Moe Bye/Pekon, Myanmar - A Myanmar military drone tracked a car carrying anti-junta forces as it drove through the contested village of Moe Bye. Moments after it parked near a house, the operator dropped an explosive.
Myanmar has been mired in bloody conflict since the military seized power in a 2021 coup, sparking a widespread armed uprising that has seen their pro-democracy opponents take swathes of territory, while millions of civilians have been displaced.
Drone strikes have been crucial to the insurgents’ successes, including pushing junta troops out of large areas in Myanmar’s north, many of them near the border with China.
Now the military is adopting the equipment of the anti-coup fighters, using drones to drop mortars or guide artillery strikes and bombing runs by its Chinese and Russian-built air force.
“We were very weak in technology and suffered much,” one frontline Myanmar military officer told AFP.
“We lost some military posts in the regions because of bombing by drones,” he said, declining to be named for security reasons.
“Now we are also using drones for counter-attack. They used big jammers to block the signal. We also use jammers.”
Early morning mist gives cover to Kayan National Army (KNA) personnel as they patrol Moe Bye, in the rugged jungle-covered hills that run along the border of Shan and Kayah states.
But when the weather clears, the skies open to the Myanmar military’s new weapons.
As the KNA troops sheltered in a wooded area, their faces etched with tension, the sound of the bomb explosion rang out. Two anti-junta fighters were injured in the blast.
“In the past, their strategy was to send soldiers first when they attacked,” said Ba Kone, a battalion commander in the KNA, one of the myriad groups battling the military.
“Now they send drones first and then soldiers follow.”
Flying at 1500m or higher – altitudes far beyond the range of civilian drones – the junta’s devices are out of reach of the KNA’s jammers.
“We can’t do anything except hide in a safe place,” he said.
China visit
Facing one of the region’s biggest and most battle-hardened militaries, the youth-led “People’s Defence Forces” quickly turned to drones after the coup in their battle to topple the junta.
Fighters smuggled drones built for filming or agricultural purposes – many of them made in China, which dominates the global drone industry – into anti-junta camps where teams repurposed them to carry crude but effective “drop bombs”.
Top military officials have acknowledged that drone strikes were key in a huge rebel offensive in 2023 that pushed junta troops out of thousands of square kilometres of northern Shan state.
At the time, junta chief Min Aung Hlaing accused unnamed “foreign drone experts” of helping their opponents as they dealt the military its most significant setback since it seized power.
Beijing has long been the junta’s key ally and Mr Jason Tower of the United States Institute of Peace said there was now “growing evidence that would suggest that the junta is obtaining drones from China”.
In November, during his first known trip to China, General Min Aung Hlaing visited Zhongyue Aviation UAV Firefighting-Drone in Chongqing and “observed the advanced drones created by the company”, according to Myanmar state media.
The firm did not respond to a request for comment from AFP.
Myanmar military sources told AFP their supplies of drones had increased after Gen Min Aung Hlaing’s journey.
The military has become “much more accurate” in its use of offensive drones, said Mr Dave Eubank of the Free Burma Rangers, a Christian aid group that has long worked in conflict areas in Myanmar, adding they were helping it exploit its huge advantage in firepower.
In 2021, air strikes were 500 to 1,000m off target, he told AFP. “By 2022, they were within 500 metres. By 2023, they were within 10-20 metres.”
‘Like dogs’
The clashes in Moe Bye are an overspill from fighting in Kayah state, a hotbed of resistance where the United Nations says more than 130,000 people have been forced from their homes by conflict – over a third of the population.
In December, Ms Lway Zar arrived with her family at a makeshift encampment for the displaced in Pekon township, just a few minutes drive from Moe Bye.
It was the fifth time she had been forced to move since the coup, by fighting, floods – and now military shelling.
“I don’t know how long we can stay here,” she said. “Even if we don’t hear heavy gunfire, we still think that drones and air strikes are always following us.
“Before the coup, our family was poor but we had good living conditions in our own house and we could store rice from our fields,” she told AFP.
“After that, we lost everything in the war. My husband said we used to be human but now we are like dogs.” AFP
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