India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats

Militant groups hiding in Myanmar launch cross-border attacks into India, killing soldiers and civilians. The Indian Army has responded by launching cross-border military incursions into Burmese territory. After decades of trial and failure to curb the militants, a reciprocated spirit of cooperation...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Saira H. Basit
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Henley-Putnam University 2018-08-01
Series:Journal of Strategic Security
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol11/iss2/5/
id doaj-528c64c43a544bf496f4520b23ece877
record_format Article
spelling doaj-528c64c43a544bf496f4520b23ece8772020-11-24T21:46:40ZengHenley-Putnam UniversityJournal of Strategic Security1944-04641944-04722018-08-01112739210.5038/1944-0472.11.2.1673India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant ThreatsSaira H. Basit0Centre for Asian Security Studies, Norwegian Institute for Defence StudiesMilitant groups hiding in Myanmar launch cross-border attacks into India, killing soldiers and civilians. The Indian Army has responded by launching cross-border military incursions into Burmese territory. After decades of trial and failure to curb the militants, a reciprocated spirit of cooperation for the first time seems to characterize India and Myanmar’s joint efforts in fighting them. This article analyses the evolution of these efforts and argues that a sum of dovetailing drivers have created space for enhancing countermilitancy cooperation in an ambivalent and distrustful relationship. Central elements are an overall improvement in bilateral relations, India’s need to counter China’s growing influence in its neighbourhood, Myanmar’s urge to diversify its benefactors, the urgency of stabilizing India’s northeast, Myanmar’s domestic security calculations, as well as a large untapped economic cooperation potential. Despite increasing countermilitancy cooperation, difficult challenges remain as Myanmar has ceasefire agreements with India-hostile militants residing on its territory. The relationship is caught in a complex interstate order in a mix of conflict and cooperation, between the use of extraterritorial force and its acceptance.https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol11/iss2/5/Armed groupsConflict studiesCounterinsurgencyEthnic conflictInternational securityIrregular warfareRegional conflictSecurity managementSecurity studiesSmall wars and insurgenciesSoutheast Asia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Saira H. Basit
spellingShingle Saira H. Basit
India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
Journal of Strategic Security
Armed groups
Conflict studies
Counterinsurgency
Ethnic conflict
International security
Irregular warfare
Regional conflict
Security management
Security studies
Small wars and insurgencies
Southeast Asia
author_facet Saira H. Basit
author_sort Saira H. Basit
title India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
title_short India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
title_full India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
title_fullStr India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
title_full_unstemmed India-Myanmar Relations and the Management of Transnational Militant Threats
title_sort india-myanmar relations and the management of transnational militant threats
publisher Henley-Putnam University
series Journal of Strategic Security
issn 1944-0464
1944-0472
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Militant groups hiding in Myanmar launch cross-border attacks into India, killing soldiers and civilians. The Indian Army has responded by launching cross-border military incursions into Burmese territory. After decades of trial and failure to curb the militants, a reciprocated spirit of cooperation for the first time seems to characterize India and Myanmar’s joint efforts in fighting them. This article analyses the evolution of these efforts and argues that a sum of dovetailing drivers have created space for enhancing countermilitancy cooperation in an ambivalent and distrustful relationship. Central elements are an overall improvement in bilateral relations, India’s need to counter China’s growing influence in its neighbourhood, Myanmar’s urge to diversify its benefactors, the urgency of stabilizing India’s northeast, Myanmar’s domestic security calculations, as well as a large untapped economic cooperation potential. Despite increasing countermilitancy cooperation, difficult challenges remain as Myanmar has ceasefire agreements with India-hostile militants residing on its territory. The relationship is caught in a complex interstate order in a mix of conflict and cooperation, between the use of extraterritorial force and its acceptance.
topic Armed groups
Conflict studies
Counterinsurgency
Ethnic conflict
International security
Irregular warfare
Regional conflict
Security management
Security studies
Small wars and insurgencies
Southeast Asia
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/jss/vol11/iss2/5/
work_keys_str_mv AT sairahbasit indiamyanmarrelationsandthemanagementoftransnationalmilitantthreats
_version_ 1725900725004795904