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Royal Thai Armed Forces

The Royal Thai Armed Forces (RTARF) (Thai: กองทัพไทย; RTGSKong Thap Thai) are the armed forces of the Kingdom of Thailand.

Royal Thai Armed Forces
กองทัพไทย
Emblem of the Royal Thai Armed Forces
Flag of the Royal Thai Armed Forces
Founded18 January 1852; 172 years ago (18 January 1852)
Service branches
HeadquartersRoyal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters, Bangkok
Leadership
Highest Commander of the Armed Forces King Vajiralongkorn
Prime Minister Srettha Thavisin
Minister of Defence Sutin Klungsang
Chief of Defence Forces General Songwit Noonpakdee
Personnel
Military age21–45
ConscriptionYes
Active personnel860,000[1]
Reserve personnel3,600,000[1]
Expenditures
Budget฿197.29 billion(FY2023)[2]
Percent of GDP1.5%[3]
Industry
Domestic suppliers
Foreign suppliers Australia
 Brazil
 Canada
 China[a]
 Czech Republic
 France
 Germany
 India
 Indonesia
 Israel
 Italy
 Japan
 South Korea
 Netherlands
 Poland
 Russia
 Singapore
 South Africa
 Sweden
 Switzerland
 Taiwan
 Ukraine
 United Kingdom
 United States
Related articles
HistoryMilitary history of Thailand
List of engagements
RanksMilitary ranks of Thailand

The Highest Commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces (จอมทัพไทย; RTGSChom Thap Thai) is the King of Thailand.[4] The armed forces are managed by the Ministry of Defence of Thailand, which is headed by the minister of defence and commanded by the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters, which in turn is headed by the Chief of Defence Forces.[5] The commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Army is considered the most powerful position in the Thai Armed Forces.[6]

Royal Thai Armed Forces Day is celebrated on 18 January to commemorate the victory of King Naresuan the Great in battle against the Viceroy of Burma in 1593.[7]

Role edit

The Royal Thai Armed Forces primarily aim to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Thailand. Their duties include defending the Thai monarchy against all threats,[8] maintaining public order, and assisting in national disaster relief and drug control. Additionally, they support social development by cooperating with civilian government initiatives.

There are differing perspectives on the roles of the Thai armed forces. While their official duties are well-defined, some critics argue that their functions extend to preserving ruling class hegemony against democratic movements and facilitating the self-enrichment of high-ranking military officials. However, these assertions represent specific viewpoints and should be understood as such.[9][10][11]

The Royal Thai Armed Forces have also played a role in international peacekeeping efforts. Notably, they contributed to the United Nations peacekeeping forces, including their participation in the International Force for East Timor (INTERFET) from 1999 to 2002.[12] Additionally, they were part of the multinational force in Iraq, contributing 423 personnel from 2003 to 2004.[13] This international involvement reflects their expanding role beyond national borders.

Personnel edit

As of 2020, the Royal Thai Armed Forces (RTARF) comprised approximately 360,850 active duty and 200,000 reserve personnel,[14] which is nearly one percent of Thailand's population of 70 million. This proportion of military personnel in relation to the total population is higher than that of the United States but lower than Vietnam's.[15]: 5 [16] The Thai military includes over 1,700 flag officers (generals and admirals), equating to about one general for every 212 troops.[17][18] This ratio is notably higher than that of the United States military, which as of November 1, 2018, had 920 active duty general and flag officers for a force of 1,317,325 personnel, resulting in one flag officer for every 1,430 troops.[19]: 2, 5  On May 2, 2015, 1,043 new flag officers from all three services of the Thai military were sworn in.[20] The number of officers who retired during the same period is not specified.

Observations by some analysts suggest that the goals of Thai generals include aligning with politically favorable parties, securing advantageous postings, and personal enrichment, which reportedly involves sharing gains with subordinates to maintain loyalty.[11]

In early 2021, Thailand's Ministry of Defence announced a plan to reduce the number of flag officers by 25% by 2029. As of March 2021, the RTARF had about 1,400 generals and admirals: 250 at RTARF headquarters, 400 in the army, 250 in the navy, 190 in the air force, and 300 in the Office of the Permanent Secretary of Defence.[21]

Conscription edit

Conscription, a national duty outlined in the Constitution of the Kingdom of Thailand,[22] was initiated in 1905.[23] It mandates military service for all Thai citizens, although in practice, it primarily applies to males over 21 years of age who have not completed reserve training. The annual conscription process, typically held in early April, begins with eligible individuals reporting to their selection center at 07:00 on the designated day.

