Back to WebsiteNewsletter PreviewSign Up
This week our top story looks at how the Arakan Army is setting up local administration over the territory it controls in a fractured Myanmar. We also have an interview with Elizabeth Threlkeld, deputy director of the South Asia Program at the Stimson Center, about Pakistan’s regional gameplan following the fall of Afghanistan.
The Diplomat Brief
September 1, 2021thediplomat.com
Athens Democracy Forum: Resilience and Renewal
Welcome to the latest issue of Diplomat Brief. This week our top story looks at how the Arakan Army is setting up local administration over the territory it controls in a fractured Myanmar. We also have an interview with Elizabeth Threlkeld, deputy director of the South Asia Program at the Stimson Center, about Pakistan’s regional gameplan following the fall of Afghanistan.
Story of the week
Arakan Army Seeks to Build ‘Inclusive’ Administration in Rakhine State

POLITICS

Arakan Army Seeks to Build ‘Inclusive’ Administration in Rakhine State

What Happened: Seven months since the military coup in Myanmar, the political wing of the rebel Arakan Army (AA) has significantly expanded its administrative and judicial mechanisms across Rakhine State in western Myanmar, with hundreds of its personnel now effectively administering the region independently of the military junta that rules in Naypyidaw. It’s a fascinating case study of how one ethnic armed group is moving from violent resistance to governance.

Our Focus: According to its commander-in-chief, the AA is implementing “a governance mechanism with strong institutions for public administrative affairs including administration, judiciary, and public security.” For many locals – Arakan and Rohingya alike – it’s a welcome change. “People have been treated with discrimination by the previous successive governmental departments, including the police and the soldiers,” Khaing Kaung San, founder and executive director of the Rakhine State-based Wan Lark Foundation, told The Diplomat. “Right now, the existence of the AA with its newly introduced Judiciary and Complaints System weakens the arbitrary acts.”

What Comes Next: Can the AA truly create a model of effective – and inclusive – governance in the violence-plagued Rakhine State? And what happens when the Tatmadaw look to take back the ground they have lost? The military junta had sought AA’s support, but instead of allying with the Tatmadaw the AA looked to consolidate control over its base in Rakhine State. A potential counteroffensive from the Tatmadaw could mark a return to the violence that has already displaced more than 230,000 civilians in the past few years.

Read this story
Behind the News

INTERVIEW

Elizabeth Threlkeld

Elizabeth Threlkeld, senior fellow and deputy director of the South Asia Program at the Stimson Center, on what a Taliban government in Kabul means for China-Pakistan relations: “While Pakistan views the Taliban takeover as a positive development, China is less sanguine... Pakistan will remain a useful go-between for China given its ties to the Taliban, but the group’s rise could put a strain on the ‘iron brotherhood.’”

Read the interview
This Week in Asia

Northeast Asia

US Climate Envoy in Japan, China

U.S. climate envoy John Kerry is in Japan and China this week as part of broader efforts to entice stronger climate commitments ahead of a U.N. summit in November. Climate change is one of the very few bright spots in China-U.S. relations; watch to see if the genial tone of Kerry’s April visit to China can be maintained this week.

Find out more

South Asia

Bangladesh’s Taliban Fears

The Taliban took control of the airport in Kabul on Tuesday, cementing their control over Afghanistan as the last U.S. troops evacuated. Dhaka is watching nervously, given the long history of Afghanistan-trained fighters invigorating terror networks in Bangladesh. The country is already facing a resurgence of extremism; will the Taliban victory further embolden similarly-minded Bangladeshis?

Find out more

Southeast Asia

Thai Parliament Begins No-Confidence Debates

This week, Thai lawmakers will hold a no-confidence debate targeting Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha and five members of his cabinet over their poor handling of the COVID-19 pandemic. The debate, which is scheduled to last four days before a vote on Saturday, comes amid a persistent campaign of protests – some of which have elicited a violent response from police – demanding Prayut’s resignation in addition to other far-reaching political reforms.

Find out more

Central Asia

What Comes After the U.S. War in Afghanistan?

The final U.S. troops have withdrawn from Afghanistan, but some Americans and many Afghans remain in the country who want to leave. What comes next is steeped in uncertainty. The Taliban are in power, but the Islamic State Khorasan made its presence devastatingly known in the final days of the withdrawal. 

Find out more
Visualizing APAC

Johns Hopkins University CSSE COVID-19 Data

With skyrocketing COVID-19 case counts finally coming down, Indonesia is slowly returning to normal.

See the full picture
Word of the Week

SECURITY

虚舟

Utsuro-bune, literally “hollow ship” in Japanese, refers to an early UFO legend.

Find out more
Webinar

The Diplomat Asks

Where Does the China-India Border Dispute Stand?

Over the past months, China and India have continued the slow process of disengaging along sections of their disputed border in Ladakh. How do things stand along the border today?

Join us on September 2 at 8 a.m. U.S. Eastern time for an expert overview of the past, present, and future of the Sino-Indian border dispute, and the implications for China-India relations writ large.

Sign up for the webinar
Asia and the ‘Global War on Terror’

The Diplomat Magazine | September 2021

Asia and the ‘Global War on Terror’

This month, our cover story analyzes how the “Global War on Terror” was waged and repurposed throughout the Asia-Pacific in the 20 years since 9/11. We also probe the state of the relationship between besieged Prime Minister Imran Khan and the Pakistani military, trace the evolution of the Philippines-U.S. alliance as their Mutual Defense Treaty turns 70, and explore the ways Soviet water and energy infrastructure continues to complicate Central Asian borders. And, of course, we offer a range of reporting, analysis, and opinion from across the region.

Read the Magazine
Dense Grey Webs: Cyber Risks and Trends in the Asia-Pacific

DRI REPORT NO. 05 | May-June 2021

Dense Grey Webs:
Cyber Risks and Trends in the Asia-Pacific

Based on in-house research and consultations with leading experts, the report delineates key cyber risks and trends in the Asia-Pacific amid the COVID-19 pandemic. It also looks at key regional actors and their cyberspace goals, cyber supply chain and critical infrastructure vulnerabilities, as well as ways through which emerging tech could shape the cyber landscape in the years to come.

Read the Report
Diplomat Risk Intelligence