Rebel fire and China's ire: Inside Myanmar's anti-junta offensive
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[December 15, 2023]
(Reuters) - Generals from Myanmar's junta held peace talks
in June near the border with China with representatives of three
powerful ethnic armies. They sat across a wide table covered with blue
cloth and decorated with elaborate bouquets.
But the rebels were playing a double-game.
Secretly, the ethnic armies - collectively called the Three Brotherhood
Alliance - had already laid the groundwork for Operation 1027, a major
offensive launched in October that has become the most significant
threat to the regime since it seized power in a 2021 coup.
"We were already preparing for the operation when we met them," said
Kyaw Naing, a spokesman for the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance
Army (MNDAA), a largely ethnic-Chinese group that is part of the rebel
coalition.
Reuters interviewed a dozen resistance officials with knowledge of the
operation, as well as analysts and other people familiar with the
matter. Some spoke on condition of anonymity because the offensive is
ongoing.
They disclosed previously unreported elements of the planning, including
details of the formation of a unified battlefield brigade and the extent
of China's impatience toward the junta, which some analysts believe
emboldened the militias.
Operation 1027, named after the date it began in late October, has
delivered nationwide victories for the alliance and other groups
fighting the military, which unseated Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi's
civilian-led government in February 2021.
The junta cracked down on protests after the coup, sparking a grassroots
rebellion and re-igniting conflict with some ethnic armies. The
military, known as the Tatmadaw, has ruled Myanmar for five of the past
six decades, and its soldiers are feared for their brutality and
scorched earth tactics. The army says tough measures are required to
fight groups it considers "terrorists."
Two members of the Three Brotherhood Alliance together with five other
armed groups formed the new Brigade 611 in early 2022, four rebel
officials told Reuters. The formation's strength numbers in the
"thousands", one of them said.
It was a display of unprecedented cooperation among outfits that come
from different parts of Myanmar, speak different languages and
traditionally have had different priorities, according to a November
report from the U.S. Institute of Peace (USIP), a Washington-based
think-tank focused on conflict prevention and resolution.
The operation came amid rising anger in Beijing with the junta over
rampant crime on the border, which created conditions that supported the
blitzkrieg, according to two analysts.
China, a key junta ally that also has close relations with some ethnic
Chinese militias in the borderlands, has been riled by Myanmar's
inability to shut down online scam centers along the frontier that have
become a scourge across Southeast Asia.
As of October, more than 20,000 people, mainly Chinese, were being held
in over 100 compounds in northern Myanmar, where the workers - many of
them trafficked - defraud strangers over the internet, according to a
USIP estimate.
The centers have become a major public security challenge for China and
Chinese officials delivered an ultimatum in Beijing this September to
their Myanmar counterparts: eliminate the compounds or China would do
so, according to a person briefed on their meeting.
Numerous scam centers were caught up in the recent fighting, allowing
many foreign nationals who had been trapped to flee.
Myanmar's junta, as well as China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
Ministry of Public Security, did not return requests for comment.
In a Nov. 29 speech, junta leader Gen. Min Aung Hlaing said the fighting
near the border originated from long-standing issues and the military
was focused on combating insurgents "for peace and stability in the
region."
The regime has since held China-facilitated talks with the Three
Brotherhood Alliance, a junta spokesman said on Dec. 11 without
providing further details. Beijing said it supports such talks, while
the alliance said on Wednesday it remains determined to defeat the
"dictatorship".
A senior Chinese diplomat said in November that Beijing doesn't
interfere in the internal affairs of other countries, but urged Myanmar
to protect Chinese residents and personnel, and to cooperate in ensuring
stability along the border.
BRIGADE 611
Operation 1027 began in northern Shan State, abutting the border with
China, where troops led by the Three Brotherhood Alliance - which
comprises MNDAA, the Ta'ang National Liberation Army and the Arakan Army
(AA) - said they captured around 150 military outposts, five towns and
four border gates within a month.
Independent analysts consider those figures reliable and the junta,
which has not addressed specifics about battlefield defeats, has
acknowledged some loss of control.
