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မြန်မာနိုင်ငံ၏ နိုင်ငံရေးသမိုင်းတွင် အာဏာရှင်များ၏ ထင်ရှားသော လက္ခဏာတခုမှာ လက်ရှိအာဏာကို ခိုင်မာစေရန်အတွက် သမိုင်း၏ အဓိပ္ပာယ်ဖွင့်ဆိုချက်ကို ပြန်လည်ထိန်းချုပ်ရန် ကြိုးပမ်းခြင်း ဖြစ်သည်။ သို့သော် သမိုင်းဆိုသည်မှာ အဆောက်အဦးတခု၊ ရုပ်တုတခု၊ အလံတခု သို့မဟုတ် ဆိုင်းဘုတ်တခုမျှ မဟုတ်ဘဲ လူထု၏ စုပေါင်းမှတ်ဉာဏ်၊ နိုင်ငံရေးအတွေ့အကြုံနှင့် မျိုးဆက်များအကြား လက်ဆင့်ကမ်းလာသော အမှတ်တရများ၏ ပေါင်းစည်းမှုဖြစ်သည်။
The article "Fueling the Generals" examines the external economic and political factors that have allowed Myanmar’s military junta to sustain power since the 2021 coup. It explores how neighboring nations and regional corporations provide critical lifelines that enable the regime to persist despite a lack of domestic legitimacy and ongoing internal conflict.
Ultimately, the author argues that the struggle for democracy in Myanmar is no longer just a domestic issue, but one deeply connected to the international networks that sustain the regime's economic viability.
The Myanmar Spring Revolution represents a landmark historical shift, unified by an unprecedented coalition of diverse ethnic groups, social classes, and generations. While this broad-based participation—termed "inclusiveness"—was the primary catalyst for the movement’s early momentum against the military dictatorship, it has recently encountered significant structural hurdles. The article argues that while inclusiveness remains a core moral and political pillar, the failure to manage its practical complexities has transformed a revolutionary strength into a strategic "trap" that threatens to stall progress toward a democratic transition.
The Myanmar Spring Revolution represents a landmark historical shift, unified by an unprecedented coalition of diverse ethnic groups, social classes, and generations. While this broad-based participation—termed "inclusiveness"—was the primary catalyst for the movement’s early momentum against the military dictatorship, it has recently encountered significant structural hurdles. The article argues that while inclusiveness remains a core moral and political pillar, the failure to manage its practical complexities has transformed a revolutionary strength into a strategic "trap" that threatens to stall progress toward a democratic transition.
In the complex landscape of Myanmar’s ongoing struggle for democracy, the erosion of trust often stems from a deeply rooted psychological and social phenomenon: scapegoating. By unfairly projecting collective frustration and failures onto vulnerable groups or "safer" political targets, individuals and organizations often find a temporary reprieve from stress at the heavy cost of accountability and truth.
This article explores the delicate balance between legitimate political criticism and the destructive cycle of scapegoating. By analyzing how "displaced accountability" weakens alliances among anti-dictatorship forces, the author examines the urgent need for a transition from habitual blaming to a factual, forward-looking dialogue essential for building a unified federal future.
By early 2026, Myanmar’s civil war has evolved into a nationwide struggle, marked by the military junta’s (SAC) systematic use of arson. Since the 2021 coup, over 125,328 civilian homes have been destroyed.
This destruction is a deliberate execution of the "Four Cuts" strategy, designed to sever ties between resistance forces and their civilian support. Despite the junta’s push for "legitimacy" through sham elections, scorched-earth tactics have only intensified throughout 2025 and 2026.