Bangkok, January 20 (AP): Myanmar’s military government and a major ethnic rebel group in the country’s northeast have signed a formal ceasefire agreement, mediator China said Monday.
The ceasefire between the military and the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA), which seized large tracts of territory along the border with China, is the second such pact in little over a year and came into effect on Saturday. A previous pact in January last year was not honored by either side.
The new ceasefire was brokered by China in mid-January, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said at a daily briefing in Beijing.
China is the most important foreign ally of Myanmar’s military rulers, who took power after ousting the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021. The takeover led to nationwide peaceful protests that escalated into civil war.
Beijing has major geopolitical and economic interests in Myanmar and is deeply concerned about instability along their border.
“We hope that all parties will maintain the momentum of ceasefire and peace talks, earnestly implement existing common understandings, take the initiative in deescalating the situation on the ground, and further negotiate and settle relevant issues through dialogue,” Mao Ning said.
She added that China stands ready to actively promote talks and provide support for the peace process in northern Myanmar. She did not disclose details and Myanmar’s military government did not immediately comment on the ceasefire.
The MNDAA, which is made up of the ethnic Chinese Kokang minority, last year announced a unilateral ceasefire in its conflict with the military and called for a dialogue under Chinese auspices. The group is a member of the Three Brotherhood Alliance that launched a surprise offensive along the border with China in October 2023.
China originally appeared to give tacit support to the offensive when it seemed to aid its goal of eradicating illegal gambling and internet scam operations organized by ethnic Chinese gangsters in northeastern Myanmar. But the offensive also weakened the Myanmar army’s grip in other parts of the country.
The ethnic rebels have been fighting for decades for greater autonomy from Myanmar’s central government and are loosely allied with the People’s Defense Force, the pro-democracy armed resistance formed after the army’s 2021 takeover.
In January last year, Beijing used its close ties with both the military and the Three Brotherhood groups to negotiate a ceasefire in northern Shan state, which lasted for five months until the ethnic alliance went back on the offensive in June, accusing the military of violating the ceasefire.
China showed its displeasure with the new rebel attacks by shutting down border crossings, cutting electricity to Myanmar towns and taking other measures to end the fighting.
China has reopened its border gates linking with the areas controlled by the MNDAA and the United Wa State Army, another powerful rebel group in eastern Shan state, according to local media.
Bertil Lintner of The Irrawaddy adds:
China has once again shown that it is the only outside power with the means, capacity, and motivation to intervene in Myanmar’s internal conflicts. In order to secure their China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC), which provides its landlocked southwestern provinces—and indeed the rest of the country—with an outlet to the Indian Ocean, the Chinese have managed to put an end to fighting in northern Shan State. The Kokang-based Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) and its close ally, the Palaung Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA), have halted their advances, and there will be no “march on Mandalay” or even Pyin Oo Lwin, which some observers predicted a year ago.
In early December, the MNDAA declared a truce with the Myanmar junta after Kokang chieftain Peng Daren went to China for “medical treatment.” A resolution to the conflict would be sought “under Chinese government arbitration,” it said on Dec. 3. The TNLA had issued a similar statement on Nov. 25, when it said it would “always cooperate with China’s mediation efforts and continue to cooperate [to achieve] good results.”
The third member of the Brotherhood Alliance, the Arakan Army (AA), which has managed to overrun most of its homeland of Rakhine State, announced on Dec. 29 that it, like its allies in the north, is ready to negotiate with the military regime.
The show goes on and, so far, nobody has been able to challenge China’s predominant role in Myanmar’s civil wars. Western peace-making outfits may be back sniffing for business opportunities, but that amounts to little more than securing aid to pay the salaries of foreign “experts.” As for potential regional players, nothing constructive can be expected from ASEAN and its toothless Five-Point Consensus, which was adopted a few months after the February 2021 coup and called for the immediate cessation of violence, constructive dialogue among all parties concerned, and humanitarian assistance to areas which have been affected by the fighting—but without any plan how those lofty recommendations should be implemented.
ASEAN has never in its 58-year history managed to solve a single bilateral conflict or dispute between some of its 10 members, let alone end an internal crisis in a member state. Even so, Western countries appear to have outsourced the Myanmar issue to ASEAN, since the war in Ukraine and the still unresolved conflicts in the Middle East are much higher up on their list of priorities.
