Thailand Defence and Security Report Q3 2008
Thailand Defence and Security Report Q3 2008 - companiesandmarkets.com adds new report
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26.11.2008 13:34:01 Thailand Defence and Security Report Q3 2008 - a new market research report on www.companiesandmarkets.com
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The major security threat facing Thailand is internal, arising from escalating sectarian strife in the country’s extreme south. Although some foreign observers have sought to portray threats to the country’s security as part of the wider, global terrorist movement, trouble in Thailand has its roots in cultural and territorial claims. Of increasing worry is the growth in assassinations targeted directly
at schoolteachers, as the most visible and accessible government employees in the south of the country. Preoccupation with political bickering in Bangkok has taken focus away from finding a solution to the problem.
With the authoritarian Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej also taking the defence portfolio on behalf of the government, the hopes of creative solutions to the southern unrest are remote. The weak local economy and accompanying high unemployment rates are some of the main issues fuelling discontent in the south. The Thai national legislature has passed an internal security act to give the army enhanced powers to deal with national security threats. There are now concerns that the military, as well as the new government, could abuse the wide-ranging legislation. The Thai Army is one of the largest in Southeast Asia but is largely untested in battle. It has failed to restore order in the South and the upper ranks are increasingly pre-occupied with political posturing and positioning against an increasingly fractious backdrop in Bangkok. Rumours of plots another coup that would overthrow Prime Minister Samak’s government are rife but unconfirmed.
The major security threat facing Thailand is internal, arising from escalating sectarian strife in the country’s extreme south. Although some foreign observers have sought to portray threats to the country’s security as part of the wider, global terrorist movement, trouble in Thailand has its roots in cultural and territorial claims. Of increasing worry is the growth in assassinations targeted directly
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With the authoritarian Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej also taking the defence portfolio on behalf of the government, the hopes of creative solutions to the southern unrest are remote. The weak local economy and accompanying high unemployment rates are some of the main issues fuelling discontent in the south. The Thai national legislature has passed an internal security act to give the army enhanced powers to deal with national security threats. There are now concerns that the military, as well as the new government, could abuse the wide-ranging legislation. The Thai Army is one of the largest in Southeast Asia but is largely untested in battle. It has failed to restore order in the South and the upper ranks are increasingly pre-occupied with political posturing and positioning against an increasingly fractious backdrop in Bangkok. Rumours of plots another coup that would overthrow Prime Minister Samak’s government are rife but unconfirmed.
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