ทุกคนคงทราบถึงข่าวลือการปฏิวัติในปลายสัปดาห์ที่ผ่านมา แต่ไม่มีอะไรเกิดขึ้น ผู้ใหญ่ในบ้านเมืองของเราก็ออกมาแถลงการณ์แก้ข่าว ซึ่งก็คงจะได้ทราบกันแล้ว อย่างไรก็ตามสื่อต่างชาติลงข่าวความยุ่งยากภายในรัฐบาล และความพยายามจะปฎิวัติตัวเองโดย คมช สายทหารบก เมื่อคืนวันพฤหัสบดีที่ 4 มกราคม เพื่อย้อนกลับไปใช้อำนาจปฏิวัติ จับกุมครอบครัวทักษิณขังในบ้าน ยึดทรัพย์ตระกูลชินวัตร และจับกุม พล.อ.ชวลิต แต่การปฏิวัติตัวเองต้องยกเลิกเพราะพระบาทสมเด็จพระเจ้าอยู่หัวไม่พระราชทานพระบรมราชานุญาตให้กลุ่มปฏิวัติตัวเองเข้าเฝ้า ทำให้ต้องกลับมารอมชอมกัน และพยายามจัดการกับกลุ่มอำนาจเก่าด้วยอำนาจทางทหารเท่าที่มี
บางทีตอนนี้สื่อบ้านเราอาจจะถูกควบคุมการเสนอข่าว คงต้องอาศัยตามข่าวจากนอกประเทศเปรียบเทียบบ้าง
ปล. ผมลงกระทู้ที่นี่ที่เดียว มีคนก๊อปของผมไปลงที่อื่นแบบคำต่อคำ ผมไม่ว่า แต่ขอชี้แจงว่าเป็นคนอื่น ไม่ใช่ผม และขอแก้ไขสำนวนให้ต่างออกไป (กลัวว่าถ้าคนที่ก๊อปไปเกิดเรื่องอะไรขึ้น ผมอาจจะถูกเหมาว่าเป็นพวกเดียวกัน)
http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=332&Itemid=31Rough waters in Thailand
05 January 2007
Junta looks ready to tighten its grip as coup rumors fly
The awareness that it is one thing to seize power, and quite another thing to govern may finally be dawning on the royalist generals who booted out Thailands government in September. The junta that dismantled a functional, if imperfect, democratic system with the promise of putting in place something better has made the country less stable and must watch out for new threats even from within its own ranks as the political uncertainty in Bangkok seems to grow by the hour.
In the wake of the New Years Eve bombings that claimed three lives and injured scores, rumors of a second coup against the existing junta spread quickly on Thursday after troop movements were detected around the capital. Although some military and diplomatic sources said the incident was nothing more than a normal troop rotation blown out of proportion, others theorized that generals led by Saprang Kalayanamitr, an assistant to junta leader Sonthi Boonyaratglin, were ready to overthrow Sonthi and the military-appointed government of Surayud Chulanont.
My boss has been too nice to those who have ill intentions for the country and the people, General Saprang told a radio station late Thursday night, lending credence to a theory that some within the junta are prepared to force their would-be allies to take a stronger line against ousted Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and his cronies. From now on, we would adjust our strategy and get tough on those people.
The junta now has to consolidate power, shore up its own cohesiveness and also be on the alert for disgruntled supporters of Thaksin, especially in the ranks of the police force, his one-time power base. Oh, and there is still the ongoing bloody insurgency in the Muslim regions in the far south. The change of power in Bangkok has done nothing to ease that situation, either.
To make matters worse, all of this is taking place within the opaque confines of the Thai elite, a world of shifting loyalties, palace intrigues and, now, potentially bloody internecine military politics.
In an effort to calm nerves, Sonthi went on TV Thursday night and Friday morning to deny the coup rumors. He insisted that the Council for National Security, as the junta calls itself, remains unified. These losers are doing everything they can to discredit the September. 19 coup, Sonthi told Army-run Channel 5. They are doing everything to show that the country is in chaos and the CNS can't restore peace as we have promised
. They are trying to tell the people that the CNS and the government have no credibility.
