Letter from Maung Zarni
Dear Friends.
Just two items: on
Myanmar and Israel, both hells on earth and criminal/rogue/pariah states.
Like Palestine, my own
native country, a former colony of Britain, is also a living hell.
Like the Jewish
Supremacist Israel the state of Myanmar, Buddhist Supremacist & militaristic,
is before the ICJ for its breaches of the Genocide Convention. The merit phase
(evidence presentation) for Gambira vs. Myanmar (genocide case) is scheduled at
the ICJ after new year, for a few weeks.
But whatever the ruling
it is not going to make any difference for the lives of Rohingya. Ultimately,
it is POWER that creates reality, NOT the Law. The law is a mere instrument,
especially international law, with no mechanism designed to enforce law.
For all intents and
purposes, international law and the UN political bodies have already outlived
their use, beyond being part of a broader expression of moral sentiments or
diplomatic rituals.
The world of
international law has entered the space and period similar to the US Supreme
Court's 1831 decision against the ethnic cleanser- US President Andrew Jackson.
The vile American racist in power wanted to forcibly remove the indigenous
population from their ancestral land, against their will and in breach of the
accepted sovereignty of the Cherokee nation. The Court ruled against the
President. He simply shrugged off the ruling and reportedly said, something to
the effect, Chief Justice had made his ruling. Let him enforce it. I don't know
the details. You got the drift.
The United States had
pretty much destroyed the credibility and respectability of international law
and the UN as a place for defending peace and security of the world.
It's imperative for We
the Sober People to stop deluding ourselves that these tools of Imperialists
are going to give the Oppressed, the Genocided (Rohingya, Palestinians,
Sudanese, Congolese, etc) and the Colonized (like Palestinians) justice of any
sort.
Zarni
Civilians in junta’s crosshairs as Myanmar
civil war shows no signs of a quick end
Four years after the military seized power in the Asian
nation, the UN warns of a grave risk to children caught in the crossfire
between the junta and militia groups.
An Excerpt:
Maung Zarni, a UK-based
genocide scholar from Myanmar, tells TRT World that the internal fragmentation
has been the most under-appreciated development in the Myanmar conflict in
recent years.
“This process of
internal balkanisation was triggered (as) the armed resistance against the
junta spread throughout the mainstream Myanmar or Burmese society in the form
of hundreds of operationally autonomous armed groups called people’s defence
forces,” Zarni says.
A tapestry of
ethno-nationalist identities
This fragmentation is evident in places like Rakhine, home to
the Buddhist Rakhine ethnic minority and a site of past atrocities against the
Muslim Rohingya.”
Here is a latest overview from TRT World: https://www.trtworld.com/article/d92dd3e2f669
.
===============================================
The Deepening Labor Crisis and Myanmar ElectionA Myanmar
Commentary by Su Latt Phyu*
16 December 2025
7 minutes read
The International Labor Organization continues to condemn
the grave suppression of worker’s rights in Myanmar.
But, as Su Latt Phyu highlights in this commentary,
repression is intensifying as the military regime pushes ahead with a
deeply-flawed election in a bid for legitimacy.
Livelihood conditions are worsening, with trade unionists
arrested, internal displacement increasing and youths fleeing the country to
escape forced conscription. More than ever an end to military rule is vital if
the cycles of human rights repression, state failure and conflict are to be
addressed.
https://www.tni.org/en/article/the-deepening-labor-crisis-and-myanmar-election
===========================================
Israel is imploding
Quietly, but steadily, the Israeli geopolitical clout is shrinking while the
Israeli state is succumbing to dysfunction.
By Ori Goldberg
Independent analyst.
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2025/12/16/israel-is-imploding
Ori Goldberg holds a PhD in Middle Eastern Studies with a specialisation in
Iranian affairs. He is a former university professor and national security
consultant. Today he is an independent analyst and commentator.
Published On 16 Dec 202516 Dec 2025
Israel may look to many like a winner, a de facto hegemon in the Middle East.
It has waged war on several fronts simultaneously, dealing deadly blows on its
enemies. In parallel, it continues to enjoy much support from various Western
constituencies and leaders, particularly those who face real challenges from
the hard right in their countries.
This is being publicly opposed by the Israeli government, but it appears to be
carried out with the tacit acceptance of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who
has now realised that he is better served by the threat of war rather than by
war itself. This is especially after he failed to accomplish his own “war
goals” – the destruction of Hamas and the return of the hostages alive; it
seems the Israeli army may have killed many more hostages than initially
assumed.
The unconditional support Israel once received from the US and Europe is
dwindling, and so is cooperation with Gulf states. The Palestinians, just like
the Muslim Brotherhood, were for decades perceived as a greater threat to the
regional status quo than the Israelis.
