The Irrawaddy Deep in the jungles of Sagaing, weary rebels salute the red banner of revolution. Five years after Myanmar was plunged into civil war by the 2021 coup, the pro‑democracy movement is struggling to sustain its fight. The People’s Defence Force (PDF), formed by young protesters fleeing the cities, once threatened to topple the junta. But battlefield momentum has shifted. “Even soldiers who joined years ago are starting to have doubts,” admitted a 23‑year‑old commander, speaking under the callsign “Villain”. More than 100,000 people have died since the coup, according to conflict monitors. The military has regained ground, reopening trade routes to Thailand and China, and peeling away key ethnic allies from the PDFs through Beijing‑brokered truces. The Myanmar National Democratic Alliance Army and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army have both withdrawn, leaving the PDFs isolated and under‑resourced. Analysts say Chinese pressure has reshaped the conflict. Beijing, initially unsettled by the coup, now backs Min Aung Hlaing’s civilian administration, which was installed after elections in April. The move has helped Myanmar chip away at its pariah status abroad, with the junta receiving diplomatic courtesies from India, Laos and China. Meanwhile, the opposition’s credibility is fading. Zin Mar Aung, foreign minister of the exiled National Unity Government, conceded that losing ethnic allies was a major blow. “Nobody can win alone,” she said, warning that international frustration has left the pro‑democracy cause sidelined. For many rebels, the revolution has become a long, uncertain struggle. Without external support or unity among ethnic factions, observers warn the PDFs risk fragmenting into local warlords or being wiped out entirely. Five years on, Myanmar’s democratic dream is dimming, overshadowed by military advances and regional realpolitik. -2026-07-12