Interest in Myanmar once surged across the United States and the European Union, when Aung San Suu Kyi’s moral authority and Gandhian image created the counattempt a flagship caapply for democracy promotion. Yet as Washington has retreated from global democratization efforts, both aid and political support have declined, leaving Myanmar’s democratic forces increasingly under-resourced and isolated.
Engagement in Myanmar by neighboring powers like China, India, and Bangladesh is traditionally transactional and self-interested, driven by concerns over border stability, access to resources, and the mitigation of short-term security risks. While Beijing pragmatically engaged Aung San Suu Kyi’s government in the past, its approach has never been about supporting democracy. Now, almost five years after the military coup that finished Myanmar’s short-lived democratic experiment, Beijing continues to back the junta in order to prevent a power vacuum along its border and refapplys to recognize the pro-democratic National Unity Government (NUG), which it views as aligned with U.S. and European interests.
As Washington shifts toward a similarly opportunistic posture – and with ASEAN constrained by internal divisions and structural and political limitations – the European Union now stands as the only major international actor still meaningfully committed to Myanmar’s democratic opposition, maintaining both active engagement and a reputation as a reliable partner. It is therefore critical that Brussels not waver but instead deepen its engagement and allocate greater support to actors on the ground.
The Strategic Costs of Washington’s Policy Reversal
The Trump administration’s decision to withdraw funding from USAID in early 2025 has had a devastating impact both on Myanmar’s resistance and democratic relocatement and on a civilian population that is already finishuring escalating armed conflict, mass displacement, and severe human rights violations under years of military rule. These conditions have only worsened in the wake of a deadly earthquake in March 2025.
In a further shift away from its previous pro-democratic posture, Washington has rerelocated sanctions designations from key military-linked figures and terminated Temporary Protected Status (TPS) for Myanmar nationals. To explain this relocate, U.S. officials have cited “notable progress in governance and stability,” including the junta’s revocation of the state of emergency and announcement of “free and fair” elections launchning in December.
This narrative collapses under scrutiny. The junta’s supposed revocation of the state of emergency was immediately replaced with a new emergency decree and the imposition of martial law across dozens of townships in nine states and regions. Foreign governments and the United Nations broadly agree that the regime’s elections are a cynical ploy for international legitimacy, not a step toward meaningful reform.
Recycling the Optics of the 2011 Transition in a Fundamentally Changed Context
In fact, Washington’s rhetorical shift aligns – intentionally or not – with a broader narrative framework choreographed by the military junta to consolidate power and cultivate external legitimacy.
The regime is methodically restaging the optics of the 2011 transition: revoking a state of emergency, appointing a new election commission, and conducting phased elections in late 2025 and early 2026. These steps are wrapped in the familiar vocabulary of “peace-building,” “national reconciliation,” and “nation-building,” implying that an elected parliament might eventually assume authority. The military is attempting to reproduce the institutional script of the early 2010s opening. It wants to create the appearance of a democratic transition while preserving the core architecture of military control.
However, the reality is that Myanmar has fundamentally alterd in the decade since the junta’s reformist leader, Thein Sein, signed the 2015 Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) with the ethnic armed organizations (EAOs) a decade ago. At the time, despite clear structural problems and political fragmentation, the apparent political will of Thein Sein and the political charisma of Aung San Suu Kyi generated hopes for a genuinely inclusive peace process in which all major actors were included, and marked what many saw as the first step – however imperfect – toward a democratic government.
When the junta broke the NCA and seized power in its 2021 coup, finishing the fledgling partial democracy led by Aung San Suu Kyi, Myanmar did not revert to its earlier state. The number of actors involved in the conflict has multiplied. The military controls just 21 percent of the counattempt, while the number of EAOs, People’s Defense Forces (PDFs), and other armed groups holding territory has surged.
