Beijing has been regularly inviting Myanmar’s junta-appointed ministers to China on various official visits.
But it was a late June visit by ex-president Thein Sein that sparked international headlines.
And just over a week later, the Myanmar military leadership’s No 2 man Soe Win made an official trip to attend a forum in Qingdao in Shandong province.
This made him the highest-ranking military leader to visit China in an official capacity since the 2021 coup.
What’s behind the timing of the visits?
The timeline of events would suggest that China seems to favour Myanmar’s former president over any of the current leaders in the military. Or that Thein Sein’s visit paved the way for Soe Win, who’s deputy army chief – and deputy prime minister under the State Administration Council formed after the coup.
But neither is the case, according to sources close to the Myanmar military.
For starters, CNA understands that since the military coup which ousted Aung San Suu Kyi and her democratically elected government, Beijing has adopted an unspoken policy of inviting junta-appointed ministers via multilateral rather than exclusive, bilateral platforms.
This would explain why junta ministers have only gone to China for forums, conferences and events involving other countries’ participation.
Late last year, specifically two months after the Operation 1027 military offensive kicked off, Beijing began stepping up engagements with Myanmar.
The moniker refers to Oct 27, the date when a trio of powerful ethnic resistance armies launched large-scale, coordinated attacks that caught the Myanmar army off-guard. Since then, the ethnic armies have seized control of various territories from the junta.