By Eric Vandenbroeck
The conflict in
Myanmar, now in its fourth year, has claimed thousands of civilian lives and displaced
more than three million people. Since toppling the democratically elected
government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021, the military junta under
General Min Aung Hlaing has failed to consolidate its authority. Over the last
seven months, the military has suffered a succession of humiliating defeats at
the hands of opposition forces.
Myanmar is undergoing
fragmentation: large parts of the country, including most of Myanmar’s
international borders, are now under the dominion of various ethnic armed
groups. These groups are expanding control of their ethnic homelands and
building autonomous statelets. But this does not necessarily mean the country
is headed for a catastrophic collapse with the kind of chaotic intergroup violence that has played out in
other fractured states, such as Yugoslavia in the 1990s.
Having previously been
there I reported in 2012 about 'the last frontier' in Myanmar/
Burma that army jets fired on positions
in northern Kachin.
And then again in
2015 I made some more extensive traveled to Myitkyina
and Kachin State, what became known as the the
Saffron Revolution, when Karen
and Kachin were waging a war. To Hpa-An, the
capital of Karen (Kayin) State. And finally which
became a bit of a relief to Mawlamyine.
At the same time,
fragmentation has greatly diminished the prospects for building a federal union
in Myanmar. Doing so would require regional rulers to cede partial authority to
a central government and nonstate forces to disarm, both of which are extremely
unlikely. Rather than trying to forge a grand political solution to the current
conflict, outside actors should accept the messy reality. Given the most
probable alternatives—a protracted war, a consolidation of military rule, or
both—decentralized control of disparate parts of the country may be the least
ruinous outcome.
Myanmar's junta chief Senior General Min Aung Hlaing
in Naypyidaw, Myanmar, March 2021
Unconsolidated Putsch
In the immediate aftermath
of the 2021 coup, the military’s brutal crackdown on peaceful protests pushed
people across the country to form armed resistance groups. Many of these groups
joined forces with ethnic armies that have been fighting the Myanmar state for
decades. Violence has now engulfed much of the country, pitting regime forces
against hundreds of resistance groups, from small units to organized militias
equipped with modern light arms.
The newly formed
rebel groups lacked the numbers, coordination, and heavy weaponry necessary to
attack military bases or other well-defended positions. Still, they conducted
effective ambushes on military convoys and hundreds of other targets, such as
checkpoints, administrative offices, and military-linked
businesses; they also carried out extrajudicial killings of alleged informants.
Initially, many of the
country’s ethnic armed groups remained on the sidelines, waiting to see how
events would unfold before taking any action. The picture changed dramatically
in late October when a coalition of three of the country’s most powerful ethnic
armies went on the offensive. The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army,
the Ta’ang National
Liberation Army, and the Arakan Army
launched a blitzkrieg on towns and military bases in northern Shan State, on
the border with China. Armed and experienced, they delivered a rapid series of
humiliating defeats to the Myanmar military, expelling it from large swaths of
territory. The capture of border towns and transport routes has disrupted trade
with China, stemming an important stream of revenue for the junta. By laying
bare the military’s weakness, these victories inspired other ethnic armed
groups and allied resistance forces to join the offensive across the country’s
periphery.
In the west, the
Arakan Army has taken control of most of Rakhine State, including the border
with Bangladesh. Soon, it may capture the state capital, Sittwe,
as well as the deep-sea port at Kyaukpyu and the
military’s regional command headquarters in nearby Ann. In the far northern
Kachin State, the Kachin Independence Army has seized strategic bases and an
important border trading post, further curtailing trade with China, and is now
within striking distance of Kachin’s capital, Myitkyina. In the southeast, on
the Thai border, the Karen National Union has significantly expanded its
territory and cut off much of the overland trade with Thailand. In April, it
temporarily ousted the military from the border town of Myawaddy before regime
forces reoccupied it with the help of a rival Karen faction. Elsewhere, the
junta has failed to recoup most of its lost territory. It is also struggling to
replenish its troops, as thousands have surrendered to rebel groups or fled.
The regime’s decision in February to enforce a conscription law reveals its
desperation.
A Karen National Liberation Army soldier carrying an
RPG launcher on the outskirts of Myawaddy, Myanmar, April 2024
Centrifugal Forces
The military’s
failures on the battlefield, along with the country’s deepening economic
crisis, have led to widespread elite discontent with Min Aung Hlaing. His days
as leader of the junta may be numbered, although it remains unclear who will
replace him, or when. The military itself is not yet on the verge of collapse.
Its most powerful opponents are ethnic armies that operate on the country’s
periphery, and they are unlikely to try to bring the war to the capital,
Naypyitaw, or the Yangon-Mandalay corridor, where a majority of Myanmar’s
population resides. Rather than trying to topple the junta, the major ethnic
armed groups are focused on consolidating control over their newly expanded
territories.
What they seek is the
establishment of permanent ethnic homelands, in some cases explicitly modeled
on Wa State, a self-ruling enclave on the Chinese
border. Wa leaders accept that their territory is
part of Myanmar, but they govern autonomously, maintaining an army strong
enough to deter any attempt to bring the region under state control. The desire
among other groups to emulate the Wa model stems in
part from their historical experience of living under successive imperious
governments dominated by the Burman majority. In part, too, these groups simply
want to insulate themselves from the post-coup chaos in central Myanmar. Some
observers hope that the weakening of central military control and the
establishment of decentralized power structures could begin a process of
“bottom-up federalism” that ends in stable national governance. Others see it
as a worrying slide toward Balkanization, in which multiple statelets become
locked in cycles of competitive violence. Both perspectives miss something
crucial.