During this process, draftees have the option to volunteer for service or participate in a lottery if they do not volunteer. Those who choose to volunteer undergo thorough physical and mental health evaluations, including a drug test.[24] The results of these drug tests are recorded in the Narcotics Control Board's database. In 2018, data showed that out of 182,910 men tested, 12,209, or 6.7 percent, tested positive for drugs, with the majority detected for methamphetamine, followed by marijuana, and other substances.

Individuals who test positive for drugs are subject to different treatments based on their conscription status. Over 3,000 men who tested positive and were drafted into the military received drug rehabilitation treatment as part of their service. Conversely, those who tested positive but were not drafted underwent a 13-day rehabilitation program in their home provinces.[24]

Candidates who do not meet the physical and mental health standards are exempted from service. Those who pass the examinations and volunteer for enlistment select their preferred service branch (Royal Thai Army, Royal Thai Navy, or Royal Thai Air Force) and a reporting date. They receive official documentation summarizing the draft selection of the year, along with an enlistment order detailing the specifics of their basic training, including the time and location. The process concludes for the day with the dismissal of the enlistees, who then await their reporting date for basic training.

Following the dismissal of the volunteers, the conscription lottery commences at each selection center. The number of individuals conscripted via the lottery is determined by the center's set quota, minus the number of volunteers. Like the volunteers, those participating in the lottery undergo the same physical and mental health assessments, with ineligible individuals being similarly dismissed.

During the lottery, each man draws a card from an opaque box. A black card signifies exemption from military service, and the individual receives a letter of exemption. Conversely, drawing a red card mandates military service, with the induction date specified on the card. Individuals with higher educational qualifications may request a reduction in their service obligation.

In 2018, over 500,000 men were called for selection by the Royal Thai Armed Forces. The combined quota across the forces was approximately 104,000, including 80,000 for the Royal Thai Army, 16,000 for the Royal Thai Navy, and 8,700 for the Royal Thai Air Force. On the selection day, 44,800 men volunteered for service. After accounting for these volunteers and those dismissed due to ineligibility, the remaining quota was approximately 60,000 slots. This quota was to be filled by the approximately 450,000 men participating in the draft lottery, making the overall probability of drawing a red card about 13 percent.[25]

In 2017, a total of 103,097 men participated in the military draft in Thailand, conducted from April 1 to 12. The armed forces required 77,000 conscripts annually. In some cases, certain selection centers did not need to conduct the balloting lottery because their quotas were already fulfilled by volunteers. In these instances, individuals who opted not to volunteer and instead waited for the lottery were issued certificates of exemption.

The duration of military service in Thailand varies depending on whether an individual volunteers and their level of educational attainment. Volunteers are generally required to serve for shorter periods. Those without a high school diploma must serve for two years, irrespective of their volunteer status. High school graduates who volunteer are obligated to serve for one year, whereas those who do not volunteer and draw red cards during the lottery are required to serve for two years. Individuals holding an associate degree or higher and who volunteer have a six-month service period. Those with similar educational qualifications who draw red cards during the lottery may request a reduction in their service time, up to a maximum of one year. University students are permitted to defer their conscription until they have completed their degree or reached the age of 26.

All conscripts in the Thai military are assigned the rank of Private, Seaman, or Aircraftman (OR-1), and they retain this rank throughout their service, regardless of their educational qualifications. Their wages are subject to increase after completing basic training and with time-in-grade.

