27 April 2026 By Ko Myo
BANGKOK, Thailand — Myanmar’s military leadership is being accused of using the rhetoric of peace to deceive the international community and secure a seat at the diplomatic table, according to a report by the advocacy group Defend Myanmar Democracy.
Following a recent high-profile meeting between the Thai Foreign Minister and Senior General Min Aung Hlaing in Naypyidaw, the watchdog warned that the junta is following a “carefully scripted narrative.” The group argues that the regime is attempting to swap “blood-stained uniforms for civilian suits” to present its post-sham-election administration as a legitimate government.
“The Thai Foreign Minister is essentially imagining a seat back at the ASEAN table for a leader whose seat has long been vacant due to non-compliance,” a Yangon-based political analyst told MPA. “By engaging with this military group masquerading as a civilian government, they are granting them the very legitimacy they crave but haven’t earned.”
Defend Myanmar Democracy stated that validating Min Aung Hlaing’s “sham peace” will only prolong the ongoing conflict and deepen instability along the borders and within the wider region.
The meeting in Naypyidaw reportedly focused on building a “bridge” between Myanmar and ASEAN, with a heavy emphasis on border security, trade, energy, and joint crackdowns on narcotics and cybercrime syndicates.
However, activists insist that sustainable peace cannot be achieved by negotiating with those responsible for war crimes. “Stability for Thailand and the region is deeply linked to the reality in Myanmar,” the group’s statement read. “A true way forward only begins with an end to military violence and direct engagement with the legitimate representatives of the people—the federal democratic forces.”
For five years, ASEAN has relied on the Five-Point Consensus as its primary tool for resolving the crisis, but the military has failed to implement any of its key tenets, including inclusive dialogue. Critics argue that individual diplomatic missions, like that of the Thai Foreign Minister, risk undermining the bloc’s collective pressure.
As the junta continues to face unprecedented territorial losses and economic decline, analysts suggest its sudden embrace of “peace” talks is a survival tactic rather than a genuine shift in policy. For the millions of displaced civilians across Myanmar, the fear remains that international recognition of the junta will only cement a dictatorship that they have sacrificed everything to overthrow.





