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Once on the back foot, Myanmar's military now looks set to resume offensive in bloody civil war

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Once on the back foot, Myanmar's military now looks set to resume offensive in bloody civil war
News

News

Once on the back foot, Myanmar's military now looks set to resume offensive in bloody civil war

2026-04-30 12:45 Last Updated At:12:50

BANGKOK (AP) — A little more than a year ago, the government's military was on the back foot in Myanmar 's bloody civil war, pushed out of great swaths of the country's north by an alliance of seasoned militias, and forced into defensive action around the rest of the country by other established groups and new pro-democracy guerrillas.

Today the picture has changed.

With its ranks swollen by tens of thousands of new conscripts, the military, known as the Tatmadaw, has reversed some of its losses and appears poised to resume the offensive, while some opposition groups have left the fight and infighting and supply issues have weakened others.

“I think we're nearing a crescendo here where the Tatmadaw is going to reassert itself and the resistance movement is going to peter out,” said Morgan Michaels, a Singapore-based analyst with the International Institute of Strategic Studies who runs its Myanmar Conflict Map project.

Still, he said, even if the broader resistance movement that has grown since the military seized power stumbles, the conflict is not close to over.

“Armed resistance will always continue in Myanmar until there's a comprehensive, negotiated political solution, but the Tatmadaw has retaken the strategic initiative and everything is in the Tatmadaw's favor.”

Meantime, after five years of fighting that has seen tens of thousands killed, including some 8,000 civilians, and millions displaced from their homes, there is a general weariness, both among the forces fighting the Tatmadaw and the general population, said Aung Thu Nyein, a political analyst from Myanmar who now works in neighboring Thailand.

“There are many saying that the local population doesn't care much who will win the war, but (just want) to stop fighting,” he said in a text message.

There is also great pressure from China for stability in Myanmar, also known as Burma, which is a critical source for its rare earths elements and other natural resources, to ensure its mines and other operations are secure, he said.

Beijing has invested billions of dollars in Myanmar’s mines, oil and gas pipelines and other infrastructure and is a major arms supplier to the Tatmadaw, along with Russia.

It also carries significant influence with the paramilitary groups that operate in border areas with China, many of whose members are ethnically Chinese.

China initially supported the Oct. 27, 2023, offensive against the Tatmadaw by the Three Brotherhood Alliance, largely due to Beijing's irritation that the military-run government had allowed organized crime operations to proliferate in border regions. But it has since pulled the plug on arms and ammunition supplies to the militias and pressured them to stop fighting.

Of the Three Brotherhood Alliance members, both the Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army agreed to ceasefires last year after Chinese-mediated talks, leaving the Arakan Army the only member still actively fighting the Tatmadaw, in the western state of Rakhine.

The Brotherhood Alliance members are all long-standing paramilitary groups organized around ethnic minority lines known as Ethnic Armed Organizations, or EAOs. Suu Kyi's ouster has also given rise to pro-democracy militias known as People's Defense Forces, or PDFs, many of which are affiliated with the shadow National Unity Government, organized by former members of Suu Kyi’s party and others.

In the face of an anticipated intensification of attacks by the Tatmadaw, there is a need for top-level coordination of resistance operations by established EAOs in concert with the NUG, the Burma Liberation Democratic Front, a pro-democracy group that has been fighting in the Sagaing and Mandalay regions, told The Associated Press.

“Although there is a shared understanding of the need to overthrow the military dictatorship and move toward a future federal union, there are still gaps and differences in overall grand strategy and tactics,” the group told the AP in a written response to questions.

“There are still differences in positions, perspectives, and approaches. Many continue to hold onto ethnic, regional, and organizational interests and attachments.”

The group, which is part of an alliance of 20 PDFs, added that the Tatmadaw was actively “attempting to divide and weaken the situation by creating divisions between the public and revolutionary forces, among different ethnic groups, and even among revolutionary groups.”

The military officers who ousted the civilian government of Aung San Suu Kyi in 2021 also successfully held elections recently, even though they were criticized by U.N. experts as neither free nor fair with opposition stifled. Min Aung Hlaing, who as the military's senior general led the country with an iron fist after ousting Suu Kyi, was sworn in as president earlier this month.

