By Hsu Yee & Sayar Ngatt / MPA
The surrender of high-profile resistance leader Bo Naga to Myanmar’s military has sent shockwaves through the country, sparking both outrage within the revolutionary movement and unprecedented dissent among the junta’s own ranks.
Bo Naga, once a celebrated figure in the Sagaing resistance, was reportedly evacuated by military helicopter in a “VIP-style” operation after surrendering to the Myanmar Military Commission. The move has been widely interpreted as a psychological warfare tactic by the junta to demoralize opposition forces.
The specialized evacuation of Bo Naga has caused an unexpected backlash within military circles. Family members of junta soldiers and pro-military supporters have expressed fury that a former enemy was given “Premium Package” treatment while frontline soldiers are often left to die or surrender due to a lack of supplies and medical evacuation.
“Officers and soldiers bleeding out on the frontlines don’t even get to see a helicopter,” a source close to military circles told MPA. “Yet Naga gets high-level treatment. It suggests the leadership values a defector more than the lives of their own loyal troops.”
Political analysts have noted the stark contrast between this evacuation and previous military failures. “During the fall of Lashio, senior commanders were left to be captured by the MNDAA. In Rakhine, high-ranking officials were never afforded such luxury. This ‘Premium Package’ for Bo Naga is a calculated move by Min Aung Hlaing to entice other resistance leaders to flip,” one activist noted.
While Bo Naga was being airlifted, ground operations were underway in Pale Township, Sagaing Region, to extract his remaining loyalists. On February 19, a military column of approximately 200 troops moved through several villages to “rescue” about 15 former members of Naga’s unit who had signaled their intent to surrender.
Local residents in Pale expressed disbelief and anger as they recognized familiar faces among the defectors traveling with the military column. “We saw the faces of people we knew, people who used to move in and out of our villages as protectors,” a local woman told MPA. “It is heartbreaking and infuriating. We never imagined they would do this.”
Military sources in Pale suggest the junta plans to use these defectors as “human guides” and informants to identify resistance hideouts and target civilian supporters.
However, the strategy may be backfiring internally. Observers say that while the military has gained a symbolic victory, the “special treatment” afforded to Naga has severely bruised the morale of junta foot soldiers who feel abandoned by their high command.
As the news spreads, the revolutionary community remains divided, with some supporters still attempting to deflect blame onto administrative failures, while critics slam the move as a clear betrayal of the Spring Revolution.