It is reported by some sources that a significant number of conscripts, over half according to these claims, are utilized as servants[26] to senior officers or clerks in military cooperative shops.[27][28] However, it is important to note that the placement of conscripts, irrespective of their volunteer status and educational background, is typically determined by the operational needs of their respective service branches. The most common roles assigned include infantryman for Royal Thai Army conscripts, Royal Marine for Royal Thai Navy conscripts, and security forces specialist for Royal Thai Air Force conscripts. Their duties can vary, encompassing military operations, manning security checkpoints, force generation, and performing manual labor or clerical tasks as required by their unit.

Upon completing their service, conscripts are presented with the option to reenlist. In April 2020, for instance, only 5,460 out of 42,000 conscripts eligible for discharge at the end of the month chose to continue their service in the military.[29]

Top government officials in Thailand maintain that conscription is essential for the country.[30][31] However, there is an ongoing debate regarding the necessity and effectiveness of conscription in 21st-century Thailand.[32][33][34] Critics argue that, as of 2019, the external threats to Thailand are minimal. This perspective seems to align with Thailand's new National Security Plan, published in the Royal Gazette on November 22, 2019. Effective from November 19, 2019, to September 30, 2022, the plan suggests that external geopolitical threats are not significant in the forthcoming years, focusing instead on domestic issues, notably concerns about declining faith in the monarchy and political divisions.[35] In September 2023, the Defence Minister announced that conscription will be gradually abolished from April 2024 to 2027.[36]

Amnesty International, in a report from March 2020, alleges that Thai military conscripts are subjected to institutionalized abuse, which is often overlooked by military authorities.[37] The report describes this practice as a "long-standing open secret in Thai society".[38] One notable case cited by Amnesty occurred in 2011, involving the death of Wichian Pueksom, allegedly due to torture by 10 officers. As of the report's publication, no verdict had been rendered in this case.[39]

Budget edit

The defence budget nearly tripled from 78.1 billion baht in 2005 to 207 billion baht for FY2016 (1 October 2015 – 30 September 2016), amounting to roughly 1.5% of GDP.[40] The budget for FY2017 is 214 billion baht (US$6.1 billion)—including funds for a submarine purchase[41]—a nominal increase of three percent.[42] The proposed budget again represents around 1.5% of GDP and eight percent of total government spending for FY2017.[43] The FY2018 defence budget is 220 billion baht, 7.65% of the total budget.[44] According to Jane's Defence Budgets, the Royal Thai Army generally receives 50% of defense expenditures while the air force and navy receive 22% each.[15]: 29  The Ministry of Defense budget for FY2021 is 223,464 million baht, down from 231,745M baht in FY2020.[45]

History edit

Ancient military forces edit

The Royal Siamese Armed Forces was the military arm of the Siamese monarchy from the 12th to the 19th centuries. It refers to the military forces of the Sukhothai Kingdom, the Ayutthaya Kingdom, the Thonburi Kingdom and the early Rattanakosin Kingdom in chronological order. The Siamese army was one of the dominant armed forces in Southeast Asia. As Thailand has never been colonized by a European power, the Royal Thai Armed Forces boasts one of the longest and uninterrupted military traditions in Asia.

The army was organized into a small standing army of a few thousand, which defended the capital and the palace, and a much larger conscription-based wartime army. Conscription was based on the "ahmudan" system, which required local chiefs to supply, in times of war, a predetermined quota of men from their jurisdiction on the basis of population. The wartime army also consisted of elephantry, cavalry, artillery, and naval units.

In 1852, the Royal Siamese Armed Forces came into existence as permanent force at the behest of King Mongkut, who needed a European trained military force to thwart any Western threat and any attempts at colonialisation. By 1887, during the next reign of King Chulalongkorn, a permanent military command in the Kalahom Department was established. The office of Kalahom, as a permanent office of war department, was established by King Borommatrailokkanat (1431–1488) in the mid-15th century during the Ayutthaya Kingdom.[46] Siam's history of organized warfare is thus one of Asia's longest and uninterrupted military traditions.[47] However, since 1932, when the military, with the help of civilians, overthrew the system of absolute monarchy and instead created a constitutional system, the military has dominated and been in control of Thai politics, providing it with many prime ministers and carrying out many coups d'état, the most recent being in 2014.

