What Manor of War is This?

sayarsan's picture
Location: 
Shan State, Myanmar

Speaking during the 4-day annual meeting of the Restoration Council of Shan State/ Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA) which ended Saturday, 19 January, the movement’s supreme leader Lt Gen Yawdserk said it had strictly adhered to the ceasefire agreement made with Naypyitaw since 2 December 2011.

“We had stopped staging ambushes along the highway and raiding towns controlled by the Burma Army,” he told the meeting attended by more than 200 Central Committee members of the RCSS. “All the clashes had taken place well outside the highway where our troops are operating. The Burma Army cannot fault us for not keeping our side of the bargain.”

Yawdserk, 54, was commenting on the annual report read out by Central Executive Committee earlier which stated that 68 clashes had taken place between the SSA and the Burma Army plus its People’s Militia Forces (PMFs) during the previous fiscal year, November 2011-October 2012:

Burma Army 44 clashes
PMFs 24 clashes

According to the report, the SSA had also captured 69 assorted weapons, killed 113 and wounded 129.

The latest encounter opposite Maehongson on 5 January in Homong sub-township was a clear example, according to an officer commanding the SSA force at the Kawng Moong Mong base, opposite Maehongson’s Muang district.

“The Burma Army had informed us that it was planning to repair the old road network leading from Mae Aw to Ta Hopong,” he said. “Loi Taileng (the SSA’s main base) told them to go ahead thinking the Burma Army unit overseeing the road repair would remain along the road. But then the unit headed for Loi Naga where our troops were stopping over. It inevitably resulted in a shootout, which we did not wish.”

The Burma Army later retreated after reportedly suffering 2 dead and 2 wounded. A Burmese military official, according to Bangkok Post, accused the SSA of trying to disrupt its preparations for the 2015 Asean Economic Community (AEC) which he claimed the road network was a part of. The SSA spokesman Lao Hseng dismissed it as unfounded.

Its counter accusation was that the Burma Army, despite the ceasefire agreement, had continued to encroach on the countryside where the SSA is active saying its standing order was to continue “area clearing” and “area control” operations.

21/01/2013

Comments

sayarsan's picture

I read the above article looking at the violations of the cease-fire agreement as another episode in this long going effort on the part of the RCSS-SSA(premier insurgent force in the area which has, for years now, been trying to adopt a course of political, rather than military, settlement to the problems in the dictatorship of Myanmar.

A couple of towns hit me in the pineal gland. Mae Aw, then Ho Mong. The report might suggest that the PMF's and the Burma Army who are both sponsored by the new, improved, 'nice guy Mr. Myanmar' Government under Thein Sein have simply stepped into the boots of the criminal gangs which prospered when insurgents were taxing a long existing drug trade dating to the KMT and the Korean War, so they could buy arms to defend what was by International Agreement(PangLong 1947), "theirs to govern if they so wished". The Burmese Army (Tatmadaw) and the People's Militia Forces(PMF) which both are under the auspices of the Myanmar Government (Naypyitaw) have apparently taken up the vacuum left when Khun Sa surrendered his command of the Mong Tai Army and retired to Rangoon.

So all the farang junkies on their narco-tours and attempts at making an easy buck out of a civil war can still go to Chiang Mai, travel no further than a few kilometers from their guest (house with western dunny) and score produce from Myanmar at 70% if they are lucky, at little or no risk, until they hit a border.

More and more the true criminals in this scenario in the Shan States are those associated and often commanding the Burmese Army. The last thing a junkie thinks of is what they are funding; La plus ca change la plus ca meme chose.