Politically, the elections appeared to be a thinly veiled attempt to add a veneer of legitimacy to his rule to help improve relations with Southeast Asian neighbors and others as Myanmar struggles under international sanctions.

China, which had been pushing for the election, immediately congratulated Min Aung Hlaing and quickly sent its foreign minister to meet with him in person. The TNLA militia group also sent a message of congratulations, pledging to uphold the ceasefire that China helped broker.

The conclusion of the elections also frees up more soldiers who had been used for widespread security at the polls, Michaels said.

In one of his first acts as president, Min Aung Hlaing invited the country's armed resistance forces to new peace talks, including both the EAOs and the PDFs. No mention was made of the National Unity Government, which immediately denounced the offer as “aimed at prolonging people's subjugation under military rule.”

The vague offer, reported in the state-run Global New Light of Myanmar, said the groups had until July 31 to take part in discussions, with the caveat that they should not come in with “unrealistic demands."

There was no mention of what might happen if groups refused to take part in the process, and the government did not respond to emails requesting comment.

In the meantime the Tatmadaw has continued its attacks, including pressing ahead with large-scale offensive in Sagaing to try and retake the northern city of Indaw, which was captured by PDF groups with the support of the Kachin Independence Army EAO last year.

At the same time, it has been on the defensive in the east as it tries to hold off a push by the Karen National Liberation Army toward a Tatmadaw stronghold near the Thai border.

With the offer of talks, it seems likely Min Aung Hlaing is hoping to rekindle the Nationwide Ceasefire Agreements made with about half of Myanmar's EAOs by previous governments around a decade ago, which helped bring about relative calm.

But with seemingly little interest at the moment, more limited ceasefires may be the immediate goal, Michaels said.

“In the short term if you can agree to ceasefires with some groups, then you can redirect your resources toward other groups that are either unwilling to agree to a ceasefire or that the Tatmadaw is unwilling to agree to a ceasefire with,” he said.

“The Tatmadaw can always accept some degree of opposition and, in fact needs some level of active armed resistance to justify its rule and justify its behavior. But the current level of armed resistance across the country is not tenable.”

FILE - In this photo provided by Myanmar Military True News Information Team, Myanmar President Min Aung Hlaing, right, shakes hands with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi during their meeting in Naypyitaw, Myanmar on April 25, 2026. (Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP, File)

FILE - In this photo provided by Myanmar Military True News Information Team, Myanmar President Min Aung Hlaing, right, shakes hands with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi during their meeting in Naypyitaw, Myanmar on April 25, 2026. (Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP, File)

FILE - Myanmar's newly elected President Min Aung Hlaing waves as he leaves after a swearing-in ceremony at Union Parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on April 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo, File)

FILE - Myanmar's newly elected President Min Aung Hlaing waves as he leaves after a swearing-in ceremony at Union Parliament in Naypyitaw, Myanmar, on April 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Aung Shine Oo, File)

FILE - Saw Win Myint, a commander of a military unit under the Karen National Union, the leading political body for the Karen ethnic minority that is part of the resistance against military rule in Myanmar, inspects the damaged armory in the captured army base of Infantry Battalion 275 in Myawaddy township in Kayin state, Myanmar, on April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Metro, File)

FILE - Saw Win Myint, a commander of a military unit under the Karen National Union, the leading political body for the Karen ethnic minority that is part of the resistance against military rule in Myanmar, inspects the damaged armory in the captured army base of Infantry Battalion 275 in Myawaddy township in Kayin state, Myanmar, on April 12, 2024. (AP Photo/Metro, File)

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — The white supremacist who shot and killed 51 Muslims at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, lost an attempt to undo his guilty pleas in a Court of Appeal ruling Thursday.

The panel of three judges dismissed Brenton Tarrant’s claim that harsh prison conditions prompted him to make an involuntarily admission to terrorism, murder and attempted murder charges. His bid to withdraw his guilty pleas and seek a trial was “utterly devoid of merit," they wrote.