Conflicts edit

The Royal Thai Armed Forces were involved in many conflicts throughout its history, including global, regional and internal conflicts. However, most these were within Southeast Asia. The only three foreign incursions into Thai territory were the Franco-Siamese conflict of 1893, the Japanese invasion of Thailand in December 1941, and in the 1980s with Vietnamese incursions into Thailand that led to several battles with the Thai Army. Operations on foreign territory were either territorial wars (such as the Laos Civil War) or conflicts mandated by the United Nations.

Franco-Siamese conflict (1893) edit

With the rapid expansion of the French Empire into Indochina, conflicts necessarily occurred. War became inevitable when a French mission led by Auguste Pavie to King Chulalongkorn to try to bring Laos under French rule ended in failure. The French colonialists invaded Siam from the northeast and sent two warships to fight their way past the river forts and train their guns on the Grand Palace in Bangkok (the Paknam Incident). The French also declared a blockade around Bangkok, which almost brought them into conflict with the United Kingdom. Siam was forced to accept the French ultimatum and surrendered Laos to France, also allowing French troops to occupy the Thai province of Chantaburi for several decades.[48]

 
The Siamese Expeditionary Force in Paris, 1919.

World War I (1917–1918) edit

King Vajiravudh on 22 July 1917 declared war on the Central Powers and joined the Entente Powers on the Western Front. He sent a volunteer corps, the Siamese Expeditionary Force, composed of 1,233 modern-equipped and trained men commanded by Field Marshal Prince Chakrabongse Bhuvanath. The force included air and medical personnel, the medical units actually seeing combat. Siam became the only independent Asian nation with forces in Europe during the Great War. Although Siam's participation militarily was minimal, it enabled the revision or complete cancellation of so-called "unequal treaties" with the Western powers.[49] The Expeditionary Force was given the honour of marching in the victory parade under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.[50] Nineteen Siamese soldiers died during the conflict, and their ashes are interred in the World War I monument at the north end of Bangkok's Pramane Grounds.

Franco-Thai War (1940–1941) edit

The Franco-Thai War began in October 1940, when the country under the rule of Field Marshal Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram followed up border clashes by invading a French Indo-China, under the Vichy regime (after the Nazi occupation of Paris) to regain lost land and settle territorial disputes. The war also bolstered Phibun's program of promoting Thai nationalism.[51] The war ended indecisively, with Thai victories on land and a naval defeat at sea. However, the disputed territories in French Indochina were ceded to Thailand.

World War II (1942–1945) edit

To attack British India, British Burma and British Malaya, the Empire of Japan needed to use bases in Thailand. By playing both nations against one another, Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram was able to maintain a degree of neutrality for some time. However, this ended in the early hours of 8 December 1941, when Japan launched a surprise attack on Thailand at nine places along the coastline and from French Indo-China. The greatly outnumbered Thai forces put up resistance, but were soon overwhelmed. By 07:30, Phibun ordered an end to hostilities, though resistance continued for at least another day until all units could be notified. Phibun signed an armistice with Japan that allowed the empire to move its troops through Thai territory. Impressed by Japan's easy conquest of British Malaya, Phibun formally made Thailand part of the Axis by declaring war on the United Kingdom and the United States, though the Regent refused to sign it in the young king's name. (The Thai ambassador to Washington refused to deliver the declaration, and the United States continued to consider Thailand an occupied country.) An active and foreign-assisted underground resistance movement, the Free Thai, was largely successful and helped Thailand to be viewed positively in the eyes of the victorious Allies after the war and be treated as an occupied nation rather than a defeated enemy.[52][53]

Korean War (1950–1953) edit

 
Thailand soldiers arriving at Busan

During the United Nations-mandated conflict in the Korean peninsula, Thailand provided the reinforced 1st Battalion of the 21st Infantry Regiment, Some 65,000[clarification needed] Thais served in Korea during the war. Thai foot soldiers took part in the 1953 Battle of Pork Chop Hill. During the war the battalion was attached at various times to U.S. 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team and the British 29th Infantry Brigade. The kingdom also provided four naval vessels, the HTMS Bangprakong, Bangpako, Tachin, and Prasae, and an air transport unit to the UN command structure. The Thai contingent was actively engaged and suffered heavy casualties, including 139 dead and more than 300 wounded.[clarification needed] They remained in South Korea after the cease fire, returning to Thailand in 1955.[54][55][56]

Vietnam War (1955–1975) edit

 
Thai soldiers boarding a USAF aircraft, during the Vietnam War.