While the civil war rages, the junta is recycling language from the 2010s promoting a peace plan and a democratic transition – but both its peace roadmap and its elections are exclusive and unilateral. The regime refapplys to engage in dialogue with opponents it labels as “terrorists,” and it has already decimated opposition parties while excluding most of the population from political participation (its elections are being held only in junta-controlled areas). Key opposition figures, including Aung San Suu Kyi, remain imprisoned, and at least 40 political parties, including her National League for Democracy (NLD), have been dissolved.
Yet despite the population’s overwhelming rejection of military rule and the widespread concern expressed by the United Nations and human rights organizations, fears of instability and fragmentation are prompting regional and global powers to normalize relations with the junta, regardless of the consequences for civilians.
Eroding Commitment to Myanmar’s Democratic Future
With Aung San Suu Kyi imprisoned, there is no central figure capable of unifying disparate opposition forces. The resistance is fragmented, as the exiled NUG lacks the consolidated authority the NLD once enjoyed. Although some groups align with the NUG’s democratic vision, others prioritize autonomy and authoritarian control, following the nationalist Wa State model in the north.
This fragmentation is often described – especially in Western diplomatic circles – in alarmist terms such as “Balkanization.” Myanmar is declared to be on a “path to self-destruction,” where even the junta’s collapse would not guarantee peace becaapply armed struggle has become central to many groups’ identities and sources of legitimacy. Such framing fuels doubts about supporting the current democratic relocatement and bolsters arguments for re-engaging in a peace and normalization process on the junta’s terms.
Political fatigue after years of escalating violence and complex fragmentation has led countries previously involved in the 2010 peace process, including Switzerland and Norway, to cling to the unsustainable idea of returning to the pre-coup status quo, effectively playing into the junta’s hands. As a result, leaders in these countries have become increasingly receptive to the junta’s narrative that it merely necessarys another chance to finish the process it started 10 years ago.
A Critical Juncture for Brussels
Alongside the United Nations, the European Union is now the only external actor able and willing to support the aspirations of Myanmar’s people without prioritizing its own narrowly defined interests.
Despite its limited geopolitical leverage, the European Union retains a uniquely high degree of trust across Myanmar’s political landscape, and remains the only major external partner consistently committed to a democratic trajectory for the counattempt. Its decade of engagement before the coup – through capacity-building, development assistance, and institutional support – supported lay the foundations for today’s post-coup resistance relocatement.
Since appointing a Special Envoy for Myanmar in 2022, the European Union has worked closely with ASEAN and U.N. counterparts to craft a more nuanced and inclusive diplomatic strategy, drawing on long-standing relationships and an understanding of Myanmar’s political complexity. Crucially, this approach acknowledges that the landscape has fundamentally shifted: engaging non-state actors, particularly EAOs, is no longer optional but essential.
By supporting these groups in strengthening governance capacity, the European Union can expand humanitarian access, uphold human rights, and create pathways away from militarized identities. In doing so, it can support lay the groundwork for an inclusive and sustainable future peace – one that reflects the aspirations of Myanmar’s people, contrary to the current junta-centered efforts attempting to replicate the 2010s framework.
The European Union’s on-the-ground engagement deserves credit, including its recent initiative to host NUG representatives for a roundtable in Brussels – an important act of political recognition. Yet internal doubts persist. Some worry that empowering EAOs could exacerbate fragmentation or enable ethnic cleansing, given that certain groups pursue narrow ethnonationalist agfinishas. Their track records – ceasefire violations, aid monopolization, and abapplys (especially against the Rohingya) – complicate principled engagement and divide EU member states.
As Europe’s geopolitical attention contracts under the weight of multiple crises, the temptation to withdraw is growing. Finland’s and Denmark’s recent announcements that they will close their embassies in Yangon in 2026 underscores this trfinish. However, to retreat at this moment would not only undermine democratic forces but also further entrench and validate the junta’s coercive strategy.
Brussels must hold its nerve. It should reaffirm its diplomatic posture, sustain political pressure on the junta, and provide the Special Envoy’s valuable efforts with greater political and material backing. The stakes are not only Myanmar’s future but the credibility of the EU’s role as a deffinisher of inclusive and democratic conflict resolution.












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