Is India poised on its final strike on insurgency in the northeast?

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Post Chandel attack, one thing is certain – the government of India is determined to decimate the rebels, particularly the NSCN (K) by woing the Myanmar government and the Tatmadaw.

Sunzu Bachaspatimayum

Northeast India’s insurgents are on the run in Myanmar, their last refuge, with Tatmadaw  (as the Myanmar army is called) launching intense  offensive flush out operations in Taga area in  northwestern Sagaing division on the eastern part of Chindwin river,  an area under the area control of Khaplang faction of  the National Socialist Council of Nagalim or NSCN (K). 


The Taga adjoins the border town of Moreh in Manipur and is about 60 kilometres away from Moreh. 


The ground zero of the action is also known as the unified command area of the umbrella group called the United National Liberation Front of Western South-East Asia (UNLFWESE), founded under the aegis of the NSCN (K). 

The conglomerate of northeast insurgent outfits comprises United Liberation Front of Asom-Independent (ULFA-I), the Songbijit-led faction of the National Democratic Front Of Bodoland (NDFB-S), the Kamtapur Liberation Organisation (KLO), the People’s Democratic Council of Karbi Longri (PDCK), and the Manipuri militant outfits like the People’s Liberation Army of Manipur (PLA), the Kanglei Yawol Kanna Lup (KYKL), the People’s Revolutionary Party of Kangleipak (PREPAK), the Kangleipak Communist Party (KCP) and the United National Liberation Front (UNLF).  

Soon after its establishment under the leadership of late veteran rebel  leader, SS Kaplang, UNLFWESE asserted its presence by carrying out several strategic strikes against the Indian security forces. One of most prominent attack of the group under the command of NSCN-K  was the Chandel attack on an Indian Army convoy that left 18 soldiers dead and many seriously injured.

Retaliation by the Indian Army came in the form of the Indian Army Special Forces launching a surgical strike on two NSCN(K) camps inside Myanmar. The India army claimed inflicting heavy casualties on the rebels. The Army’s version was disputed by the rebels who  mocked the Special Forces by terming the ‘surgical attack’ as a failed attempt to attack their camps and claimed that none of its cadres were injured. 

Setting aside the controversy, post Chandel attack, one thing is certain – the government of India is determine to decimate the rebels,  particularly the NSCN (K) by woing the Myanmar government and the Tatmadaw. 

At that time NSCN(K), which had signed a  ceasefire agreement in 2012 with the Sagaing regional government, had been sheltering northeast Indian insurgent  cadres in the unified command areas of Taga. 

In 2014, immediately upon assuming power, the Modi government followed an appeasement policy while dealing with Myanmar,  opening communication channel with the Myanmarese authorities, including the Tatmadaw, with the objective of roping Myanmar to decimate the northeast rebels. 

 A number of senior officials, including National Security Adviser Ajit Doval and top Indian Army generals, visited Myanmar and hosted senior Tatmadaw officers.

“The objective was to forge an understanding with the Myanmarese authorities and convince Tatmadaw that cracking down on northeast rebels in their territory was in their long-term interests. We also made attractive offers of help, including monetary help to buy weapons, to them,” said a senior bureaucrat of ministry of home affairs (MHA).

“The Tatmadaw had little control over the Taga area, in which were inhabited by the Nagas of Myanmar. It was the NSCN(K) whose undisputed writ ran in those areas. The Tatmadaw lacked resources, intelligence and the motivation to establish control over those areas.  Myanmar was more concerned with its own insurgent groups like the Kachin Independence Army. So we started working with the Tatmadaw and signed a protocol with it. Under this protocol, we provided specialised training to some groups of its soldiers in counter-insurgency operations, provided sophisticated arms and other equipment like night-vision glasses and hand-held thermal imagers to them. We also started providing them with real-time intelligence on the location of rebel camps and movement of rebel cadres. We started sharing satellite imagery with them. And we motivated them to launch operations to bring areas held by the NSCN(K) under its own control,” said a eastern command officer of the Indian Army.

Myanmar had been the last refuge after governments of Bhutan and Bangladesh chased off northeast insurgent groups operating from Bhutan and Bangladesh. 

It was the Atal Bihari Vajpayee government that got the Royal Bhutan Army and the Sheikh Hasina government of Bangladesh to conduct flush out operation  against the northeast insurgents who have set up camps in their respective countries since December 2003.

The Vajpayee government initiative had effectively broken the backbone of many prominent outfits operating in Assam and rest of the northeast region including the United Liberation Front of Asom (ULFA) and many of their top cadres were arrested and handed over to India. 

Soon after coming to power in 2014, the Modi government followed up on the Vajpayee initiative and started working closely with Myanmar to deny safe havens in Myanmar that northeast insurgents were enjoying, especially in Sagaing division. This diplomatic efforts resulted in the Indian Army and  it’s Myanmar counterpart conducting coordinated operations to flush out rebel cadres from camps in Myanmar since early this year.

Besides tightening the security grid in Manipur, Nagaland and Arunachal Pradesh to apprehend insurgents who cross over to India as Myanmar turns up the offensive on them,  the Indian Army have also been assisting the Tatmadaw sharing intelligence and satellite imagery, providing training and even military hardware like drones to track down and flush out the northeast insurgents.

With the coordinated operations  turning up the heat, the NSCN (K)  is pretty badly hit claims an intelligence sources.  This development makes the other rebel outfits  extremely vulnerable.  

Many, particularly the ULFA(I) and the NDFB(S) have crossed into India and surrendered. 

Even those who are still holed up in the dense forest of Myanmar in their bid to escapethe offensive are reported to be in bad shape or have been killed by diseases or attacks by wild animals or taken into custody by the Tatmadaw.

Adding another blow to the on-the-run insurgent outfits, particularly of Manipur is the recent protest by the Myanmarese civil society leaders against the illegal presence of Manipuri rebels in Myanmar’s border town of Tamu which borders Manipur’s  Moreh. 

It is open secret that Manipuri armed outfits have been maintaining safe houses in Tamu for a decade and a half from where they have been planning and conducting their violent activities. 

The protest which took the form of a community peace meeting, held at the Mon hall in Tamu, was organized against the backdrop of a bomb blast which went off in Tamu on June 18 at one of safe houses used by the Manipuri rebels. 

First of its kind meeting, attended by elected representatives, civil society and youth leaders resolved to highlight the illegal presence of the Manipuri rebels  to their government and act accordingly. 

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