Chaos or whatever you wish to call it, certainly elections, tentatively scheduled for October, look a long way away as contending forces in the capital, none of them readily identifiable, jostle for power.
This is a long way from the royalist-instigated coup, in which military forces were met by civilians in Bangkok bearing flowers and enthusiastic opponents of Thaksins corruption and heavy handed assault on civil liberties proclaimed that a new kind of smiling coup had been invented in Thailand.
As for Thursdays incident, sources said Saprang and company planned to oust the military-appointed government, rip up the interim charter, put Thaksins family under house arrest and seize their assets. They also wanted to arrest former Prime Minister Chavalit Yongchaiyudh, the most vocal junta critic, who also has been suggested as a suspect in the December 31 bombings.
This element of the junta believes, as Saprang said, that Sonthi and Surayud have not done enough to crack down on Thaksin loyalists, allowing them to regroup. Saprang, who is vying to replace Sonthi as army chief when the junta leader is scheduled to retire in October, wants to take a harder line. Sources said the planned coup was foiled because Saprang did not have the support of King Bhumibol Adulyadej.
As Saprang, Sonthi and Surayud met for talks Thursday night, the king never responded to requests for a meeting, leading the three to strike a compromise, sources said, which would see them flexing their military might against Thaksin loyalists and others.
Whatever Thursday nights events portend, the turbulent, opaque maneuvering of the past week makes it seem that the goal of a more democratic Thailand after Thaksins removal may be a pipe dream. Rather, conservative military forces appear ready to tighten their grip on power as struggles within the ranks rise to the surface, setting the stage for continued unease and potential violence. Many analysts speculate whether Sonthi, generally regarded as a professional soldier who is looking forward to retirement, can keep the armed forces unified before the October elections.
Democracy in many countries is not free; people have to fight for democracy, Panitan Wattanayagorn, a political and military analyst at Chulalongkorn University, told Asia Sentinel. No leaders will give democracy to the people easily, so there is going to be a struggle. Since the military took power, the people must fight to gain back democracy. I can only hope it's a peaceful one.
A poll released Friday by Assumption University found that the governments popularity plummeted after the New Years Eve blasts. Just 48.5 percent of 1,600 Bangkok residents polled by the university said they support Surayud after the explosions, down from 90 percent when the junta appointed him premier in October.
Potentially more worrisome for the generals is a growing lack of trust in the military. Sixty-three percent of respondents said they trust the police ‑ which the generals are trying to restructure and was the launching pad for Thaksins rise to power and wealth ‑ to protect them from future attacks, while only 53 percent had confidence in the army and 11 percent in Surayud himself.
On Thursday, Surayud told the public to expect more life-threatening events in the near future, and Friday he said the unrest could continue for several months.
After the bombings, the divide between Surayuds government and the generals seems to be growing. While the prime minister has claimed that no concrete evidence has surfaced to make arrests, the generals have consistently fingered rogue military elements connected to Thaksin.
But no matter how much heat Surayud takes, analysts say its quite unlikely he will be removed by force, since King Bhumibol supported him explicitly in his annual birthday speech last December.
The king gave Surayud unconditional support, an Asian diplomat said. Whoever takes Surayud out will be a villain, maybe even worse than Thaksin.
Garnering the kings support for any major political moves is absolutely crucial in Thailand, where the monarch has near godlike status. When Sonthi staged the September 19 coup, he was granted an audience with the king within hours, leaving the masses no doubt as to what their beloved king thought. Then the coup leaders appointed Surayud, who served on the kings 19-member privy council, to lead the interim government. In December the king blessed Surayuds government in his annual birthday speech.
For old people in the government, they have no greed for themselves and deserve a compliment for their willingness to continue to serve the country although they have long worked and should have their retirement time, he said.
The strategy of those who may want Surayud to leave may just be to make his life as difficult as possible. Surayud already said he would resign if recent allegations that he illegally purchased land on a forest reserve, reportedly dredged up by Chavalits aides, proved to be true.
The groups that want Surayud out may just be spreading coup rumors to increase the pressure so much that he just resigns, said a Western diplomat who follows politics closely. If that happens, it would be hard to find a replacement. If they get really desperate to find somebody, then these guys like Chavalit and [traditional politician] Banharn [Silpa-archa] may bizarrely come back on the scene.
