Background At the time of Burmese independence from the
British in 1948, there was considerable tension between the
Karen community and the Burmese majority. Some Karens sought independence while others attempted co-existence within Burma. The KNLA was preceded by the
Karen National Defence Organisation (KNDO), an armed organisation formed by the KNU in 1947 to defend Karen communities and interests. Most KNDO soldiers had previously served in the forces of
British Burma. In early 1949, the Burmese government arrested the ethnically Karen leader of the armed forces, Gen.
Smith Dun, and replaced him with Burmese nationalist
Ne Win. Continued attacks against Karen dominated townships around Rangoon and the arrest of Karen political leaders led the KNU to
declare armed struggle, and the world's longest running civil war began. Early in the fighting, Karen forces overran much of northern Burma including towns such as
Mandalay and established strong positions outside
Rangoon at
Insein Township. But lacking a port from which to receive military supplies, the Karen forces gradually withdrew to the southeast of Burma.
Founding of the KNLA In 1967, the Karen National United Party began to change its approach to the war, withdrawing more from the
Irrawaddy delta and, in 1976, changing its policy on wanting an independent state, and joining a new alliance, the National Democratic Front. This alliance of armed ethnic political parties supported a federal union of Burma. Around this time, the Karen National Liberation Council was formed as a new emergency administration by the KNU, which then founded the Karen National Liberation Army. In 1970, the KNLA was reorganized into 7 brigades and additional special battalions under the personal command of
Bo Mya. These units combined KNLA soldiers with local KNDO militias in each brigade's territory, quickly growing the size of the KNLA to 10,000 well-armed and experienced soldiers. A group calling itself the KNU/KNLA Peace Council, led by the former KNLA brigade 7 commander Brig-Gen Htay Maung (Htein Maung), broke away from the KNLA in February 2007, and organised a peace talk as well as a cease-fire agreement with the Burmese military government without the approval of the KNU central committee. On 14 February 2008,
Padoh Mahn Sha Lah Phan, the KNU secretary-general, was assassinated in
Thailand. On 13 May 2009, a senior
Myanmar Army officer, Brig.-Gen. Kaung Myat was killed by the KNLA. He had been the commander of the No. 5 Military Operations Command. The next month, on 19 June,
DKBA soldiers began attacking the KNLA Brigade 7 headquarters, which they then captured on 23 June.
2010–present During 2010, increasing numbers of
Democratic Karen Buddhist Army (DKBA) soldiers defected to the KNLA, or fled to Thailand, following the announcement that the DKBA would be absorbed into the Burmese military government's Border Guard. The DKBA had previously been allied to, but distinct from, government forces. In November 2010, following the
general election of 2010, large parts of the
Democratic Karen Buddhist Army are alleged to have mutinied and re-aligned themselves with the KNLA, resulting in the
escalating conflict with junta troops. The two rebel armies have formed an alliance in advance of a possible crackdown by the military government. The KNLA, along with its parent organisation the KNU, signed the
Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) with the government of Myanmar on 15 October 2015, along with several other insurgent groups. In September 2016, KNLA fighters began clashing with members of the
Mon National Liberation Army (MNLA), the armed wing of the
New Mon State Party (NMSP), in the
Tanintharyi Region. Both the KNU and NMSP were signatories of the
Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) at the time of the fighting. A temporary bilateral truce was reached between the two groups on 14 March 2018. On 27 April 2021, the KNLA captured a Myanmar Army base along the Salween River, bordering Thailand's Mae Sam Laep sub-district. A civilian on the Thai side of the border was wounded by a stray bullet during the battle. On 9 September 2021, KNLA Brigades 3 and 5 captured a Myanmar Army camp in
Kyaukkyi Township in
Bago Region. On 21 November 2025, KNLA forces raided a suspected scam compound guarded by the
Democratic Karen Benevolent Army. 2,000 foreign nationals were detained, with hundreds handed off to Thai authorities. KNU officials called for international cooperation against
fraud factories. == Volunteers ==