The military retains huge political and economic influence in Myanmar and has a long track record of pursuing critics, both during the crippling decades of junta rule and since the generals partially ceded power to civilians.
The latest story to anger the military, published in The Voice newspaper in late March, took aim at a propaganda film called "Pyi Daung Su Thit Sar" (Faithful to the Union) lauding the army's victories over armed ethnic groups.
Kyaw Swa Naing, who wrote the story under a pen name, said he would report to the police tomorrow over the case brought under the country's increasingly used and broadly worded telecommunications law which forbids "defaming or disturbing" people online.
"I am determined myself that I won't apologise to them for my article," Kyaw Swa Naing, who is being sued along with the paper's editor, told AFP.
"There is fighting everywhere and its normally lower-rank soldiers who end up dead while the leaders sit behind their desks."
The case also comes at a time of heightened tensions between the government and Myanmar's military, which still holds key levers of power after Suu Kyi's NLD party won the first free elections in generations in 2015.
Earlier this month one of her senior aides accused the military of spreading rumours to destabilise the NLD, bringing an angry response from the army in the most public sign yet of simmering discontent between the two.
But defamation prosecutions have soared since they took power in March 2016, with social media satirists, activists and journalists targeted.
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