„Inferno“ ist eines dieser Alben von denen ich nicht wusste, wie sehr ich es erwartet habe, bis ich vor Wochen hörte, dass es erscheinen wird. Boards of Canada machen Boards-of-Canada-Sachen und genau dafĂŒr liebe nicht nur ich die beiden Schotten hart. Eine Platte, die am besten dann klingt, wenn man ihr einen angemessenen Raum zu Zuhören schafft. Gerne ganz alleine. Alles daran ist groĂartig!
Ich schrieb neulich am Rande darĂŒber, dass ich dabei wĂ€re, einen Team-Tag vorzubereiten, was durchaus mit Stress verbunden war, mit dem einherging, dass hier weniger los war. Der Team-Tag fand nun am Freitag statt und lief so wie geplant und auch gut. Nach dem Feierabend wollte ich dann mit dem Rad sehr fix nach Hause, da hier Besuch von Lieblingsmenschen aus Wien auf mich wartete und die will man ja nicht lange warten lassen. Also Kette rechts und ab nach Hause. Das auf einer FahrradstraĂe, die ich zwar kenne, aber leider nicht so gut wie meine Westentasche. Solche Wege verĂ€ndern sich von Jahr zu Jahr und eigentlich weiĂ ich auch, dass man die erstmal eher entspannt fahren und checken sollte, was ich in diesem Jahr auf dieser Strecke noch nicht getan hatte.
Ich behaupte gerne, dass ein einziger Grund fĂŒr den Kauf eines SUV die Radwege sind. Aber dann war es schon zu spĂ€t, ich habe einen sehr hohen Asphaltbruch erst bemerkt, als mein Vorderrad mit gut 30 km/h auf diesen traf, was fĂŒr mich zur Folge hatte, ĂŒber den Lenker absteigen und mit dem Kopf auf der StraĂe einschlagen zu mĂŒssen. Ăberall Blut, Schmerzen aus der Hölle und glĂŒcklicherweise sehr kompetenten Ersthelfer:innen, die mir einen guten Druckverband verpassten. Dann RTW, Notaufnahme, CT, Röntgen, Platzwunde ĂŒber der linken Augenbraue geklebt und sehr viel Zeit im Krankenhaus verbracht.
GlĂŒcklicherweise ist mehr als die Platzwunde nebst blauem und angeschwollenem Auge, SchĂŒrfwunden, drölfhundert anderen blauen bis schwarzen Flecken und einer erst neuen kaputten Brille nichts geblieben, aber das alles in Summe tut doch ordentlich weh. Jedenfalls bin ich ob dessen jetzt erstmal eine Woche krank zu Hause. Dass es ein Wegeunfall war macht das alles nicht besser, ich hĂ€tte auf diese schmerzliche Erfahrung einfach ganz gerne verzichtet.
Notiz am Rande: die Ersthelferin, die dort wohnt, meinte zu mir, dass ich in den letzten vier Wochen jetzt schon der fĂŒnfte sei, den es an dieser Stelle vom Rad geholt hĂ€tte, was zeigt, welche PrioritĂ€ten diese Stadt fĂŒr ihre Radwege pflegt.
(This blog essay is overdue because I'm still waiting for new prescription glasses and writing while cross-eyed with text zoomed to 250% is tedious. They should be here later this week. Meanwhile ...)
Back in January 2022 I wrote an essay revisiting my predictions for 2017. My review of 2017's stab in the dark began, "it spanned three blog posts and ended happily in a nuclear barbecue to put us all out of our misery: start here, continue with this, and finale: and the Rabid Nazi Raccoons shall inherit the Earth."
I'll actually stand by those 2017 predictions, which were weirdly not that far off the mark although Queen Elizabeth II outlasted my prediction by several years.
But my 2022 predictions?
Oh boy.
