When Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed Myanmar coup-maker Senior General Min Aung Hlaing to Beijing on June 15 with full state-visit honors — Huawei phone gift included — the choreography was meant to read as consolidation.
Five days later, when UN Special Envoy Julie Bishop stood at the General Assembly and used the titles “President Win Myint” and “State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi” — the constitutionally legitimate officeholders deposed in a 2021 coup — the gap between Beijing’s ambition and its actual reach became the most important fact in Myanmar’s war.
China’s influence in Myanmar is real but it is also highly exposed. The 18 cooperation documents signed during the visit covered transport, public health and media. However, the two unsigned documents mattered more.
That is, there was no agreement on the Kyaukphyu deep-sea port, the flagship of China’s Indian Ocean access strategy, nor on the Muse–Mandalay railway, the spine of the China-Myanmar Economic Corridor.
Three years after Beijing first framed the CMEC as the deliverable of its Myanmar bet, and two months after Min Aung Hlaing’s staged December–January sham election produced his self-installed “civilian presidency,” those anchor projects remain unsigned exactly because Min Aung Hlaing cannot deliver the territory through which China’s hoped-for pipelines, rails and roads run.
That’s because the territory is controlled and administered by Myanmar’s armed resistance to military rule. In western Rakhine State, the Arakan Army now besieges the naval approaches to Kyaukphyu, and junta retaliation in Kyaukphyu Township has displaced more than 50,000 civilians.
In northern Kachin State, the Kachin Independence Army holds the rare-earth belt that feeds China’s heavy-metal separation industry. The Ta’ang National Liberation Army holds the rail corridor north of Mandalay; at talks in Kunming brokered by Beijing in May 2026, the TNLA refused junta demands to evacuate four further townships.
The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army (MNDAA) was forced out of Lashio in eastern Shan State in April 2025 under Chinese pressure and is now functionally compliant. But Beijing has had to absorb the diplomatic cost. India’s Vivekananda International Foundation, hardly an advocacy outlet, has stated plainly that China’s “non-interference” claim rings “increasingly hollow.”
This is the structural ceiling on China’s grand strategy in Myanmar. Beijing wants a tractable, indebted, junta-led Myanmar that delivers resources, corridor access and border quiet. But Beijing is engaging a military regime that cannot govern the ground its corridors criss-cross.
The 18 documents are a substitute for the two that matter. Min Aung Hlaing’s Huawei phone is a substitute for the partnership Xi wished he could announce.
The June 19 response from UN Envoy Bishop and from the European Union closed off the alternative path Beijing was reaching for: international normalization. Bishop’s preservation of pre-coup titles was a clean statement that the UN does not recognize Min Aung Hlaing’s “civilian presidency.”
The EU went even further. Speaking for the bloc, Ambassador Hedda Samson said staged elections “do not confer legitimacy,” called for a global arms embargo and warned that “countries that continue to supply lethal assistance … must stop” — a formulation that names China and Russia without naming them.
The EU added that 640 children have been killed by junta airstrikes in the current reporting period and that 3.7 million Myanmar civilians remain internally displaced.
The combined effect of these two interventions, 48 hours after Beijing’s red-carpet treatment for Min Aung Hlaing, was a de facto rebuke of China’s self-interested machinations.
Indian strategic discourse is moving in the same direction. The Observer Research Foundation has argued that India’s state-centric Myanmar policy is “increasingly inadequate” and that New Delhi must engage Myanmar’s ethnic armed organizations directly, not only Naypyidaw.
The Manohar Parrikar Institute for Defense Studies and Analyses has written that the Kachin Independence Army’s control over rare-earth supply may compel China to engage with ethnic forces rather than with the junta — a reading that complicates Beijing’s preferred narrative of a single channel through the capital.
Dr. Hla Kyaw Zaw, writing on the same day as the Bishop briefing, named the “Sagaing trap”: instability in Sagaing Region threatens both India and China, because CMEC must transit Sagaing and Sagaing is the heart of the resistance. The two regional powers have a positive-sum interest in a settlement they cannot get from the junta.
The next test arrives in late 2026. The 81st UN General Assembly opens in September, and its Credentials Committee will again take up Myanmar’s representation. UN Ambassador Kyaw Moe Tun, appointed by President Win Myint in 2020, has held the seat for five consecutive years through deferral by consensus.
Beijing, Moscow and Naypyidaw will push hard not for outright junta credentialing — which would lose a General Assembly floor vote — but for a “seat empty” compromise wrapped in moderate language that quietly silences the resistance’s current voice at the UN.
But Myanmar’s people have what the regime cannot buy and what China cannot manufacture: the moral cause, the territory, the time and now an international response that has explicitly refused to normalize the junta’s sham election.
The regime must govern; the resistance needs only to survive. China has staked its prestige on a general who cannot consolidate and is paying the price for that decision at the UN, with the EU and, to a lesser degree, vis-à-vis its rival in New Delhi.
China’s strategy in Myanmar seeks managed instability rather than outright victory. Beijing prefers a manageable problem to a settled solution, because Beijing’s leverage is maximized when Naypyidaw is dependent in a wartime environment.
But that preference cannot deliver Kyaukphyu, the Muse–Mandalay rail line, Kachin’s rare earths or even UN credentialing. It cannot deliver the popular legitimacy that Xi himself conceded, in coded language during the June visit, that Min Aung Hlaing lacks.
The people of Myanmar are not waiting for China to allow their victory. They are taking the ground, township by township, while their military junta adversary signs cooperation agreements about media and public health.
International partners, among them the EU, UN and India’s influential strategic community, as well as the Indonesian, Malaysian, Singaporean and Filipino voices in ASEAN that have refused to bless the staged election, should recognize that the contest is winnable, that the time for decisive support is now and that the cost of inaction will continue to be measured in junta airstrikes on civilian populations.
Beijing has placed a heavy bet on a regime that cannot repay it. The people of Myanmar are not the long shot in this contest – they are the side with the odds increasingly in its favor.
James Shwe is a Myanmar democracy advocate based in California. He has served in advisory roles on sanctions enforcement, ESG accountability for resource extraction and diaspora policy outreach.
