The Burmese junta's latest offensive has achieved a tactical breakthrough, pushing rebel forces back across multiple fronts. Sources on the ground confirm the military is forcibly conscripting men into the army, a desperate measure that signals severe manpower shortages. This is a strategic pivot from holding territory to simply bleeding the insurgency dry through attrition.
The UK's warning of a humanitarian crisis is not alarmism: it's a forecast of systematic population displacement and resource denial. The cyber warfare dimension is critical. Junta forces have likely jammed communications and employed surveillance drones to coordinate these pushes.
The rebels, lacking anti-drone capabilities, are being outmanoeuvred. Look for increased Chinese investment in border infrastructure as a hedge against instability. The threat vector here is not just civil war: it's state collapse enabling transnational crime and refugee flows.