Look, for an amateur futurologist writing in January of 2022 it was arguably forgivable to miss the US electorate being so boneheadedly stupid that they'd re-elect the most corrupt president in their nation's history, at the head of a Gish gallop of barkingly ignorant and destructive cranks and conspiracy theorists determined to tear down the republic and destroy its vital institutions, all in the name of returning the social order (per the Project 2025 plan) to the 50s--the 1850s, that is, not the 1950s. With 20/20 hindsight, what I missed was the now-obvious wave of media ownership consolidation, including corporate social media such as X, Meta, and Google, in the hands of a narrow class of billionaire oligarchs. I also missed the complacent incompetence of the Biden administration with respect to organizing their succession plans--it was obvious that by 2024 he'd be vulnerable to campaign ratfucking on grounds of his age, and his anointed successor was guilty of being (a) too female and (b) non-white, rendering her unacceptable to a large chunk of the voters.
But, even if you forgive my failure to recognize the catastrophic collapse of the US as a credible hegemonic superpower over the past 3-4 years, I can only hang my head in shame over my failure to anticipate the Ukraine war, which broke out six weeks after that blog essay. Let alone to anticipate a revolution in military affairs as profound as that brought about of the first world war.
Similiarly, I have no excuse for not recognizing that an Israel with politics dominated by Benjamin Netanyahu would go Full Nazi sooner rather than later, as the genocide in Gaza and the program to build a Greater Israel in Lebanon demonstrate. I mean, I grew up going to synagogue and have visited Israel more than once! I should have seen the signs, they were all there as far back as the 1980s. Mea culpa. (And fuck those guys.)
While I correctly recognized the EV transport revolution, I missed the concurrent solar power and grid-scale battery revolution, now very visibly in train and arguably more important than the arrival of cheap electric cars and cheaper e-bikes. I didn't notice the global supply chain crisis of 2021-2023, even then gathering pace, although it didn't impact consumer prices for a few more months.
Possibly my worst miss is that I completely discounted the profound social impact of LLMs (or so-called "AI"), not simply as a massive technology sector investment bubble and happy hunting ground for snake oil salesmen and grifters, but as a corrosive influence on population-level critical thinking. I should have seen it coming--I read Joseph Weizenbaum's Computer Power and Human Reason back in the 1980s--but I didn't recognize just how unable to see past the ELIZA illusion most people would prove to be.
Nor did I expect the transhumanists, extropians, and the rest of the hairball of beliefs now congealing into the syncretistic techno-religion of TESCREAL to have seized control of trillions of dollars of private equity and not only be arguing about the Singularity but to be squabbling over who gets to run it (with a side-order of racism and eugenics on top, because every flavour of crank batshittery is so much better with a side-order of fascism and concentration camps).
So I'm sticking a flag in the ground here and admitting: I am officially a shit futurologist.
Back in 2022, and before that, in 2017 and even in 2007, I espoused a general rule of thumb about predicting the future, that:
Looking 10 years ahead, about 70% of the people, buildings, cars, and culture is already here today. Another 20-25% is not present yet but is predictable -- buildings under construction, software and hardware and drugs in development, children today who will be adults in a decade. And finally, there's about a 5-10% element that comes from the "who ordered that" dimension
2022 forced me to update the ratio to:
20% of 10-year-hence developments utterly unpredictable, leaving us with 55-60% in the "here today" and 20-25% in the "not here yet, but clearly on the horizon" baskets
Anyway, it's now 2026, and I officially give up.
The Stross Ratio for predicting events ten years hence is now 60/10/30. That is: 60% of the people, buildings, and culture are here today. 10% is predictably on the drawing boards, and a whopping 30% is utterly unpredictable.
Airborne Hantavirus pandemic or global Measles pandemic, who the fuck knows what we're going to get--given that the US FDA is run by a crank who doesn't believe in the germ theory of disease and seems to be trying to spike vaccine development globally?
I'm reasonably confident that the Russian invasion of Ukraine will be over by this time in 2030--quite likely by this time in 2027, due to the collapse of the Russian domestic economy. I'm also reasonably confident that the US war on Iran will be over by this time in 2030, if only because Trump will most likely be dead or in palliative care (possibly following his removal in a soft coup via Article 25 of the US constitution, due to his very obvious current illness and decline). (Note that Trump's insistence on "running for a third term" is very probably a serious sign that the electoral process in the USA is no longer fully functional, under the aegis of the supreme court he appointed, as long as he survives. His successor may not be able to sustain his ability to ignore the law: if they can, then, well, the US Republic is over: it had a good run, from 1776 to 2026.) The AI bubble will have burst long before May 2027--the semiconductor pinch caused by the aforementioned helium supply crisis will cripple Nvidia's ability to manufacture chipsets for data centers, and the US DCs are all being built to run on diesel/kerosene burning gas turbine power plants anyway, the price of which has skyrocketed due to the gulf war.
