Don Pathan
www.stratsea.com
Introduction
In the wake of a general election widely dismissed by the international community as a sham, Myanmar will once again look to Thailand to serve as its window to the wider world.
The vote was held amid widespread armed conflict and limited territorial control. The result, nonetheless, helped the government and further consolidated its power.
Far from easing the political crisis, it bolstered the Tatmadaw position even as violence, displacement and illicit economic activity persist. With over 3.5 million people internally displaced, an end to the conflict is not in sight.
This escalation in Myanmar is fuelling growing concern in Thailand that its neighbour’s instability could harm its own interests and security. Officials at the planning and operational levels indicate that Bangkok must recalibrate its strategy towards Naypyitaw and take up a more active approach.
The complex challenges spilling over from Myanmar include increased border security risks, volatile cross-border trade, a surge in transnational crime – especially online scams – and environmental threats like air pollution as well as water contamination from mining activities near the frontier.
Evidently, these issues have imposed a mounting humanitarian and public health burden.
“Myanmar poses a systemic risk to Thailand’s security, economy and social stability, not merely a foreign policy concern,” said Supalak Ganjanakhundee, a Thailand-based security and political analyst. “But Thailand’s response is still reactive, fragmented and inadequate for the ongoing challenge.”
Moreover, it has become increasingly clear that ASEAN’s collective mechanisms – namely the Five-Point Consensus (5PC) – have made no meaningful progress on any of its five points: cessation of violence, constructive dialogue, mediation, humanitarian access and appointment of a special envoy. Though Thailand will not abandon ASEAN, it will assume a more active unilateral role in Myanmar.
New Diplomatic Tone
International relations expert Kavi Chongkittavorn thinks Thailand’s Myanmar policy will become more solid; the overwhelming electoral mandate has given to the Bhumjaithai Party (BJT) of Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul enough confidence to break from the past. Moreover, the support from Foreign Minister Sihasak Phuangketkeow, a career diplomat adept at articulating Thai narratives, will come in handy.
“Notice how friendlier Myanmar has become since the two foreign ministers met?” remarked Kavi, in reference to their 18 February 2026 meeting in Phuket.
Just over two years ago, BJT was a medium-sized regional outfit, primarily known for its pro-cannabis stance. However, the border conflict with Cambodia gave the party a renewed direction and purpose, which it leveraged effectively. Nationalist sentiment significantly influenced the electoral outcome, propelling BJT to 193 seats in the 500-seat parliament.
For decades, Thailand has handled its Myanmar border using practical tolerance, quick decision-making and strategic vagueness. The country has responded to waves of displaced people, dealt with armed groups, maintained refugee camps, processed migrant workers and kept up relations with various Myanmar governments.
However, it has never developed a unified national strategy that ties these efforts together.
This flexible approach worked well after 1988: costs stayed reasonable, crises were occasional and international donors who supported humanitarian needs lessened Bangkok’s financial burden from managing the border.
Historically, on the government-to-government level, Thailand was generally helpful—lending a hand to the Myanmar government by ending the international isolation after the Burmese junta killed some 3,000 of the student-led protestors in 1988.
Drugs, Mining, Arsenic and Scam Centres
Relationship soured briefly in the late 1990s as the Tatmadaw permitted the United Wa State Army (UWSA) – a 30,000-strong ethnic armed organisation – to expand their home turf on the Chinese border down to the northern border of Thailand, stretching from Chiang Rai and Chiang Mai to Mae Hong Son provinces. The US State Department called the UWSA one of the most powerful non-state armed groups and the primary driver of the Southeast Asian drug trade.
Kavi believes the new Thai government will not rule out military action against the UWSA. Others believe Thailand has too much to lose to pick a fight with a battle-hardened outfit like the Wa. Bangkok has sought help from the Tatmadaw, but there was nothing Myanmar could do as they, too, are not permitted to enter UWSA territory without an armed escort and permission.
Thai generals said they do not want to turn the clock back and use military means against the UWSA. But no one is taking the initiative to establish a serious discussion with the Wa about what kind of trade-offs they are looking for in exchange for cleaning up the pollution and moving back some of its outposts.
Indeed, the water contamination from unregulated mining by Chinese companies (with concessions from the Wa authorities) in Shan State – about 39 kilometres from the Thai border – has complicated the UWSA issue even further. The extraction of gold has surged since the 2021 coup, and rare earth mining has also rapidly expanded in the UWSA-controlled area. Elevated arsenic levels have been found at the Kok and Sai Rivers that flow from these mines.
Thailand takes pride in its ability to contain the Myanmar crisis within Myanmar’s borders, preventing direct spillover onto Thai soil. However, internal issues in Myanmar continue to impact Thailand, including the influx of refugees that places strain on Thai resources – particularly the public health system – and the transit of illicit drugs through Thailand en route to major international cities.
Additionally, some areas along the Thailand-Myanmar border, guarded by 7,000-strong pro-Myanmar Karen Border Guard Forces, have become hotspots for cyber scams targeting individuals worldwide. These scam complexes along the Myanmar border are notorious for trafficking victims under horrific working conditions, which involve constant surveillance, threats of physical punishment and beatings.
The scam crisis shows how crimes connected to Myanmar negatively impact Thailand’s economy, mainly investment and tourism. After the trafficking incident involving Chinese celebrity Wang Xing, Chinese tourist arrivals fell by 33%, causing a major economic hit. Thai officials are particularly worried about Chinese tourism, which remains below pre-pandemic numbers but is crucial to Thailand’s slow-moving economy.
Peace Corridors
Regarding Myanmar’s international standing, a group of technocrats from Naypyidaw working on de-escalation said the incoming government will ask Thailand to go beyond “calibrated re-engagement” and act as a “bridge” for Myanmar’s return to ASEAN.
Myanmar will be turning to Thailand to help with the peace corridor initiatives to facilitate humanitarian initiatives with the hope that this will lead to peace talks between the government and the resistance forces.
Some in the security sector said Thailand is willing to consider taking up the role of a mediator, but this would mean Thai government agencies could no longer work in silos when it comes to Myanmar. This is in line with Bangkok’s desire to continue with the humanitarian corridor. The initiative, supported by ASEAN, was carried out by then Vice Minister Sihasak in early 2024.
On paper, Myanmar is transitioning from one-man dictatorial rule to governance under a constitution, with the Tatmadaw – in theory at least – subordinate to the government. The president will have to work on political agreements once the state of emergency ends.
Engagement with ethnic armed organisations (EAOs) will be high on the new government’s agenda, and talks of negotiations and concessions could reach the Parliament floor by October 2026, said the Myanmar technocrats from Naypyidaw.
Moreover, the new political reality in Myanmar will see more rigorous feedback from the regional commanders to the central government. In the past, these commanders’ recommendations were often diluted before reaching the policy level, they said.
Also according to them: expect positive feedback from these local commanders who are on friendly terms with their Thai counterparts.