Due to its proximity to Thailand, Vietnam's conflicts were closely monitored by Bangkok. Thai involvement did not become official until the total involvement of the United States in support of South Vietnam in 1963. The Thai government then allowed the United States Air Force in Thailand to use its air and naval bases. At the height of the war, almost 50,000 American military personnel were stationed in Thailand, mainly airmen.[57]

In October 1967 a regiment-size Thai unit, the Queen's Cobras, were sent to Camp Bearcat at Bien Hoa, to fight alongside the Americans, Australians, New Zealanders and South Vietnamese. About 40,000 Thai military would serve in South Vietnam, with 351 killed in action and 1,358 wounded.[57][58][59] Thai troops earned a reputation for bravery and would serve in Vietnam until 1971, when the men of the Royal Thai Army Expeditionary Division (Black Panthers) returned home.[58]

Thailand was also involved in the Laotian Civil War, supporting covert operations against the communist Pathet Lao and the North Vietnamese from 1964 to 1972.

By 1975 relations between Bangkok and Washington had soured, and the government of Kukrit Pramoj requested the withdrawal of all US military personnel and the closure of all US bases. This was completed by March 1976.[60]

Communist insurgency (1976–1980s) edit

The communist victory in Vietnam in 1975 emboldened the communist movement in Thailand, which had been in existence since the 1920s. After the Thammasat University massacre of leftist student demonstrators in 1976 and the repressive policies of right-wing Prime Minister Tanin Kraivixien, sympathies for the movement increased. By the late-1970s, it is estimated that the movement had as many as 12,000 armed insurgents,[61] mostly based in the northeast along the Laotian border and receiving foreign support. By the 1980s, however, all insurgent activities had been defeated. In 1982 Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda issued a general amnesty for all former communist insurgents.

Vietnamese border raids (1979–1988) edit

With the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in 1978, communist Vietnam had a combined force of about 300,000 in Laos and Cambodia. This posed a massive potential threat to the Thais, as they could no longer rely on Cambodia to act as a buffer state. Small encounters occasionally took place when Vietnamese forces crossed into Thailand in pursuit of fleeing Khmer Rouge troops. However, a full and official conflict was never declared, as neither country wanted it.

Thai–Laotian Border War (1987–1988) edit

This was a small conflict over mountainous territory including three disputed villages on the border between Sainyabuli Province in Laos and Phitsanulok Province in Thailand, whose ownership had been left unclear by the map drawn by the French some 80 years earlier. Caused by then-Army commander Chavalit Yongchaiyudh against the wishes of the government, the war ended with a stalemate and return to status quo ante bellum. The two nations suffered combined casualties of about 1,000.[62]

East Timor (1999–2002) edit

After the East Timor crisis, Thailand, with 28 other nations, provided troops for the International Force for East Timor or INTERFET. Thailand also provided the force commander, Lieutenant General Winai Phattiyakul.[12] The force was based in Dili and lasted from 25 October 1999 to 20 May 2002.

 
Thai and US military training together during Cobra Gold 2001.

Iraq War (2003–2004) edit

After the successful US invasion of Iraq, Thai Humanitarian Assistance Task Force 976 Thai-Iraq Thailand contributed 423 non-combat troops in August 2003 to nation building and medical assistance in post-Saddam Iraq.[63] The Thais could not leave their base in Karbala as their rules governing their participation restricted them to humanitarian assistance which could not be accomplished due to the insurgency during the Thai's tenure in Iraq.[64] Troops of the Royal Thai Army were attacked in the 2003 Karbala bombings, which killed two soldiers and wounded five others.[65] However, the Thai mission in Iraq was considered an overall success, and Thailand withdrew its forces in August 2004. The mission is considered the main reason the United States decided to designate Thailand as a major non-NATO ally in 2003.[13]