I expect us to be well into Great Depression 2.0 by this time in 2030.
There will be some grounds for hope. The global energy transition to renewables will, by that point, be a done deal. It also means China will have replaced the USA as the global energy superpower--not because they dominate the transport routes for energy but because they manufacture 80% of the planet's EVs and PV panels and batteries. But that's a tenuous hold on superpowerdom. If the Chinese government throws its weight around in the 21st century the way the USA did in the 20th, it will rapidly find first-tier rivals building up their own manufacturing capability: meanwhile, PV/battery is inherently easier to distribute that large, centralized grid based power supplies, and the dronification of warfare means (at least in the near term) that rapid mechanized wars of maneuver are a non-starter: the "fog of war" is on the way out, replaced by highly precise targeting of advancing assets and the robotization of the front line.
In space, I'm pretty sure we will see a Kessler Syndrome event if the idiotic rush towards putting data centers in orbit goes anywhere. But I think it's not going to happen--SpaceX is inextricably tied to the current tech bubble, and when it pops Elon Musk is going to wish he had a bunker to hide in.
The main casualty of this decade is the ideological credibility of capitalism as a social organizational principle.
Enshittification, also known as platform decay, per wiki, is "a process in which two-sided online products and services decline in quality over time. Initially, vendors create high-quality offerings to attract users, then they degrade those offerings to better serve business customers, and finally degrade their services to both users and business customers to maximize short-term profits for shareholders." Systematic capture of the US government and the global system of trade by capitalists has resulted in the creation of a framework optimized for enshittification all round, and the result is the enshittification of everything--all the infrastructure of the capitalist world is decaying and on fire as the post-privatization owners loot it.
This is the Marx-predicted crisis of capitalism, and it's been in progress since the collapse of the USSR in 1991 removed the main ideological standard-bearer for opposition. It accelerated in 2008 with the global financial crisis, and again in 2020 when the pandemic provided top cover for the hyaenas to go on a looting spree. They've stripped the corpse of actually-existing social democracies everywhere to the bone, and now they're cannibalizing their own body politic. Disaster capitalism has finally come home to roost, and it won't end until the global financial system collapses. Meanwhile, the generation born in the 21st century has no time for their shit. We are moving into a political state weirdly reminiscent of the period between 1905 and the 1930s. If we're lucky we're going to get New Deal 2.0 and a brisk round of socialism: if we're unlucky, it's going to be guillotine time all over again.
Welcome back to the Abstract! Here are the stories this week that spread life across space, went stir crazy for science, held the colony together, and peacefully sat it out.
First, what if we went all the way to Europa only to find that some earthly bacteria already set up shop there? Then: red rum on the Red Planet, the palace intrigue of tropical wasps, and an afterlife in full lotus.
Europa, the ice moon of Jupiter, is considered one of the most promising candidates in the search for extraterrestrial life due to its vast subsurface ocean. But imagine what a trip it would be to not just find aliens on this world, but to learn that they originally hailed from Earth.
That’s the premise of a new study that investigates “the possibility of dust particles containing living bacteria ejected from Earth reaching Europa and landing on its surface,” according to author Zaza Osmanov of the Free University of Tbilisi.
“Life on Earth originated at least 3.55 billion years ago, which implies that for approximately that long, Earth has been shedding life-bearing particles into surrounding space,” Osmanov said in the study. “Hence, if favorable conditions exist elsewhere in the Solar System and can be accessed by dust particles, the transport of life from Earth appears plausible and may have been occurring over the course of several billion years.”
This idea that life might travel between planets, or even star systems, is called panspermia. In addition to Earth life potentially expanding beyond our planet, scientists have previously speculated that life on Earth was itself seeded by microbes from another world, such as Mars.
