Analysis-Myanmar's deadly earthquake may bring diplomatic payoff for junta chief
By Devjyot Ghoshal and Panu Wongcha-um
Just before last week's earthquake of magnitude 7.7 that killed almost 2,900 people, the junta chief was readying for a rare foreign visit to a regional summit in
Despite the devastation at home,
The visit, timed just after an outpouring of sympathy following the quake, is a step towards potentially ending his isolation by most world leaders over a war that displaced 3.5 million people and decimated the economy.
"The junta knows that regional powers jostling for influence in
"By publicly and directly engaging with regional capitals, it can demonstrate its supposed indispensability as
A junta spokesman did not respond to telephone calls from Reuters to seek comment.
In the days since the earthquake,
Just weeks after the junta reaffirmed plans for a general election in December, one of the impoverished nation's strongest earthquakes in a century has opened a new window for its leader to engage with regional powers.
The junta had steadily lost ground in the conflict sparked by the 2021 coup, suffering a string of battlefield defeats and piling unprecedented pressure on
Key allies such as
He did not get an audience with Xi when he visited
But during a state visit to
"I would think he's getting like everything he ever dreamt of and more right now," said a diplomatic source in the commercial capital of
"He's back in the circle. He has a seat at the table."
However, the junta is doing what it can to benefit from the crisis and deny assistance to civilians and opposition groups, said a second diplomatic source in the country.
Millions of dollars in aid, relief supplies and hundreds of rescue workers from countries such as
The junta could exploit the crisis to strengthen its position in
"The quake will complicate the resistance's fight and its ability to retain support from the local population."
TIGHTROPE WALK
Some regime hardliners believe the junta can continue with the help of a handful of allies, said Sihasak Phuangketkeow, a former Thai vice minister for foreign affairs who visited
"They see the world order as shifting, and that there is a new pole with
"They think
During the BIMSTEC summit,
BIMSTEC, or the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation, comprises
"What I got from my recent trip was that
"It is about how we can assert our own position. We should not let this opportunity to engage
In
"Modi, particularly, has already indicated that he is willing to directly engage," said Choudhury, referring to the two leaders' call.
The visit may also give
Some analysts say
"There's a nasty, brutal, violent civil war," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, a political scientist at
"
(Reporting by Devjyot Ghoshal and Panu Wongcha-Um in
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