The Australian man, who is now 35, killed 51 worshippers and injured dozens more in March 2019 when he drove to two Christchurch mosques and opened fire with semiautomatic weapons during Friday prayers. Tarrant’s guilty pleas in March 2020 brought relief to bereaved families and survivors of the attack, who feared he would use a public trial to air his hateful views.

The dismissal of his appeal appears to end the possibility of Tarrant ever facing a trial, a prospect that lawyers representing some of his victims — who included men, women and children as young as three — said in a statement Thursday had been “unimaginably traumatic.”

The court noted the gunman's bid was made 505 days after the legal deadline for it to be filed. Tarrant had “failed by a considerable margin to adequately explain the extraordinarily long delay” in seeking an appeal, the judgment said.

At the court's five-day hearing in February, the attacker argued his admissions of guilt were provoked by “irrationality” induced by poor mental health, which led him to desert his racist views for a time. The judges concluded, however, that his claims of mental illness weren’t supported by prison staff, mental health professionals or lawyers who had earlier represented him.

The court added that Tarrant also didn't meet the legal definition of unfitness to plead guilty, a point he had admitted.

“He was not suffering from a mental impairment or any other form of mental incapacity which rendered him unable to voluntarily change his pleas to guilty,” the judges wrote in Thursday's ruling. “He endeavoured to mislead us about his state of mind in a weak attempt to advance an appeal in circumstances where all other evidence demonstrated that he made an informed and totally rational decision to plead guilty.”

The court's decision also revealed that Tarrant sought to abandon his appeal shortly after making his case at the hearing in February. The judges rejected that bid too, writing that the case was “of significant public interest and should be finally determined.”

They suggested that Tarrant “began to form the opinion that the hearing was not proceeding in his favour, and as a result decided to file a notice of abandonment after the hearing concluded.” New Zealand law doesn’t automatically allow an appellant to quit an appeal bid once it’s underway.

The shooter's complaints about his prison conditions included that he was kept away from other prisoners without anything to do and was constantly surveilled. The judges, however, said his solitary confinement was necessary because Tarrant was at risk for suicide or self-harm.

“He was monitored because of concerns about his welfare and not to torment him or treat him cruelly,” they wrote.

The shooter “was not coerced or pressured in any way” to plead guilty, the judges said. In fact, they added, Tarrant rejected his lawyers' offer to attempt to negotiate away the terrorism charge because he wanted to be known as a terrorist.

Tarrant, who has fired the lawyers who were acting for him in February, remains in Auckland Prison, where he was sentenced in August 2020 to spend life in prison without the chance of parole. The judges allowed him to abandon his appeal of that sentence, which was scheduled to be heard later in 2026.

The killer was radicalized online and moved to New Zealand in 2017 with a plan to commit a mass shooting. He amassed a cache of weapons and made a reconnaissance trip to the sites of his planned crimes before the attack.

His previous lawyers told the appeals court in February that Tarrant, an immigrant from Australia, had wanted to argue during a trial that he had been defending New Zealand from immigrants. Such a defense is not available under New Zealand law, a fact that the judges suggested Thursday had influenced his decision to plead guilty.

They wrote that Tarrant hadn't disputed the facts of the case against him, which they described as “overwhelming” and “beyond dispute," or identified any legitimate defense he would have offered at a trial. Evidence included footage of the attack that the gunman filmed himself and livestreamed on the internet, in which he showed his own face, and a document outlining his racist views that he published online before the attacks under his real name.

FILE - Brenton Tarrant appears in the Christchurch District Court, in Christchurch, New Zealand, March 16, 2019. (Mark Mitchell/Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE - Brenton Tarrant appears in the Christchurch District Court, in Christchurch, New Zealand, March 16, 2019. (Mark Mitchell/Pool Photo via AP, File)

FILE - An armed policeman patrols the grounds at the Al Noor mosque following the previous week's mass shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand, on March 23, 2019. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

FILE - An armed policeman patrols the grounds at the Al Noor mosque following the previous week's mass shooting in Christchurch, New Zealand, on March 23, 2019. (AP Photo/Mark Baker, File)

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