The strategic pivot in Myanmar’s civil war is unmistakable. A coordinated junta offensive, leveraging armoured columns and air power, has shattered rebel defensive lines across multiple fronts. Intelligence sources confirm a sharp rise in desertions among ethnic armed groups, signalling a collapse in morale and logistical cohesion.
This is not a retreat but a rout. The junta, under Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, has exploited a critical vulnerability: the rebels’ inability to secure resupply corridors. Without sustainable logistics, no force can hold ground.
The desertions are a symptom of a deeper systemic failure. Rebel command structures are fracturing, and defectors are providing the junta with tactical intelligence. This accelerates the junta’s tempo of operations.
For the international community, the threat vector is clear: a stabilised junta will turn its attention to border security and internal dissent. The cyber domain is also active. Pro-junta hackers are targeting foreign media servers to control the narrative.
This is not an isolated conflict. It is a laboratory for hybrid warfare. The next 72 hours will determine if the rebels can regroup or if the junta consolidates a decisive victory.
Military readiness in neighbouring states must now account for a potential refugee surge and cross-border incursions. The chessboard is tilting in favour of Naypyidaw.