To game out a scenario in which earthly bacteria might reach Europa, Osmanov estimated the rate at which dust-borne bacteria is dislodged from Earth by impacts and how it might then endure a long journey through space and survive a crash into the icescape of Europa.
He concluded that many trillions of life-bearing dust grains from Earth could have reached the moon’s surface over tens of millions of years. From there, surviving microbes may have spent generations shimmying down through cracks in its ice shell, which is dozens of miles thick, into the dark waters of the ocean below.
A close-up of the fractures in Europa’s ice shell. Image: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona
Though the deck would be stacked against these microbes, the high number of dust particles that Earth sloughs off into space “renders the existence of life on Europa highly plausible,” according to the study.
It’s worth noting that panspermia remains a topic of heated academic debate, in part because there are so many uncertainties about the process. For example, H. Jay Melosh, the late geophysicist and panspermia expert, also assessed the odds that Earth life could relocate to Europa and came to the opposite conclusion as Osmanov.
“If life should be found in the oceans of Europa or Enceladus, it is very likely that it’s indigenous rather than seeded from Earth, Mars or (especially) another solar system," Melosh said while presenting findings at the 2019 meeting of the American Geophysical Union, according to Space.com.
Ultimately, we won’t know until we go! NASA’s Europa Clipper is currently on its way to Jupiter to take a closer look at its namesake moon from orbit, and to scout out potential sites for surface exploration in the future. Perhaps decades from now we’ll finally be able to answer the tantalizing question of whether the seas of Europa are inhabited—and if so, if the aliens are homegrown or descended from spacefaring Earthlings.
It’s one thing for a bacterium to make an interplanetary voyage; sending humans across deep space is orders of magnitude harder—and not just because we are flimsy mortal fleshbags. There is also the psychological toll of spending months or years in a confined space on a long-duration mission, such a trip to Mars.
To anticipate these challenges, scientists enlisted 12 crew members on a 10-month overwintering mission at Antarctica’s Concordia Station to self-report feelings of loneliness and paranoia, while wearing proximity sensors that allowed the team to monitor their movements.
The Concordia Station, a French–Italian research facility on the Antarctic plateau. Image: Jessica Struder/ University of Zurich
The results revealed “a progressive deterioration in both individual psychological outcome and team dynamics” in which “loneliness and paranoid thoughts increased over time,” according to researchers co-led by Andrea Cantisani of the University of Bern and Jan Schmutz of the University of Zurich.
The team even singled out one participant who “reported unusually high scores…corresponding to severe levels of paranoid ideation.” Reading the study, it’s hard not to be reminded of John Carpenter's The Thing, or the descent into space madness depicted in movies like Event Horizon or Sunshine.
Indeed, the authors shouted out Stephen King’s The Shining as a fictional precursor to the study’s finding that “prolonged isolation [and] constant proximity does not necessarily strengthen relationships but can instead amplify tension, mistrust, and psychological strain.”
In other words, if astronauts start seeing ghostly masked revelers, murdered children, and mercurial bartenders popping up in their Mars base, it’s time to pack it in and head back to Earth.
Speaking of hostile social dynamics, it’s time to return to the “dynastic violence" beat. Long-time readers of this newsletter will know that I am a sucker for succession battles in eusocial animals such as naked mole rats or matricidal ants—which are ruled over by one breeding female queen.
This week, scientists updated the genre by watching what happens when you remove queens of the tropical wasp species Polistes canadensis, a shift that increased colony-level aggression “approximately tenfold,” according to a new study.
In the ensuing power vacuum, rival females vied for the crown through aggressive behaviors including bites, tackles, stings, and air fights. But even as some females took up arms (and stingers), the team was surprised to observe other wasps stepping into foraging or worker roles they had never occupied before to prevent the colony from collapsing in the chaotic interregnum.
“Contrary to our predictions, these findings support the theory that some form of compensatory mechanism exists in this species, buffering the conflict of queen succession,” said researchers led by Owen R. Corbett of University College London. “This system, in which some individuals compete while others compensate, could be what allows species like P. canadensis to maintain colony function despite aggressive contest-based succession.”
