Myanmar’s civil war poses one of China’s biggest foreign policy challenges. As the country devolves back into rebel fiefdoms, Beijing has fallen back on a unique brand of Realpolitik.
A column of officers and soldiers of the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) walks to a position located on a hilltop. Credit: Thierry Falise/LightRocket via Getty Images
Chipwi is a small town in northeastern Myanmar’s Kachin State, perched on a bend of the meandering N’Mai River. For decades its people subsisted on the sale of walnuts, apricots, sour cherries and other produce to China’s Yunnan province, some 40 miles to the east via treacherous mountain roads and the Burmese border town of Pang War.
But from 2010, the area’s economy began to change dramatically, transforming Beijing’s interests — and eventually its diplomacy — in the area.
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On Wednesday Xi Jinping presided over a Beijing military parade celebrating the 80th anniversary of Japan’s World War II defeat. Eighty-eight years ago his mother, Qi Xin, watched Japanese troops march into the city, at the outset of a conflict that would define her formative years and instill lessons she would later pass on to her son.
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