Thailand: The war you've never heard of unless you read Rantburg
Each week in Thailands deep south, new blood is spilled in the name of a forgotten Muslim sultanate. This guerilla war seems worlds away from Bangkok and Thailands neon-soaked coastal playgrounds. But it has ground Thailands military to a halt.
The campaign, little known outside the region, is being waged to restore Pattani, a small Islamic kingdom absorbed by Thais in 1908. So entrenched is Thailands southern violence that, when decapitated heads tumble across public streets, the killings are reported in passing. Four such attacks in February nudged the movement toward its 50th recorded beheading. Since 2004 when the separatist campaign sparked anew more than 3,300 have died.
Now, as Thailands new ruling party plans a hearts-and-minds campaign, the military appears to be digging in. With southern violence in mind, the Royal Thai Armed Forces is quietly amassing equipment and gear: Russian attack choppers, sleek Israeli assault rifles, armored Ukrainian and South African personnel carriers, and more. Amidst one of Thailands worst-ever economic slumps, the military has set aside $214.6 million for the insurgency this year. It will also maintain a $557.9 million, six-year budget to set up a special infantry division devoted entirely to southern unrest.
The new arms deals signal only a slight step in the right direction, said Zachary Abuza, professor at Bostons Simmons College and expert on Thailands southern violence. What the soldiers really need, he said, is more training and more guts. They need troops willing to take the chase to the insurgents, said Abuza, who characterized the Thai armys strategy as a passive defense.
You need rolling checkpoints penetrating the interior. For a while, theyve had a fair number of troops down there, but you never see them. They never leave the barracks. The ability to infiltrate the interior, where the insurgents hang out, is nil, he said.
Anonymity defines the separatists, who remain mostly unknown to military leaders. Men sometimes emerge from rubber tree plantations, halt passing motorists, kill them and disappear. Or they ignite remote bombs, wait for police or soldiers to respond and set off secondary bombs hidden nearby.
The heavy Thai security presence prevents the insurgents (from) massing and going toe-to-toe with the government, wrote U.S. Marine Corps Maj. Nicholas Vavich of the Naval War College in a briefing on the insurgency. They prefer hit-and-run operations
specifically aimed at a target audience: the population.
Separatists have attacked schools and Buddhist temples and have beheaded monks. Twice, in 2005 and 2006, they laced an entire commercial strip in the southern trading hub Hat Yai with explosives. But, typically, they get away and they seldom attribute their attacks to specific networks. A March 7 attack was typical of the tactics. Separatists killed two brothers and left behind a note reading This is a revenge on state officials." So were two late February attacks, in which suspected separatists beheaded a married couple and two soldiers, and simply left authorities to assume their motives.
The military still has a difficult time protecting itself, said Srisompob Jitpiromsri, director of Deep South Watch in Pattani province. Time after time, theyre attacked, but the troops dont tend to push forwards, or even counterattack. They just try to protect themselves.
Even as Thailands military stockpiles weapons, Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, appointed in mid-December, is promising a more sensitive approach. So far, his remedies have been mostly bureaucratic. Abhisit is establishing a southern affairs cabinet, which he will chair. He also promises to review the deep souths three-month emergency decrees extended 14 times already that offer police and soldiers special powers to wiretap, detain suspects and impose curfews. Military round-ups of young, Muslim men, who typically speak a northern Malay dialect instead of Thai, draw routine censure from groups such as the Asian Human Rights Commission.
The separatists, Prime Minister Abhisit admits, will likely persist unless the government acknowledges southern poverty and southern Muslims Malay-centric culture. There are so many military and police in the three (southernmost) provinces that it cant be a sustainable or long-term solution, Abhisit told foreign reporters in January. The only long-term solution must be done through a comprehensive package that covers well beyond the security dimensions.
But as Thailands government promises sensitivity, and the military cuts arms deals across the globe, the violence roils. Since Abhisits Dec. 15 appointment, Abuza has counted more than 80 killings, 34 bombings and five beheadings. The soldiers cant protect the people
or themselves, Srisompob said. Its like theyre just concerned with their own survival.
There's a nifty round-up of recent arms purchases by Thailands Royal Armed Forces at the end of the article. Also, another article by the same reporter:
Why America won't fight Thailand's Islamic separatists
Posted by: ryuge 2009-03-13 |