To channel Cersei Lannister: When you play the game of thrones, you win or you…compensate. While that doesn’t have quite the same ring as the original quote, the wasp colonies definitely weathered their dynastic struggles better than Westeros in the end.
Last, it’s time to take a seat—for eternity. That’s the idea behind a rare funerary custom called “seated burial,” in which bodies are arranged in an upright sitting posture, in contrast to the far more common practice of being “laid to rest” in a supine pose.
In a new study, archaeologists examined four individuals who lived between the 7th and 9th centuries in what was then called the Chang’an region of northwest China and were buried in seated poses. The study offers “the first direct genetic evidence” to counter predictions that these burials imply a monastic lifestyle or a particular ethnic lineage, according to researchers led by Chenshuang Sun of Fudan University in Shanghai.
“Our genomic data contradicts the hypothesis that seated burials have a unique origin from ancestors in northern or northeastern Asia” as “we find no evidence of significant differences between seated burial individuals and their contemporaries,” the team concluded. “Although Buddhist symbolic artifacts, such as pagoda-shaped jars, were found in one tomb, isotopic evidence contradicts strict adherence to vegetarian Buddhist precepts.”
In addition to refuting the special status of the skeletal sitters, the study also includes interesting asides, such as records of Buddhist monks who ended up in “seated death” after “passing away in the full-lotus position.”
Seated burials have been unearthed across the globe, serving as a reminder to us all that we don’t have to take death lying down.
The project was conceived in relation to both Naka-Ikebukuro Park and Hareza Ikebukuro, the mixed-use cultural and commercial facility that opened in 2019. Once a sandy open space, the park has been renewed as a stone-paved plaza, a civic room of sorts that evokes the character of a European square and now supports cultural events and everyday public activity. Creating a sense of continuity with that plaza became a central theme of the buildingâs facade design.
Floor-to-ceiling heights of approximately 13 feetâgenerous by any urban mixed-use standardâestablish an interior register of expansiveness that the tight plan area would otherwise foreclose. The decision was enabled in part by the siteâs relatively relaxed height restrictions, but the move to exploit that allowance fully, rather than simply meet code minimums, reflects the studioâs deliberate spatial philosophy. Here, height is not treated as leftover zoning capacity, but as a tool for producing breath, light, and spatial complexity within a compact urban envelope.
The residential levels on the seventh and eighth floors carry this logic forward, with the maisonette units organized across two floors. The introduction of lofts transforms each into a quartet: a four-level domestic environment compressed into a two-story envelope. Circulation becomes part of the living experience. A slide connects levels, staircases double as spatial events, and movement through the apartment is choreographed rather than merely accommodated.
The eighth floor pushes the idea furthest, with a curved atrium opening the living-dining space vertically and a net suspended within it to create a hammock-like platform, accessible from above via the bouldering wall. Private rooms and wet areas are arranged on the seventh floor, allowing the domestic program to unfold as a three-dimensional sequence rather than a conventional stacked plan. Below the residences, the buildingâs commercial section applies the same cross-sectional intelligence. The first- and second-floor tenant spaces can operate independently, but they are also designed to be joined through internal stairs and a dumbwaiter, while the third through sixth floors are envisioned for shops, clinics, and similar uses.
The transom gardensâthree-dimensional planting installed within the approximately seven-foot-high windows and the transom sections above themâcreate interstitial green volumes between the interior tenant spaces and the street. Wall greening was considered, but the architects instead chose this recessed planting strategy to maintain visibility into the tenant spaces while giving the façade a softer, more verdant presence in relation to the plaza. The result is greenery that is not merely applied to the exterior, but layered into the building section itself. Set back into recesses above a lower portion that extends to the site boundary, the transom gardens allow the building to maximize leasable floor area while introducing porous, planted depth along the facade.
That layered strategy continues in the buildingâs structure. Rather than matching the structural frame to the polygonal exterior shape of the site, the architects adopted a simpler central grid for cost and construction efficiency. The exterior could still respond to the irregular site geometry, while the internal frame remained rational.
