The Sentinel-Record

Myanmar waged war for decades

- AP’s The Conversati­on Tharaphi Than is an associate professor, Department of World Cultures and Languages, at Northern Illinois University. The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

With great fanfare — but few guests — Myanmar’s armed forces recently celebrated their 76th anniversar­y in the nation’s capital of Naypyitaw.

Only Russia, China, Thailand and a handful of other Asian countries sent representa­tives to attend the March 27 parade showing off Myanmar’s modern war machines — mostly imported from Russia and China over the past decade, to the tune of $2.4 billion.

The Myanmar military has been terrorizin­g civilians since a coup two months earlier. On the day of the parade, soldiers killed over 90 people for protesting military rule, including a 5-yearold boy and three teenagers. An estimated 564 people have been killed in Myanmar since the

Feb. 1 coup.

One of Asia’s poorest countries, Myanmar spends twice as much on defense as it does on education and health combined. With half a million soldiers, at least on paper, Myanmar has the world’s 38th strongest military, according to Global Fire Power, which ranks 140 nations on their capability to wage war.

Myanmar’s military wasn’t always a repressive force. It began as an adored liberating force founded to end colonial rule.

History of the Burma army

Burma’s first national army came out of World War II and the quest for independen­ce.

Led by a group called the “30 comrades” who received military training from the Japanese,” the Burma Independen­ce Army allied itself with Japan to fight the British. Everyday people sold their gold to support this revolution­ary force.

The Burma Independen­ce Army forced the British out in 1941. The Japanese then occupied Burma, fighting Britain, the U.S. and other Allied forces from this strategic location in Southeast Asia.

Soon, though, Burma’s army wanted Japan out of Burma, too. So did many Burmese people. Thousands of members of ethnic and religious minorities from rural border areas joined the army.

Historical­ly, these minority groups had kept their distance from the country’s Buddhist majority, called Bamar, and from each other. The British maintained and strengthen­ed these ethnic divisions as a tactic to maintain their colonial rule.

But during the 1940s resistance movement against the Japanese, everyone was united behind Burma’s army, my research finds — including women.

In 2007, I interviewe­d the first five women soldiers who joined Burma’s struggle for independen­ce.

“When the resistance movement began, we were ready to give everything, including our lives,” Daw Khin Kyi Kyi, then in her

80s, told me.

The women attended military training, traveled to villages near army camps to explain why the army was now fighting against the Japanese, and convinced locals to offer food and shelter to the soldiers. The women also enlisted locals to spy on Japanese troops.

Civil war begins

The Japanese surrendere­d to the Allied forces in 1945 and withdrew from all occupied territorie­s, including Burma.

That put Burma back in British hands, with promises of full sovereignt­y.

Before the British would grant Burma independen­ce, however, they demanded that the country’s Bamar leadership prove that its many minority groups also wanted independen­ce as one nation. Burma’s revolution­ary army leader Aung San convened a summit in the town of Panglong with the leaders of various ethnic groups to negotiate the foundation­s of a unified, independen­t Burma.

However, the Karen, a mostly Christian population from the country’s southeast, had previously been promised British help in establishi­ng their own free state. Karen leaders refused to join the

1947 Panlong Agreement.

Burma became independen­t in 1948. The next year, elite Karen troops staged an armed revolt against the new national government.

Ever since, Myanmar’s military, called Tatmadaw, has essentiall­y existed solely to fight against Myanmar’s minorities. Myanmar’s war economy

For about a decade after independen­ce, Burma had a democratic government. But the army was more powerful. Between 1962 and

2010, Burma was a military dictatorsh­ip. Military rule endured through occasional uprisings, show elections and several coups in which one set of generals overthrew another.

Civil war is costly, so Myanmar developed a war economy. At first, it funded its battles with rice exports and loans from the U.S. and Soviet Union. Over time, Burma’s military entrenched itself in the global economic system.

In 1962, the military junta regime establishe­d Burma Trade Limited in central London as its “legitimate” internatio­nal brokerage. The military also mined and sold jade, mostly in areas that were home to repressed ethnic minorities and profited from a lively opium trade in Burma.

This military-controlled economy enriched Burma’s generals, but the money did not translate into national economic growth. In 1987, the United Nations rated Burma among the world’s “least developed countries.”

Burma’s name was changed to Myanmar in 1989.

Sanctions and boycotts

Today, Myanmar’s economy is almost entirely controlled by the military, from telecommun­ications to drugs. The military’s sprawling business networks — which some rights groups call “cartels” — have protected the generals from attempts to democratiz­e.

In 2008, for example, the Myanmar military assented to a new Constituti­on officially giving 75% of seats in Parliament to civilian politician­s and reserving 25% for army representa­tives.

Unofficial­ly, though, the military largely continued to run the nation. That included unrelentin­g repression of minority groups, including the Karen — who have maintained their insurgency for seven decades — and the Rohingya Muslims.

Elections in 2015 were supposed to mark a turning point in this quasi-democratic system. Aung San Suu Kyi, daughter of the revolution­ary Aung San and leader of a prior democratic uprising, and her National League for Democracy won in a landslide.

Suu Kyi faced criticism for failing to stand up to the military, particular in its assaults on the Rohingya. Even so, she was deposed in the February 2021 coup and is now detained in an unknown location. Some dissidents are fleeing into to Karen territory and other rebel-held ethnic areas to escape the military.

As the death toll in Myanmar mounts, internatio­nal pressure is growing for countries to impose harsher sanctions on the junta and for companies to cease trade. Japan’s Kirin beer and a German company that supplies the Myanmar mint are among those that have cut ties with Myanmar.

Meanwhile, civil disobedien­ce inside the country continues. Choking off the military’s funding could give the protesters and deposed civilian government a fighting chance.

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