China’s long-term ambitions in Myanmar have taken on new urgency as wars in the Middle East disrupt vital shipping lanes and energy supplies. Analysts say Beijing now views the China–Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC) as a crucial alternative route to the Indian Ocean, bypassing chokepoints that could be blocked in times of conflict. Since the mid-1980s, China has sought to open trade routes through Myanmar to give its inland provinces direct access to the Bay of Bengal. While the CMEC was framed as an economic project, it has always carried strategic weight. With around 80 percent of China’s crude oil imports and much of its mineral trade crossing the Indian Ocean, instability in the Strait of Hormuz and wider Middle East has only heightened the corridor’s importance. Recent clashes in the region — including U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and retaliatory missile attacks — have disrupted energy flows and underscored China’s vulnerability. Beijing’s investments in Indian Ocean states such as the Maldives and Mauritius reflect its determination to secure influence across key maritime routes. Washington, meanwhile, fears that Chinese infrastructure projects could provide Beijing with vantage points to monitor U.S. military bases, notably Diego Garcia in the Chagos Archipelago. India has also stepped up its presence, expanding facilities in the Andaman and Nicobar Islands to guard the Strait of Malacca and surrounding waters. For China, Myanmar offers the only land-based alternative to these contested sea lanes. Pipelines and transport links through the corridor cannot replace maritime trade entirely, but they provide Beijing with a fallback option and a foothold in the Bay of Bengal. China’s support for Myanmar’s military regime, including praise for recent elections dismissed as a sham by Western governments, reflects this strategic calculus. As a new government prepares to take office in Naypyitaw, Beijing is expected to deepen its role as both patron and mediator. For the United States, the dilemma is clear: sanctions may be pushing Myanmar further into China’s orbit. Some voices in Washington are now calling for “calibrated engagement” to counter Beijing’s influence and secure access to rare earths. Caught between superpower rivalries, Myanmar’s future is increasingly shaped by forces far beyond its borders — with China’s strategic designs at the centre of the contest. -2026-03-25
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