Its hard to imagine that the coup leaders would trust Chavalit to take over the civilian government, but there is typically a fine line between friends and enemies here. For sure, Chavalit has taunted the coup leaders. He accused Saprang of gross incompetence for not making arrests on the bombings after claiming to know who did it.
Chavalit, though, is a consummate survivor. He remains close to retired general Prem Tinsulanonda, who heads the privy council and is widely seen as the mastermind of the coup. In desperate times, desperate measures may be called for. Chavalit also served in Thaksin first government as Deputy Prime Minister.
In any case, it remains to be seen if Saprang will get his wish to crack down on Thaksins family. That could signal his growing influence.
Saprang, General Anupong Paochinda and General Montri Sangkhasap are all in a race to succeed Sonthi as army chief in next Octobers military reshuffle.
The April reshuffle will be an intense period, and negotiations have likely already started, Panitan said. The generals need to move people into position now so when April comes along they are able to control things more tightly. People like Khun Saprang and Khun Anupong will likely look to consolidate power.
If the two are split, they sure didnt give that impression when they met diplomats on Thursday to clarify events after the bombings. Dressed in civilian clothes (so as not to scare the farang (foreigners), one diplomat said), Anupong and Saprang coolly explained that the bombings could not be connected to the insurgency that has claimed nearly 2,000 lives since January 2004, and blamed political opponents. The statements from the generals were much stronger than those from the Foreign Ministry, which, at the same briefing, claimed the government had no evidence of anything.
Diplomats noted that no police were present at the briefing, even though they are leading the investigation. It also struck them that two generals were needed to represent the CNS, which may have signaled the emerging rivalry.
At one point during the briefing, Saprang made the roundabout argument that the bombings could only further delay elections, which is not what the junta wants. This argument seizes on the belief that the Thai public would finally get upset if they thought the army wanted to stick around permanently. By holding elections, the generals could get off the tigers back as soon as possible.
Members of the former ruling Thai Rak Thai party, unsurprisingly, are skeptical.
Saprang wants to make sure that another Thaksin is not possible, said a former MP. He wants a Prem-style bureaucratic polity that will keep him or his associates in power. From the looks of it, the constitution-drafting committee may be thinking along the same lines.
Some members have already come out in favor of an unelected prime minister, and many have said rules that promoted strong parties such as Thaksins Thai Rak Thai may be scrapped. In its wake would be weak political parties and a strong military, which would essentially retain the right to topple any government by force.
The military has made headway in expanding the Internal Security Operations Command, a Cold War leftover that nearly faded into history in the late 1990s. The coup makers have since attempted to regroup Thailands entire security apparatus under it, including the police, with the army chief in control. Sonthi earlier said the coup leaders would add 60,000 new staff to operate security missions in 76 provinces. These would include monitoring political opponents.
Although many doubt Southern insurgents were behind the New Years Eve blasts, the situation in Thailands southern provinces has deteriorated rapidly over the past few months, with daily assassinations almost doubling in the previous two months. Arson attacks have also risen dramatically.
The south has almost become ungovernable, said Anthony Davis, a Bangkok-based security analyst with Janes Information Group.
With the insurgency emboldened, Surayuds government has tried to push through controversial measures, including the elimination of farm subsidies, the imposition of capital controls and even a ban on alcohol advertising. For sure, the ambitious agenda requires more political capital than the generals can muster, particularly now that their reputation as white knights coming to save the day has been stained.
You cant undo whats been done in the past five years in just three months, said Panitan. To take on police reform or push forward with corruption allegations will require more power. So the military may now take additional measures to get more control.
Nearly everyone sees trouble ahead. As the juntas opponents step up their attacks, the military may further tighten the screws on civil liberties. That thought evokes uncomfortable memories of earlier mass protests, like the ones in October 1973 and May 1992, both of which ended in bloodshed.
Its going to be rough seas ahead, an analyst said. Uncertainties are all around. But Thai people clearly want democracy, so sooner or later democracy has to return. The military has to find a way to accommodate that.