But there are also wild cards over which China’s influence is limited. The Kachin Independence Army (KIA) in the far north has little choice but to deal with the Chinese across the border, but in October it ignored their request not to seize control of the border town of Pangwa, the domain of former communist warlords who made peace with the Myanmar military in 1989 and turned their area into a haven for logging, opium cultivation, and mining for rare earth metals. Today, the KIA controls not only Pangwa but also the official border-crossing at Kanpiketi and adjacent areas. China has even less influence in areas along the Thai border where Karen and Karenni resistance forces are active, or in Chin State in the west.
Recent developments raise three fundamental questions: what can the Bamar allies of the ethnic resistance armies realistically expect to achieve; what are China’s long-term objectives; and are there no outside forces at all that can stand up to China or, at least, counter China’s influence? Several resistance armies dominated by ethnic Bamar, including many youngsters who tried to oppose the junta by peaceful means after the coup and are collectively known as People’s Defense Forces (PDF), have since then been fighting alongside the ethnic armies. Many PDFs have raised the flag of resistance in Sagaing and even rural parts of Mandalay Region. But for the ethnic armies, the PDFs are mere buffers between them and the junta forces. By keeping Naypyitaw’s soldiers at bay, the ethnic armies can consolidate their hold on their own respective areas. The KIA, for instance, which has provided training and support for PDF forces now active in the north, would have no interest in marching into Mandalay, still less Naypyitaw or Yangon.
China’s strategic objectives are clear. The CMEC has to be protected, and China is doing it by playing both sides—being a major supplier of military hardware to the Myanmar military as well as several resistance forces. The MNDAA, the TNLA, and the AA are equipped with Chinese-made guns obtained through the officially neutral United Wa State Army (UWSA). In other words, China has leverage over the Myanmar military as well as ethnic armed organizations in a way nobody else can compete with.
At the same time, the emergence of a strong, peaceful, democratic, and federal Myanmar—the stated goal of most resistance armies—is not in China’s strategic interest. As long as Myanmar is weak, China can play official games of being a friendly neighbor and peacemaker and use a carrot-and-stick approach with whatever government is in power: trade coupled with investment on the one hand, and indirect support for the ethnic armies on the other. If Myanmar ever really became strong, peaceful, democratic, and federal, China would be the first to lose. Its leverage would be gone.
But then China does not want the situation to get totally out of hand either, because that would mean serious instability in the frontier areas and, most likely, a flood of refugees across the border. And it would seriously disrupt normally lucrative cross-border trade.
Western peaceniks, ASEAN, the U.S., and the EU are not in a position to influence the course of the civil wars, which are the heaviest and most widespread since the years immediately after independence from Britain in 1948, when the regime was so isolated that it was referred to as “the Rangoon Government.” Japan too, despite a strong interest in containing China’s influence, has been utterly unsuccessful in its efforts to bring peace to Myanmar.
Myanmar’s western neighbors India and Bangladesh, which are not hamstrung by ASEAN’s Consensus and non-interference principles, could play roles—if only they had a clear strategy for dealing with the geopolitical consequences of wars in Myanmar. The Bangladeshis, naturally, are concerned about more than 1 million Rohingya Muslim refugees languishing in camps in their country, and about what would happen if the AA took over the whole of Rakhine State. Bangladesh shares a 271 km porous border with Rakhine and Chin states, and developments there would have a direct impact on its national security.
India’s interests in Myanmar appear to be motivated by four major concerns. The first is the future of New Delhi’s “Act East” policy. Myanmar is the obvious link between India and lucrative markets in Southeast Asia. India’s security planners also want to ensure that ethnic Assamese, Manipuri, and Naga rebels are deprived of cross-border sanctuaries in the remote hills of northwestern Myanmar, from where they can launch raids into India and smuggle guns into India’s volatile northeastern region. Unrest in Sagaing Region and Chin State has already spilled over into Manipur, which borders Myanmar. Thirdly, India’s rapidly expanding economy needs energy, and India has shown interest in importing oil, gas, and perhaps also hydroelectric power from Myanmar. That is not possible as long as wars are raging across the border. Lastly, India, more than any other neighboring country, wants to keep China’s influence in Myanmar at acceptable levels.
In February, it will be four years since the military seized power, arrested democratically elected representatives of the people, and re-introduced a strict dictatorship. In the coming year, it is highly unlikely that the junta will be able to defeat the plethora of ethnic and political resistance forces that are active in large areas throughout the country. But it also doubtful whether the resistance will be strong and united enough to unseat the junta. The present strategic stalemate is likely to continue, but everything depends on China’s next move.
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