CONFLICTS/MYANMAR CIVIL WAR
ACTIVEAsia

MYANMAR CIVIL WAR

STARTED FEBRUARY 1, 2021
DURATION: 5 YEARS, 2 MONTHS
4 PARTIES
SIDE A
🇲🇲
Myanmar
Tatmadaw (Myanmar Military Junta)
SIDE B
People's Defence Force (PDF)
B
Arakan Army (AA)
B
Three Brotherhood Alliance
B
ESTIMATED CASUALTIES
50,000+ dead; 2.6 million displaced; 18 million requiring humanitarian aid
TERRITORIAL CONTROL
Junta controls major cities only; resistance forces hold ~80% of rural territory including Rakhine, Chin, Sagaing, Kayah states
LIVE UPDATES
Mar 16, 2026Resistance forces continue territorial gains in Shan and Chin states; junta loses control of more border crossings
Mar 12, 2026Military junta conducts airstrikes on civilian areas in Sagaing Region; dozens killed
CLASSIFIED
INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGMYANMAR CIVIL WAR
WARDATALAB.AI // 2026-04-15
INTEL // ASIA // ACTIVE
REF: MYANMAR-CIVIL-WAR
SITUATION OVERVIEW

Myanmar's civil war entered a catastrophic new phase following the February 1, 2021 military coup in which the Tatmadaw (armed forces) overthrew the democratically elected National League for Democracy government, arresting State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi and President Win Myint. The coup triggered massive civil disobedience movements and ultimately the formation of the People's Defence Force (PDF) — the armed wing of the National Unity Government — which declared a "defensive war" against the junta in May 2021.

What the military junta (State Administration Council, SAC) expected to be a short suppression campaign has evolved into a full-scale revolutionary war. By 2023, a dramatic shift occurred: Operation 1027, launched October 27, 2023 by the Three Brotherhood Alliance (Ta'ang National Liberation Army, Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army, and Arakan Army), captured dozens of towns along the Chinese border within weeks, overrunning military bases and seizing sophisticated weapons. The Tatmadaw's aura of invincibility collapsed. By 2024, military analysts estimated the junta controlled less than 20% of Myanmar's territory — primarily major cities.

The Arakan Army achieved extraordinary success, capturing Rakhine State's capital Sittwe and establishing effective control over most of the state including critical infrastructure on the Bay of Bengal. The Tatmadaw has responded with mass airstrikes on civilian areas, burning villages, and conscripting men aged 18-45 through a new mandatory military service law — revealing severe manpower shortages.

KEY EVENTS & TIMELINE
ACTIVE PHASEstarted February 1, 2021
Feb 1, 2021Military coup overthrows Aung San Suu Kyi government; mass protests erupt
Mar-Apr 2021Military crackdown kills hundreds of protesters; Civil Disobedience Movement
May 2021People's Defense Forces (PDF) formed; armed resistance begins
2022-2023Gradual territorial losses for junta in border regions; airstrikes on civilians intensify
Oct 2023Operation 1027 — Three Brotherhood Alliance captures key border towns in Shan State; turning point
Nov-Dec 2023Junta loses multiple border crossings with China; rapid resistance gains
2024Resistance forces expand control in Chin, Kayah, Shan states; junta holds central Burma
2025-2026Junta continues losing ground; controls primarily major cities and central regions
Mar 2026Resistance gains in Shan and Chin; junta airstrikes on Sagaing Region
STRATEGIC SIGNIFICANCE

Myanmar represents a geopolitical vacuum at the junction of China, India, and Southeast Asia. China shares a 2,200 km border with Myanmar and has significant Belt and Road Initiative investments in pipelines, roads, and the Kyaukphyu deep-water port — a critical outlet to the Indian Ocean. China has played a complex role: pressuring ethnic armed organizations to maintain ceasefire while allowing weapons to flow to various factions. India fears instability along its Manipur border, where spillover effects triggered ethnic violence in 2023 killing over 100. ASEAN's "Five-Point Consensus" has failed completely. The UN reports over 2.6 million internally displaced people — the highest figure since independence in 1948.

FORCES & CAPABILITIES

The Tatmadaw deploys approximately 120,000-150,000 effective combat troops with 440 combat aircraft including Russian-supplied Su-30 fighters, Yak-130 trainers used as light attack jets, and Mi-35 attack helicopters. Air power remains the junta's decisive advantage. Resistance forces total an estimated 65,000 PDF fighters plus 70,000-80,000 ethnic armed organization soldiers across 20+ groups. Captured Tatmadaw weapons include Type 96 tanks, BTR-3U APCs, 122 mm howitzers, and man-portable air defense systems that have downed several Tatmadaw jets.

CURRENT STATUS

ACTIVE — Junta losing ground. Resistance forces continue territorial gains in Shan, Chin, and Kayah states. Operation 1027 (October 2023) was a turning point — ethnic armed organizations captured key border towns. The junta has lost control of multiple border crossings with China and Thailand. Airstrikes on civilian areas continue, particularly in Sagaing Region. The parallel National Unity Government (NUG) and People's Defense Forces (PDF) coordinate with ethnic armed organizations. Myanmar is effectively in a multi-front civil war with the junta controlling primarily central Burma and major cities.

WARDATALAB INTELLIGENCE PLATFORM — ALL RIGHTS RESERVEDLAST UPDATED: 2026-04-15
MILITARY ANALYSIS

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