Thai royalists like to claim that no
other country can be compared to Thailand. But there are at least three
comparable cases in Asia’s recent history that may shed light on Thailand’s
possible political future.
Soeharto’s Indonesia
Another comparison is with Thailand’s
regional neighbor, Indonesia. The two countries share many similarities. Both
King Bhumibol and the former military dictator General Soeharto came to power
during the acutely polarized politics of the Cold War in Southeast Asia. And
military dictatorships were established in both countries.
King Bhumibol and Soeharto were fervent anti-communists and
played key roles in the suppression of communism. Both cultivated close relations with the United States,
which supported their regimes financially,
militarily, and diplomatically. And both were crucial to the adoption of policies of economic liberalization
and the capitalist transformation of their countries.
Soeharto, who increasingly acted in the
manner of a Javanese sultan, styled himself the “father of development”, while King Bhumibol
was lauded in North Korean-style state propaganda as the “development king”.
When Bhumibol came to the throne in 1946
the finances of the Thai royal family were in dire straits.
Today, Thailand’s monarchy is the the wealthiest in the world, surpassing the
Arab oil monarchs and the United Kingdom’s Queen Elizabeth II.
But following Soeharto’s resignation in
May 1998, amid the economic disaster of the Asian Financial Crisis, the New Order military dictatorship collapsed.
Indonesia went through a process of rapid and far-reaching political reform
that transformed the country. For all its problems, Indonesia today is perhaps Southeast Asia’s most democratic nation.
But the chairman of a communist party and
the president of a newly formed nation are modern political offices. The Thai
king, by contrast, is conceived of, on the one hand, as the descendant of an
ancient caste of warrior-kings, and on the other as a future Buddha. The military and religious
legacy of the Thai institution of monarchy dates
back to the 13th century.
While Mao and Soeharto are gone, the
Chinese Communist Party and the Indonesian presidency remain. Yet, it is by no
means certain that Thailand’s monarchy can survive King Bhumibol’s passing in
the same way.
Mao Zedong’s China
leader Mao Zedong alongside
images of emperors and deities in Beijing, China, Monday, May 16, 2016. [AP
Photo/Ng Han Guan](AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)
The first is China, following the death of
Mao Zedong in 1976. The last decade of Mao’s premiership in China –
like the last ten years of King Bhumibol’s reign in
Thailand – was a period of great political turmoil.
Although ideologically from opposite ends
of the political spectrum, both leaders played crucial roles in establishing
the regimes that came to dominate their country: the Communist Party of China and the military-bureaucracy-monarchy power bloc in Thailand.
Both figures were the subject of totalitarian personality cults spread by the mass media and the education system. Both were politically
untouchable.
In both countries, conformity to the idiosyncratic ideas of the ruler took the
place of rational political debate. In both cases, ideologically extreme groups
took advantage of the power vacuum created by the ageing and weakening of the
ruler to seize power, ostensibly to protect his legacy: the “Gang of Four” and the Red Guards in China,
and in Thailand, hyper-royalist street movements and an arch-royalist
clique within the military.
Yet shortly after Mao’s death in 1976 the Gang of Four were swiftly overthrown and Deng Xiaoping manoeuvred his own rise to power.
As Deng consolidated his authority, Mao’s supporters within the CCP were
eventually sidelined.
Deng brought an end to the turmoil of the
Cultural Revolution, strengthened relations with the West, and began the
process of reforming China’s economy and opening the country up to the world.
The Shah of Iran
The third comparison is Iran after the
Shah. At first glance, Buddhist Thailand might not appear to bear comparison
with Islamic Iran, yet there are, in fact, startling similarities.
Both countries had old monarchies which,
unlike many in Asia, survived the colonial era unscathed. The
kingdoms they ruled, though formally independent, were dominated by the
European imperial powers – especially the British Empire. In the aftermath of
World War II, the monarchy in each country was weak, parliamentary democracies
were evolving, and the political forces of the Left were on the rise.
The Cold War changed everything. With US
assistance, reactionary forces in each country crushed the emerging democratic
regimes – famously in the case of Iran with the assistance of a CIA and Mi6-sponsored coup
that overthrew the democratically-elected Prime Minister, Mohammed Mossadegh,
and restored the autocratic Shah.
Iran and Thailand became key US allies in
the struggle against communism in the Middle East
and Southeast Asia respectively. The US
bolstered the authority of these monarchies as symbols of conservative
stability.
In both countries networks of surveillance and repression were set up to eliminate threats
to the regime.
With democratic and leftist forces
murdered, imprisoned, or in hiding, and farmers’ organizations, unions, and
political parties banned or co-opted by the state, the two monarchs threw their
authority behind policies of rapid economic development that transformed and
polarized their societies.
Here the similarities end.
Shah Reza Pahlavi was overthrown in a
massive revolution in 1978-9 that ended the two-and-a-half millennia-old
Iranian monarchy and established the Islamic Republic of Iran.
Despite the victory of communist forces in
Indochina and a home-grown Thai communist insurgency, Thailand’s King Bhumibol and its monarchy survived –
until now.
Tipping point
In all three Asian countries the passing
of authoritarian rulers – Mao, Suharto, and Shah Reza Pahlavi – was followed by
sweeping political and social change.
Thai society has been acutely polarised for a decade. The long
duration of the conflict may encourage the perception that the country will
just muddle through the succession, and that some political compromise will
eventually be reached – as had been the case during previous periods of
political turmoil during the late king’s reign.
But if the dramatic experiences of the
three Asian countries discussed here following the passing of their powerful
rulers provide any example, it would be short-sighted not to consider that a
more far-reaching transformation than a royal succession might not also be in
store for the Kingdom of Thailand.
Patrick Jory, Senior Lecturer, Southeast
Asian History, School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry, The University of Queensland
This article was originally published on The
Conversation
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