Medical students, doctors and engineers march in Yangon, Myanmar, on Feb. 26, 2021 to protest against the military coup earlier that month. (The New York Times)
Medical students, doctors and engineers march in Yangon, Myanmar, on Feb. 26, 2021 to protest against the military coup earlier that month. (The New York Times)

U.S.-ASEAN Summit: A Chance to Explore New Steps to Resolve Myanmar’s Conflict

The February 2021 coup in Myanmar, which overthrew an elected government and installed a brutal military dictatorship, has posed an enormous challenge to the Association of Southeast Asian States (ASEAN). The group has split on what — if any — action to take regarding the coup. Meanwhile, the military’s unbridled violence against the country’s citizens failed to suppress an increasingly militarized population and the conflict now affects ASEAN states bordering Myanmar and those beyond. As the U.S.-ASEAN Special Summit gets underway this week in Washington, Myanmar will not be present, a symbol that the organization — as a whole— does not accept the coup government’s legitimacy. What’s next remains to be seen.

USIP’s Jason Tower and Priscilla Clapp discuss ASEAN’s response to the coup, the international power dynamics behind it, and how the putsch fits into a worldwide assault on democracy. 

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