Behind the transom gardens, windows aligned with this grid form what the architects call the âLuce Jardin,â or Light Transom Garden, where daylight filters softly through the planting and into the interior. Timber used on the underside of the transom garden eaves creates a second façade of sortsâone experienced from eye level when looking upwardâlending warmth to a building otherwise defined by density, precision, and urban constraint.
Clerestory Garden ultimately proposes a more porous model for the mid-rise city building. It maximizes floor area ratio while carving out interstitial spaces for planting, light, and movement. In doing so, it harmonizes with the adjacent plaza and surrounding urban fabric while producing an architecture of density that feels unexpectedly expansive.
To view this and other projects by the studio, visit keyoperation.com.
A “river of blood” was how one survivor described the scene in western Myanmar. âI saw shooting. I saw mass killing.” Another told the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHRC) how 20 relatives, including three children, had been killed in the 2024 attack on Htan Shauk Khan village.
Human Rights Watch (HRW) said earlier this month that the Arakan Army (AA) âmay have killed at least 170 Rohingya men, women, and childrenâ in Hoyyar Siri (known as Htan Shauk Khan in Burmese) in Buthidaung Township. It described the May 2, 2024, attack as a âmassacreâ.
Buthidaung is one of the two townships in Rakhine State that is home to the majority of the Rohingya, a mainly Muslim ethnic minority in the predominantly Buddhist Myanmar.
At least 40 villages in Buthindaung were burned down in April and May 2024 amid clashes between the AA, an ethnic armed group fighting Myanmarâs military junta for control of Rakhine, and junta forces battling to retain their hold of the township.
Both sides committed abuses against civilians during the clashes, according to HRW. The military juntaâs forced conscription of Rohingya to fight on its behalf has also intensified violence against them.
The military and Rohingya armed groups began arson attacks in Buthidaung township in April 2024. By mid-May the AA had captured all junta bases, according to the think tank, the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. The destruction of Buthidaung has previously been documented by Bellingcat.Â
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The AA has denied accusations that it massacred civilians in Buthidaung, claiming that those killed were junta soldiers and Rohingya militants.
Bellingcat emailed the United League of Arakan, AAâs political wing, about the alleged attack on civilians but did not receive a response at the time of publication. Myanmarâs Ministry of Defence also did not respond to our questions.
Evidence of civilian harm in Myanmar is slow to emerge and difficult to obtain due to the militaryâs strict control of the region and the tight grip of armed groups such as the AA in areas they control.
âThe mass killing could only be confirmed more than a year later,â the recent HRW report said, âwhen survivors eventually crossed into Bangladesh and found their way to the Rohingya refugee camps in Coxâs Bazar.â
Aerial imagery shows that Htan Shauk Khan was almost entirely destroyed in May 2024.
False-colour infrared map from Copernicus on Planet Insights Browser shows exposed ground in grey or tan, indicative of possible damage, in the village.
Erasing Homes
A new investigation by Bellingcat has identified 115 villages in Rakhine State, similar to Htan Shauk Khan, as partially or completely destroyed since the February 2021 military coup that overthrew Myanmarâs democratically elected government.
The data points to a pattern of violence that leaves civilian areas uninhabitable and in some cases, erases them completely.
Several buildings were set on fire when the junta allegedly dropped a
bomb on the Muslim village of Zu La on Nov. 3, 2024. The fire was captured nearby on
NASA FIRMS.
Satellite imagery indicates that it was attacked again on Dec. 9, 2024. Visible smoke can be seen
rising from the village.
Zu La is located in Maungdaw Township. Along with neighbouring Buthidaung, Maungdaw is home to
the majority
of Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingya.
Zu La, and the neighbouring village of Gone Nar, previously faced violence during the 2017
Rohingya genocide.
Satellite imagery from that year shows them completely burned to the ground.
They show signs of reconstruction after 2017.
But repeated attacks in 2024 destroyed the villages again.
Neither of the villages appears on the latest maps from 2024. These are produced by the United
Nations mapping unit, based on Myanmar government maps.
Steve Ross, Senior Fellow at the US nonprofit Stimson Center who is leading the ‘Crisis in
Myanmarâs Rakhine State’ project, told Bellingcat this is part of the military’s broader
campaign to deny the existence of the Rohingya and erase identity in Rakhine.
