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Burma Army Uses Meth-Fueled Troops and Death Metal in Mad Max-Style Assaults

Jocko Podcast · 542: Stronghold: War, Rescue, and Resistance. With Ephraim Mattos · May 27, 2026
Burma Army Uses Meth-Fueled Troops and Death Metal in Mad Max-Style Assaults
Jocko Podcast
Jocko Podcast
542: Stronghold: War, Rescue, and Resistance. With Ephraim Mattos
"The Burma Army was driving down the road to come attack the rebels with these giant trucks with huge speakers on them, Mad Max style, and they're blasting some sort of war death metal music. All of the soldiers, or many of the soldiers at least, were on meth. It's a totally normal tactic for the Burma Army. They'll give their guys meth when they want to hype them up for a particular fight."
Matos revealed the Burma Army routinely uses methamphetamine to drug its soldiers before battle and conducts assaults with trucks mounted with massive speakers blasting death metal music. This unconventional warfare tactic is designed to intimidate and overwhelm resistance forces, representing a stark departure from conventional military operations and highlighting the brutal nature of the conflict.

About this episode

On Jocko Podcast 542, host Jocko Willink welcomed back former Navy SEAL Ephraim Matos, founder of Stronghold Rescue and Relief, for an extensive discussion of the ongoing humanitarian crisis and civil war in Burma. Matos, who recently completed a master's degree at Harvard Kennedy School while continuing field operations, provided detailed firsthand accounts of coordinated airstrikes, drone warfare, and brutal Burma Army tactics including the use of methamphetamine-fueled troops and civilians as human shields. He revealed extensive Russian and Chinese military backing of the Burma junta, including plans for a Russian nuclear power plant and deep-water ports designed to give both nations strategic ocean access bypassing traditional choke points. The conversation covered Matos surviving a deliberate three-aircraft airstrike targeting his team after civilians reported white personnel, escaping barefoot seconds before 500-pound bombs destroyed their position. He described implementing battlefield blood transfusions in remote jungle locations, dramatically improving survival rates and saving lives including a 14-year-old girl wounded in an airstrike. Matos detailed the psychological toll of combat, including experiencing shaking hands for months after the bombings, which he addressed through cold exposure therapy. The episode also covered his new geopolitics podcast 'The Overwatch,' aimed at helping Americans understand global conflicts and foreign policy. Matos emphasized the ongoing 75-year war has never ended for Burma, with rebel forces now including ethnic Burmese fighting their own military following a 2021 coup, though Russian and Chinese support has recently shifted momentum back to the junta.

Key takeaways

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