The process of state
building at the regional level makes progress toward federalism at the national
level more challenging. Any federal solution—the aspiration of many in Myanmar
after decades of unresolved minority grievances and civil war—would require
ethnic minority administrations to cede partial power to a national government.
Armed groups that have gained control over their ethnic homelands at a
tremendous cost in lives and resources are unlikely to make such compromises.
They will be reluctant to trade the authority they now enjoy, including control
of their own armed forces, for a turbulent experiment in federal democracy.
These groups aim to
maintain their armies to safeguard their autonomy and, in some cases, to
preserve control over lucrative natural resources (such as jade, gems, and
minerals) and illicit sources of income (such as drug production, casinos, and
scam centers). This preference for a confederation of autonomous ethnic zones
is not limited to ethnic minority areas. Even in some Burman-majority regions,
the idea of de facto self-rule is gaining momentum and local communities,
organizations, and armed resistance groups are starting to put the
administrative building blocks in place. All this threatens to leave Myanmar as
a collection of statelets, with a rump state at the center.
Ascendant Antifederalism
Although the
emergence of “one country, many systems” may be incompatible with federalism,
it need not lead to catastrophic Balkanization, either. Myanmar is not a
well-functioning state that is suddenly breaking apart. It has been in a
situation of partial collapse since it gained independence in 1948. Large areas
of the uplands, which are home to ethnic minority groups, have never been under
the control of any central government and have long managed disputes among
themselves. In areas controlled by Karen National Union and Kachin Independence
Organization armed groups, for example, sophisticated governance structures
have evolved over the decades, along with a vibrant civil society. More nascent
ethnic armed group administrations—such as those being developed by the Ta’ang National Liberation Army in Shan State, the Arakan
Army in Rakhine State, and Karenni forces in Kayah
State—are drawing lessons and inspiration from these models of self-government.
The emergence of
quasi-independent statelets is likely the least bad outcome for Myanmar in the
medium term. The most probable alternative, after all, is not peace under a
federal democratic system, but brutal war. Any attempt to negotiate a grand
solution to the country’s failed state-building process amid the current
conflict and political crisis would likely result in more violence, not less. A
settlement would create losers as well as winners, and the losers would
certainly have the means to mount an armed response.
This is not to
question the value of building consensus around the many divisive political
issues in Myanmar. The work of civil society and opposition groups that have
emerged since the coup can help facilitate state-building efforts in the
future. But in the near term, it is important to recognize that bringing
Myanmar’s disparate political actors into agreement on a federal structure,
which was always going to be an intractable task, has become even more
difficult as the country’s politics have fractured since the coup.
Neighboring
countries, Western donors, and multilateral institutions need to accept the
reality of Myanmar as a fragmented state. They must be willing to engage with
ethnic armed group administrations to deliver critical humanitarian and
development assistance, taking care not to inflame conflict in the process.
International donors also must carefully calibrate their engagement based on
armed groups’ willingness to abide by fundamental human rights norms, such as
respect for minorities in areas under their control. Convincing outside actors,
particularly neighboring countries, to work with Myanmar’s nonstate authorities
will not be easy. Apart from China, which has long engaged with armed groups
along its shared border, Myanmar’s other neighbors are wary that developing
deeper relationships with subnational administrations could draw the ire of the
junta. They also worry about undermining the principle of state sovereignty—and
the signal such diplomatic overtures may send to their own insurgent or separatist
groups. This concern is most acute for India, but it echoes in Bangladesh,
Laos, and Thailand, which have all experienced ethnic-based insurgencies.
As the junta looks
increasingly fragile and loses control of most of the country’s borders,
however, Myanmar’s neighbors have started to adjust their policies. Bangladesh
understands that the million-plus Rohingya refugees it hosts cannot be
repatriated without the agreement of the Arakan Army, which now oversees the
areas from which the Rohingya were expelled and to which they would return. In
February, India announced an end to a long-standing policy that had allowed
residents of border communities to move freely between the two countries; it
has also begun the construction of a costly 1,000-mile border fence. Both moves
are signs that New Delhi’s close relationship with the junta in Naypyitaw is no
longer proving useful in securing India’s northeastern border, where multiple
Indian insurgent groups operate. And Thailand’s prime minister, Srettha Thavisin, has publicly
said the Myanmar regime is “losing” its battle to consolidate control of the
country. His government has stepped up engagement with the Karen National Union
following the Myanmar military’s temporary defeat at the border town of
Myawaddy in April.
Myanmar’s junta is
unhappy that these countries are beginning to hedge their bets, but there is
little it can do about the situation. It has few international allies other
than Russia, which is distracted by its war in Ukraine and unable to offer much
tangible support. Beijing, which dislikes Min Aung Hlaing and believes his
regime to be incompetent, is in no mood to lend a helping hand, either. With
the military thus isolated, other countries’ engagement with nonstate
administrations is unlikely to tip the scale of the conflict one way or the
other. These administrations are almost certainly here to stay. Working with
them is therefore the only feasible way to help improve the lives of the people
in the areas they control.
An international
system built on the primacy of relationships between nation-states is too
restrictive a framework for dealing with Myanmar today. Foreign governments and
international institutions must engage with nonstate groups to address acute
humanitarian needs and improve governance. Myanmar’s fragmentation may be
unavoidable, but it does not have to be catastrophic for its people.
For updates click hompage here