In mid-April, Myanmar’s military bombed a village in the country’s northwest, killing over a hundred people in what’s been considered the deadliest attack in the now two-year civil war in the country: The result of the Myanmar military’s coup in February 2021.
The airstrike happened after my conversation with Professor Amitav Acharya, author of Tragic Nation Burma: Why and How Democracy Failed. Yet it’s a reminder of the coup and the civil war’s consequences for the people of Myanmar.
Amitav Acharya is the UNESCO Chair in Transnational Challenges and Governance and Distinguished Professor at the School of International Service, American University, Washington, DC. Some of his many works include The End of American World Order (Polity, 2014); Constructing Global Order: Agency and Change in World Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2018); and, with Barry Buzan, The Making of Global International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2019)—and many books besides about Southeast Asia.
In this interview, Amitav and I talk about why Myanmar’s military junta launched its coup (and derailed the country’s opening), how Myanmar’s population have reacted to these events, and the response of the international community.