Bellingcat contacted the Myanmar government but had received no response by the time of
publication.
Villages in Mungdaw are inured to cycles of violence. Ywar Haung, a village south of Zu La, has
stood barren since 2017.
So has Kan Kya, where the military built the Border Guard Police Battalion No. 5 (BGP5).
All four villages are among the growing number of Rakhine’s lost settlements.
Six of the 10 villages we found partially or totally destroyed in Maungdaw in 2024 aren’t marked
on the UN’s township map.
Removing more villages from the map remains a possibility, Ross said. However, following this
Aprilâs elections, which critics dismissed as a sham,
the military is eager to restore international credibility and avoid actions that might be seen
as provocative, the expert told Bellingcat.
The AA announced the capture of Maungdaw when it
seized BGP5 on Dec. 8, 2024.
And with that the armed group gained full
control of Myanmar’s entire border with Bangladesh.
Shortly afterwards, the AA took control of the strategically important Ann Township in central
Rakhine.
The armed group announced it had captured the headquarters of the Western Regional Military
Command on Dec. 18, 2024.
It shared a video of the headquarters and nearby
military installations burning.
Local residents in and around the township were trapped,
displaced or forced to
flee their homes due to the months-long fight for Ann.
According to reports, the military
entered Pyaung Chaung village and burned it down on Oct. 31, 2024.
Satellite imagery from Nov. 1, 2024, shows large-scale damage in the village. There were reports that the
military warned residents to evacuate the village a week before the attack.
Ross believes that the military’s intention has been to try to make Rakhine as ungovernable as
possible if the AA gains full control of the state.
Nearby villages of Yat Thar Ywar Thit
and Pyaung Thay show similar evidence of destruction.
Sittwe
city, the capital of Rakhine State, has become a focal area of fighting since late 2025.
The city is in Sittwe township, one of the three townships still under junta control.
Su Mon Thant, Asia-Pacific analyst at Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED),
said capturing Sittwe would be highly symbolic for the AA as no non-state actor has yet taken
control of a state capital in the country.
The AA already controls areas along an India-backed transport corridor in Myanmar that includes
a port in Sittwe.
Sittwe is surrounded by water on three sides. Capturing it would be challenging, with the
military maintaining naval superiority and building defences in and around the city to deter a
potential AA offensive, Ross said.
On Dec. 27, 2024, the AA attacked the Kyauk
Tan checkpoint near Sittwe on the highway linking the capital to Yangon, the largest city to the
south of Rakhine.
There are many villages near the checkpoint.
Like Taw Kan
where, according to local reports,
junta forces carried out an arson attack that destroyed 80 houses on Jan. 15, 2024.
Bellingcat found at least 13 villages near the checkpoint that had been destroyed, with only a
few remaining structures. All but one of them were attacked in 2024-2025.
Less than 4km from the checkpoint is Yar Tan
which appears intact in a March 2024 Google Earth image
but several buildings look destroyed in high-resolution satellite image on Google Earth from
March 2025.
Trenches and military outposts began appearing near the village around Nov-Dec 2024.
They grew as the months passed. However, due to a lack of updated high-resolution satellite
images, we cannot tell whether these are currently in use or to what extent.
There are also villages that appear to have been replaced with defensive structures. For
example, Kan Pyin Ywar Haung, for which the latest available high-resolution satellite image
shows trenches on both sides.
Although such structures are clearly visible in high-resolution satellite imagery, lower-quality
images can also help indicate whether a village was replaced with fortifications.
Kan Pyin Ywar Thit, located just south of Kan Pyin Ywar Haung, appears to have been completely
destroyed; however, the same criss-crossing lines are not visible across the village.
Similar fortifications appear in other villages.
Defence infrastructure has replaced villages on the outskirts of Sittwe, making it more difficult
for AA to advance towards the city, said Ross.
Bellingcat also found at least 10 villages partially or totally destroyed in Kyaukpyu Township
since fighting intensified in February 2025.
Kyaukpyu,
which has abundant oil, natural gas and marine resources, is also home to a junta naval base
Nearly all the villages we found to be destroyed or damaged are within a 10km radius of the
naval base.
