to negotiate
settlements among themselves to ensure that a potential post-junta Myanmar does
not descend into a civil war, as happened in Afghanistan when its government
collapsed in the 1990s. To avoid Afghanistan’s fate, Myanmar’s resistance
should take a page from the antiapartheid movement in South Africa, which puts
a premium on national reconciliation over centralizing power. Only then will
Myanmar have a fighting chance of emerging as a federal democracy.
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