Among the rebel forces was the multi-ethnic Brigade 611, said MNDAA's
Kyaw Naing.
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A member of the insurgent KNDF Karenni Nationalities Defence Force
rescues civilians trapped amid airstrikes, during a battle to take
over Loikaw in Kayah State, Myanmar November 14, 2023.
REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo
The formation includes troops from entities supported by the
parallel civilian government as well as fighters from the AA, one of
Myanmar's most powerful ethnic armed forces, and the Bamar People's
Liberation Army (BPLA), a newer militia drawn mostly from the
country's majority Bamar people, officials from those groups
confirmed.
Photos of Brigade 611 posted by an MNDAA-affiliated outlet in
January show hundreds of troops in battle fatigues gathering for a
graduation ceremony. Officials watched from a marquee, under a red
banner with Burmese script and Chinese characters.
Some Brigade 611 troops drilled in using drones ahead of the
operation, said Lin Lin.
Rebel ground troops often launch attacks following drone strikes, a
tactic that has "become a game changer" for them, said Khun Bedu,
leader of Karenni Nationalities Defense Force (KNDF), which now
controls parts of the frontier with Thailand and also contributed to
Brigade 611.
The closer coordination means the rebels have risen "up everywhere
and the junta doesn’t have enough military forces to handle them,"
said Zhu Jiangming, a security counsel at the Asian Development Bank
who has written about the border situation.
Rebels aided by "foreign drone experts" used over 25,000
drone-dropped bombs during the offensive, forcing some military
posts to be abandoned due to "excessive strength" of resistance
fighters, Min Aung Hlaing said in November.
The Three Brotherhood Alliance did not respond to a request for
comment on whether they used foreign experts.
Despite these setbacks, the Myanmar military - one of the largest in
Southeast Asia - has sizeable resources and a "determination to
prevail at all costs," said Richard Horsey, a senior adviser at the
non-profit International Crisis Group.
Anti-junta operations have since rapidly expanded to other parts of
Myanmar, with battles in the central region of Sagaing as well as in
states near India and Bangladesh.
In several areas, rebel groups are supported by the People's Defense
Forces (PDF), a movement backed by the civilian National Unity
Government (NUG) that includes representatives of Suu Kyi's
administration.
The NUG claims control over parts of the country and has worked on
diplomatically isolating the junta. Suu Kyi remains in detention in
the capital, Naypyidaw.
In Mandalay, a major city that is the gateway to the northern
territories, the local PDF is tasked with stalling military
reinforcements to the frontline, its spokesman said.
The NUG supports over 300 PDF units under its command using money
raised by taxation, bond sales and other methods, Finance Minister
Tin Tun Naing told Reuters.
CHINESE CHAGRIN
Chinese frustration had been steadily growing this year as the scam
centers in northern Myanmar continued to operate despite Beijing's
diplomacy, according to state media and online government posts.
China's Ministry of Public Security heavily promoted social media
posts on the arrests of alleged Myanmar scammers, gathering millions
of views.
The Xinhua state news agency said the scam centers, many operated in
enclaves run by junta-aligned forces, "seriously infringed on the
property, security and legitimate rights and interests of the
Chinese people."
This summer, "No More Bets", a Chinese film about a couple from the
country trafficked to a scam centre in an unnamed Southeast Asian
country, grossed nearly $530 million domestically.
In recent months, Beijing raised the issue in multiple bilateral
meetings, according to two people briefed on the talks and Chinese
state media.
China exerts some influence over rebel groups, especially the
ethnically Chinese, but does not control them, analysts say.
Scot Marciel, a former U.S. ambassador to Myanmar, said the ethnic
armed groups were not acting as Beijing's direct proxies in carrying
out Operation 1027, "but the Chinese weren't troubled that they did
it – at least the initial attacks on the scam centers".
Zhu, the Chinese security counsel, said China was friendly with both
the junta and the resistance.
If two friends fight, he said, "I have no choice but to not help
either side. But if anyone hurts China’s core interest, I will help
its opponent."
(Reporting by Reuters staff; Editing by Katerina Ang)
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