In early March this year, clashes
took place between the AA and the military near Say Maw village, located less than 5km from the
base.
NASA FIRMS detected fire in the village and the surrounding areas on March 23, 2026.
The latest high resolution satellite image on Planet from April 2026 shows flattened buildings in
the village.
A month earlier Saing Chon Dwein village, also less than 5km from the base, was reportedly
burned down by the military.
The fire was caught on a Feb. 9, 2026 lower resolution satellite image
with burnt areas distinguishable the next day.
Like Sittwe, Kyaukpyu is surrounded by water, making it difficult for the Arakan Army, which
lacks naval capabilities, to seize control. “AA has some advanced drones reportedly, but these
areas also have jamming technology,” said Thant.
Methodology
The data was compiled using news reports, including social media channels, ACLED, satellite imagery and NASA FIRMS. The names of the villages were corroborated using the UNâs Myanmar Information Management Unit (MIMU), news reports and Planet Labs.
We only included areas where the destruction was clearly visible in high-resolution satellite imagery or significant enough to be detected in mid-resolution images. Our data is not exhaustive and the true number of affected villages is likely to be higher.
While it is difficult to ascertain whether the villages we found damaged or destroyed showed signs of reconstruction, at least five of them appear to show some buildings rebuilt in latest available satellite imagery.
Military Control Is Slipping
Last month, in the first election since Myanmar’s 2021 coup, the pro-military parliament chose junta chief Min Aung Hlaing to be the next president.
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According to research group Data for Myanmar, at least 65 townships were excluded from voting, including the 14 in the AAâs control. In Rakhineâs 17 townships, voting was held in only three still under junta control â Kyaukpyu, Sittwe and Manaung.
The AA resumed attacks against the junta in Rakhine in November 2023, ending a year-long ceasefire.
Data published by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project (ACLED) and analysed by Bellingcat reveals a sharp increase in the military’s air and drone strikes in Rakhine. After the AA resumed its offensive, strikes rose from 30 in 2023 to 461 in 2024. By the end of 2024, the AA had captured all but three townships in the state.
Bellingcat found that strikes were then concentrated in the townships where the junta is fighting to maintain control. They decreased in 13 townships captured by the AA and remained unchanged in one during 2025. By contrast, attacks increased in Kyaukpyu and Sittwe, yet to be captured by the AA. Data for Manaung is unavailable.
ACLEDâs data comes from multiple sources, including news reports and social media. While the data is not exhaustive, a broad trend can be identified. You can read further details and caveats about the data here.
Su Mon Thant, Asia-Pacific analyst at ACLED,explained that the military conducts clearance operations to prevent the AA from using villages as buffers or shelters â a tactic employed across the country. âAt the same time, itâs a warning sign for other villages,â she said, adding that when one village is set ablaze, it sends a signal to other villages not to âaccept, shelter or harborâ armed groups. Thant also noted that people are displaced when their village is destroyed, eroding support for armed groups as locals suffer the consequences of the fighting.
The AA has vowed to take control of all of Rakhine by 2027 and success may bring a geopolitical shift in the region. The armed groupâs control over Kyaukpyu and Sittwe will give it significant leverage, with both India and China having infrastructure projects in the townships, Steve Ross of the Stimson Center told Bellingcat.
But neither side can control the state without further alleviation of civilian suffering, Ross said. According to UNHRC data, there are almost half a million internally displaced people (IDPs) in Rakhine as of March 30, 2026.
Estimated total IDPs in March-April of each year. Data prior to 2022 is unavailable. Source: United Nations Human Rights Council. Chart: Created on Datawrapper, edited on Adobe Illustrator by Pooja Chaudhuri/Bellingcat
In Sittwe township alone, about 120,000 Rohingya have been displaced by communal conflict since 2012.
âPeople displaced from other parts of Rakhine State during the war are in Sittwe, hundreds of thousands of civilians,â said Thant, adding that neither side can control the capital without significant loss of life.
There are also 1 million Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. The futures of both the refugees and IDPs remain uncertain.
âNobody can go home yet at this stage,â said Thant.
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