Where Western leaders once competed over who would be quickest to condemn Hamas
and commend Israel’s fight for “Western values”, these same leaders are much
quieter now that constant evidence of the Israeli genocide is pouring out of
Gaza. Even US President Donald Trump has much less to say about Hamas than he
once did.
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It is clearly difficult for Western leaders to acknowledge that Israel has
become an agent of regional chaos. It is much easier to gradually, discretely,
remove its levers and make it come to terms with the emerging reality without
forcing Israeli leaders to publicly lose face. There is no need to confront
Israel directly. It is enough to give it the occasional cold shoulder and to
make it wait.
Despite protestations to the contrary, Israel needs international cooperation
to attack and occupy in Syria, Lebanon, Yemen and Iran. That is why its
operations are gradually shrinking. The Israeli army is now busy “hunting”
individuals who once participated in attacks on Israelis, rather than engaging
in strategic expansion. These are Israel’s capabilities in this new order.
Israel may be losing on the diplomatic front, too. Hamas is negotiating while
the Israeli government is stalling. If this continues, Israel will be faced
with a reality it did not actively shape. There is talk, for example, of
Israelis being forced to pay for the removal of the rubble that the Israeli
army created over more than two years of annihilating Gaza.
While Israel may be on its way to losing its status as a hegemon of the Middle
East, Israeli society is devoting all of its considerable energy to internal
squabbles “over Israel’s soul” and to intensifying its illegal occupation of
Palestinian territory. Israelis are losing their faith in the existence of a
world outside Israel’s borders. If there is such a world, many believe, it
hates Israel with a passion regardless of its actions.
The Israeli discourse is focusing more and more on issues ranging from threats
to Jews to the Israeli collective, abandoning talk of “geostrategic” upheavals
that were quite common only six months ago. There is also an overwhelming
disregard for global realities and public opinion.
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Take the new scandal plaguing the Israeli Air Force (IAF). Future fighter
pilots, on the verge of graduating from two years of training, underwent a
weeklong “imprisonment simulation”, generally considered to be the most
difficult part of their training. Afterwards, they were sent to a hotel in a
secret location in order to recuperate.
The cadets revealed the location of the hotel to their families, who visited
their sons over a weekend; some of them drank alcohol. Their commanding officer
even allowed them to imbibe.
The cadets will all face disciplinary action. IAF commander Tomer Bar clarified
that “no leniency will be given on value‑based matters that are a foundation of
the corps’ ethos.”
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This is implosion. The IAF is responsible for most of the devastation in Gaza,
including the bombing of civilian housing and infrastructure, which has
horrified the world and stripped the Israeli army of its “most moral” claim.
And yet, the IAF still talks about “values” and “ethos”. The pilots are the
main arm of the genocide, but what matters is unauthorised alcohol consumption.
The cadets and pilots in general were cast by the media as representatives of
the old Israeli elites, morally bankrupt and rudderless, spoiled in comparison
with the new elites who torched Gaza and died for their efforts on behalf of
the “People of Israel”.
In response, the pilots as a collective praised their own loyalty to the
government and the security of the Israeli state and their commitment to
continue the genocide for as long as the “democratically elected government” –
which they themselves have repeatedly protested against – instructs them to.
Perhaps even more importantly, Israel is losing its internal coherence.
Unvaccinated children are dying of measles and the flu. Roving gangs of
teenagers are attacking Palestinians who drive buses or clean streets.
Palestinian citizens of Israel are murdered in criminal gang shootouts.
Veterans of the Gaza “war” are committing suicide in unprecedented numbers.
The public mental health system has already collapsed under the burden, with
appointments scheduled more than a year in advance. Classes in state schools
are cancelled daily as teachers find themselves caring for their own children,
left teacherless in their turn. The Ministry of Education has seen 25 senior
professional leaders resign during the reign of the current Netanyahu
government, most of them citing political interference in their work. In Tel
Aviv, municipal employees have been encouraged to volunteer once a week at city
kindergartens and nursery schools because there are no qualified personnel to
be found.
There is a dearth of judges because the minister of justice isn’t speaking to
the chief justice of the Supreme Court, and both their approvals are necessary
for the appointment of new judges. Two government ministers hold nine
ministerial portfolios because the ultra-Orthodox parties left the coalition
and would not come back unless the government they formed rejects a compulsory
military draft law for Haredi Jews.
The Israeli state is quickly becoming a hollowed-out shell. Institutions are
failing, public servants are leaving and political appointees serving their
patrons are the only ones left to step in and fill the gaps. The Israel that
emerges is bound for institutional, financial and cultural poverty – or
implosion.
The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily
reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial stance.
________________________________
Ori Goldberg
Independent analyst
________________________________
But under the surface, Israel is imploding. An international coalition, led by
the United States with the participation of Qatar, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and
Turkiye, is gradually removing Gaza from Israel’s control, as well as
pressuring Israel out of its territorial escapades in Syria and Lebanon.
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