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Timelines: Asian Unrest

A tactical "Far East Radar" view showing three red "Conflict Rings" over Myanmar, the South China Sea, and the Taiwan Strait.
A tactical “Far East Radar” view showing three red “Conflict Rings” over Myanmar, the South China Sea, and the Taiwan Strait.


the internal collapse of central Myanmar, including the splintered control zones between the SAC Junta and Resistance forces.

The brutal post-coup civil war has transitioned from urban protests to a complex, multi-front territorial conflict. Resistance coalitions, including the NUG’s People’s Defense Forces (PDF) and unified Ethnic Armed Organizations (EAOs), now contest or control over 50% of the country’s landmass. The SAC Junta, led by Senior General Min Aung Hlaing, remains dug into the capital, Naypyidaw, and major urban centers, relying on punitive airstrikes and a total blockade policy to hold onto power. This chronic stalemate has sparked a catastrophic displacement crisis, with 4.1 million internally displaced people—a situation international analysts have described as ASEAN’s primary security and humanitarian failure. Our curated intelligence archive tracks the tactical shifts, proxy involvement, and critical failure nodes of the conflict.


The 352-meter barrier at Scarborough Shoal (April 2026) instantly visible to the Grey Zone maritime war.

South China Sea: The Maritime Blockade [Scarborough Shoal] In April 2026, Beijing escalated its “Grey Zone” strategy by installing a 352-meter floating barrier at the entrance of Scarborough Shoal. This blockade physically denies access to the Philippines’ Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ), signaling a shift from routine harassment to de facto territorial seizure. While the U.S. remains focused on the Iran Nuclear Standoff, Manila has countered with increased naval patrols and large-scale joint exercises on the Zambales coast. The WarsWW SCS Archive tracks this rapid militarization, A2/AD expansion, and the daily tactical friction within these contested waters.


the "Hybrid Siege" aspect—less about an invasion fleet and more about the daily "suffocation" tactics China is using in 2026.

Taiwan Strait: The Hybrid & Cyber Siege

The Taiwan Strait has moved beyond traditional military posturing into a state of continuous hybrid warfare. China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) now maintains a permanent presence within Taiwan’s Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), utilizing “Grey Zone” tactics to exhaust defensive readiness. Beyond the daily incursions, the theater is defined by widespread cyber-sabotage and the strategic restriction of critical maritime corridors. This “slow-motion siege” is designed to isolate the island’s economy without triggering a conventional kinetic conflict. WarsWW provides real-time tracking of ADIZ violations, undersea cable security, and the evolving digital battlefield.