The
Asia-Pacific’s biggest multinational military exercise will continue despite
the Thai coup
Since Thai army chief-turned-junta leader turned Prime Minister Prayuth
Chan-ocha launched his May coup overthrowing the democratically elected but
deeply troubled government of Yingluck Shinawatra, commentators in both
Thailand and the United States have debated the US response.
Washington immediately canceled an ongoing joint exercise, pulling out
troops already in place in Thailand, and severed all military aid earmarked for
2014 that had not yet been disbursed, totaling about US$3.5 million.
But the biggest debate has been about the crown jewel in the US-Thai
military relationship—Cobra Gold, the largest multinational military exercise
in the Asia Pacific. Playing host to Cobra Gold is a significant feather in the
Thai military’s cap, and many observers understandably argued for the 2015
iteration to be canceled or moved out of Thailand as a sign of Washington’s
continued disapproval of the coup.
The US government clearly struggled with this decision, arguing
internally until many experts familiar with the planning that goes into the
exercises assumed that it might be too late to hold them in February as usual
even if they were given the green light.
Earlier this month, however, the administration finally made the call,
and invited a wave of criticism by announcing the exercises would go ahead in a
scaled-back form. The large field exercise portion of the exercise, which
involves tens of thousands of troops, has been refocused, with a planned
live-fire amphibious landing drill reportedly cut and a heightened focus on
noncombat operations like military medicine and disaster relief. Difficult
though it was, Washington made the right call.
Cobra Gold is undoubtedly a boost to the pride of Thailand’s armed
forces. But it is also much more than that. Since its establishment in 1982,
Cobra Gold has evolved into the preeminent multinational training exercise in
the Asia Pacific, including active participation by Indonesia, Malaysia, Japan,
Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, and the United States. In addition, recent
years have seen an increasing number of nations send observers to the
exercises, including Myanmar for the first time in 2014 and China in
2013.
All of this exposure is indispensable to building strategic trust and
interoperability in the wider region, especially in critical areas like
humanitarian assistance and disaster relief, military medicine, and search and
rescue.
The exercises take months of planning each year and cannot be diverted
to a new location quickly. Nor are other Asia-Pacific partners clamoring to
welcome thousands of troops from the United States and many other regional
states for such a large, sustained exercise. Moreover, those that are closest
to the United States and might prove willing lack the space, facilities, and
experience to make a simple, short-term transition to hosting Cobra Gold
feasible.
While the large field exercises garner the lion’s share of attention,
Cobra Gold actually includes three components: field exercises, multinational
staff planning exercises, and humanitarian exercises. The planning exercises
involve officers from across the region engaged in a simulated exercise, via
computer, that usually focuses on some type of humanitarian or disaster relief
operation. The value of these training opportunities for region-wide operations
like the recent search for Malaysian Airlines flight 370 or the post-Typhoon
Haiyan relief effort in the Philippines is substantial and growing year by
year.
The humanitarian exercises in Cobra Gold involve significant goodwill
garnered for the United States and significant good done for Thai communities.
During the 2014 exercises, a team of 80 medical personnel from six nations
including the United States gave basic medical, pediatric, dental, optometric,
veterinary, and pharmaceutical services to local Thai communities. In addition,
eight engineering projects were carried out to address vital needs.
Canceling those exercises would not only remove a vital opportunity to
practice interoperability and coordination among regional states for future
humanitarian assistance, but would also harm local Thai communities far more
than it would the military junta.
By continuing Cobra Gold, Washington gets to maintain a long-standing
exercise that has taken on a role at the heart of its regional engagement. By
scaling back the exercise, however, and doing so publicly, the US government
gets to reiterate its disapproval of the Thai junta and reinforce the
importance that the United States places on democratic norms and good
governance.
In recent weeks, Thailand’s leaders have tried to spin the Cobra Gold
announcement by insisting that the 2015 exercises have not been changed in
light of the coup, tying into their months-long narrative that the United
States and other governments have come around to recognizing the legitimacy of
the coup. The US Embassy in Bangkok and agencies in Washington must rebut this
claim loudly and consistently, as they have done so far, by being forthright
about what has been cut from Cobra Gold and why.
Gregory
Poling (@GregPoling)
is a Fellow, Sumitro Chair for Southeast Asia Studies (@SoutheastAsiaDC),
CSIS
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