The military junta in Myanmar is exploiting a new wave of conscripts to claw back territory from resistance forces, marking a strategic shift in the conflict that threatens to deepen the humanitarian catastrophe. The UK’s call for humanitarian corridors is a tacit admission that the junta’s offensive is succeeding, but corridors are only as good as the ceasefire that guarantees them. Without a credible deterrent, these corridors become honeypots for ambushes and propaganda victories for the regime.
Myanmar’s military, the Tatmadaw, has been on the back foot since the 2021 coup, losing ground to a coalition of ethnic armed groups and the People’s Defence Forces. But the junta’s recent conscription drive, targeting men aged 18-35, is beginning to pay tactical dividends. The sheer numbers are forcing rebel groups into defensive postures, ceding previously held villages and supply routes. The junta is using human wave tactics, sacrificing raw recruits to probe rebel lines and identify weak points. This is a brutal but effective attrition strategy, one that mirrors the Russian approach in Ukraine: overwhelm with bodies, then exploit breaches with armour.
The UK’s Foreign Office has called for ‘safe and unimpeded humanitarian access’, but this is a reactive measure. The junta has history of using aid flows as a weapon, restricting movement to starve out resistance strongholds. Without enforcement mechanisms, these calls are empty. The UN and ASEAN have failed to secure meaningful access in the past. The junta simply denies permission or imposes conditions that make delivery impossible. A humanitarian corridor without a ceasefire is a logistical fantasy.
From an intelligence perspective, the junta’s conscription is a double-edged sword. The new recruits are poorly trained, poorly equipped, and unmotivated. They are cannon fodder. But they are also a symptom of the junta’s desperation. The Tatmadaw is haemorrhaging experienced personnel due to defections, casualties, and desertions. Conscription is a stopgap measure that buys time but erodes morale and institutional knowledge. The rebels should target these new conscripts with psychological operations: defection amnesties, safe passage guarantees, and messaging that the junta’s days are numbered. Turning these conscripts into a liability for the junta is the smart play.
Cyber warfare is another vector the rebels might exploit. The junta’s command and control networks are likely brittle. Targeting communication infrastructure, logistics coordination, and payroll systems could paralyse the offensive. The rebels have shown limited cyber capability, but external support could change that. The UK or other partners could provide training or tools without boots on the ground. This is the kind of asymmetric leverage that could offset the junta’s numerical advantage.
The humanitarian cost is undeniable. The UN estimates over 2.6 million displaced persons. A junta offensive will drive those numbers higher. The UK’s corridor proposal is a band-aid on a bullet wound. The real solution is strategic: deny the junta the resources to wage war. That means targeting revenue streams like oil and gas sales, gem exports, and arms supplies. International sanctions have been porous. China and Russia continue to shield the junta in the UN Security Council and provide military equipment. Diplomatic pressure on these actors is more impactful than corridor negotiations.
The military balance is shifting. The junta is regaining initiative through brute force, but its long-term prospects are grim. The rebels need to weather this surge and wait until the conscripts become a burden. The UK’s corridor call is a stopgap, not a strategy. The real strategic pivot must be to isolate the junta financially and technologically. Until then, the casualties will mount, and the corridors will remain a dream.








