The strategic picture in Myanmar is deteriorating at an alarming velocity. Pro-democracy resistance forces are conceding territory along multiple axes, a direct consequence of the junta's intensified conscription drives. This is not a random tactical shift; it is a calculated effort to swamp rebel strongholds with human wave assaults, leveraging unlimited draftees against finite insurgent munitions. The military’s command is now executing a brutal calculus: trade bodies for terrain, accepting heavy casualties to break the opposition’s logistics networks.
From a threat vector perspective, the junta has identified its critical weakness: manpower. By forcibly conscripting thousands of young men, they are patching a gaping hole in their force structure. These conscripts are poorly trained and equipped, but they are an expendable resource. The result is a grinding attrition campaign that favours the state’s capacity to regenerate losses over the rebels’ need to conserve every round. The fall of key townships in Sagaing and Magway regions is not just a local defeat; it signals a fundamental shift in operational tempo. The junta is now dictating the pace of combat, forcing the PDF (People’s Defence Forces) into static defence they cannot sustain.
The intelligence failure here is twofold. First, Western assessments consistently underestimated the junta’s willingness to sacrifice its own population. Second, the opposition overestimated their ability to hold ground without a dedicated air defence umbrella. The junta’s use of Russian-origin Su-30s and Chinese-supplied drones has turned every rebel-held village into a potential kill box. Without counter-UAS systems or man-portable air-defence missiles, the PDFs are fighting a war they cannot win in the open.
This brings us to the political chess move: UK sanctions. The Foreign Office is now under pressure to expand sanctions against junta cronies and military-owned conglomerates like Myanmar Economic Holdings Limited (MEHL). The logic is sound on paper: cut the junta’s access to foreign currency and aviation fuel. But the execution is lagging. Sanctions on jet fuel shipments have already been circumvented via Singaporean and Thai intermediaries. Unless the UK deploys secondary sanctions on trading entities, these measures are merely performative.
The real strategic pivot the UK must make is to sever the junta’s access to military equipment. The junta’s ability to sustain its conscription offensive depends on two things: fuel for its ground forces and replacement parts for its air assets. The UK’s current sanctions regime targets luxury goods and gemstone exports, not the titanium alloys and avionics that keep the Tatmadaw’s helicopter fleet operational. That is a critical oversight. Sanctions on raw materials and dual-use technology would hurt far more than a travel ban on generals who already hide in Naypyidaw bunkers.
Furthermore, the humanitarian cost is accelerating. Forced conscription is pushing thousands across borders into Thailand and India, creating a destabilising refugee surge. The junta is using this as a weapon, deliberately generating a humanitarian crisis to force regional neighbours to negotiate. This is a classic hybrid warfare tactic: weaponise refugee flows to gain diplomatic leverage.
For the UK, the window to act is closing. If the junta consolidates its territorial gains by the monsoon season, rebel forces will be scattered and demoralised. The UK must immediately designate the Tatmadaw’s conscription campaign as a crime against humanity under international law. That unlocks asset freezes on military-held accounts in London banks. Secondly, increase funding to cross-border humanitarian corridors, but tie it to intelligence-sharing with the National Unity Government. That means giving the PDFs satellite imagery of troop movements and fuel convoy routes.
The bottom line: Myanmar is now a laboratory for authoritarian attrition warfare. The junta has learned from Russia’s playbook in Ukraine, applying mass conscription to grind down a technologically weaker opponent. The UK’s response must move beyond symbolic condemnation to surgical economic warfare. Otherwise, we are watching the prelude to a genocide unfold in slow motion, and our sanctions will be remembered as the keyboard clicks of a bystander.
The threat vector is red. The strategic pivot is now. This is not a plea for action; it is a warning of cost.