South Thailand insurgency (2001–ongoing) edit

The ongoing southern insurgency had begun in response to Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram's 1944 National Cultural Act, which replaced the use of Malaya in the region's schools with the Thai language and also abolished the local Islamic courts in the three ethnic Malay and Muslim majority border provinces of Yala, Pattani, and Narathiwat.[66][circular reference] However, it had always been on a comparatively small scale. The insurgency intensified in 2001, during the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. Terrorist attacks were now extended to the ethnic Thai minority in the provinces.[67] The Royal Thai Armed Forces also went beyond their orders and retaliated with strong armed tactics that only encouraged more violence.[68] By the end of 2012 the conflict had claimed 3,380 lives, including 2,316 civilians, 372 soldiers, 278 police, 250 suspected insurgents, 157 education officials, and seven Buddhist monks. Many of the dead were Muslims themselves, but they had been targeted because of their presumed support of the Thai government.[69]

Cambodian–Thai border stand-off (2008–2011) edit

Is an event that began in June 2008 over the border dispute with the Temple of Preah Vihear afterwards. There were many clashes between the two sides. Along with the claims of each party over the said dispute territory.

Sudan (2010–2011) edit

Thai soldiers joined UNMIS in 2011.[70]

Current developments edit

 
Thai and US Army Soldiers practice tactical manoeuvres during exercise Cobra Gold 2006 in Lop Buri.

Thai military deputized as police edit

On 29 March 2016, in a move that the Bangkok Post said will "...will inflict serious and long-term damage...", the NCPO, under a Section 44 order (NCPO Order 13/2559) signed by junta chief Prayut Chan-o-cha, granted to commissioned officers of the Royal Thai Armed Forces broad police powers to suppress and arrest anyone they suspect of criminal activity without a warrant and detain them secretly at almost any location without charge for up to seven days. Bank accounts can be frozen, and documents and property can be seized. Travel can be banned. Automatic immunity for military personnel has been built into the order, and there is no independent oversight or recourse in the event of abuse. The order came into immediate effect. The net result is that the military will have more power than the police and less oversight.[71]

The government has stated that the purpose of this order is to enable military officers to render their assistance in an effort to "...suppress organized crimes such as extortion, human trafficking, child and labor abuses, gambling, prostitution, illegal tour guide services, price collusion, and firearms. It neither aims to stifle nor intimidate dissenting voices. Defendants in such cases will go through normal judicial process, with police as the main investigator...trial[s] will be conducted in civilian courts, not military ones. Moreover, this order does not deprive the right of the defendants to file complaints against military officers who have abused their power."[72]

The NCPO said that the reason for its latest order is that there are simply not enough police, in spite of the fact that there are about 230,000 officers in the Royal Thai Police force. They make up about 17 percent of all non-military public servants. This amounts to 344 police officers for every for every 100,000 persons in Thailand, more than twice the ratio in Myanmar and the Philippines, one and a half times that of Japan and Indonesia and roughly the same proportion as the United States.[73]

In a joint statement released on 5 April 2016, six groups, including Human Rights Watch (HRW), Amnesty International, and the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ), condemned the move.[74]

Corruption edit

The Asia Sentinel in 2014 called the Thai military one of the most deeply corrupt militaries in Asia.[75] The Thai armed forces have a history of procurement scandals and dodgy dealings dating back to at least the 1980s.[75]

  • In the 1980s, the army bought hundreds of substandard armored personnel carriers (APC) from the Chinese that were so shoddy that light was visible through the welds securing the armor plate.[75]
  • The Thai air force bought Chinese jets with short-lived engines so delicate that the planes were towed to the flight line for takeoff and towed back on landing in order to minimize engine hours.[75]
  • In 1997, the HTMS Chakri Naruebet aircraft carrier was commissioned. Due to its lackluster operational history, the Thai media have nicknamed the ship "Thai-tanic", and consider her to be a white elephant.[76][77]
  • The Aeros 40D S/N 21 airship, nicknamed "Sky Dragon", was purchased for 350 million baht in 2009.[78] It cost 2.8 million baht to inflate and 280,000 baht a month to keep inflated.[75] It served for eight years, mostly in storage, and crashed once. The present leadership of the NCPO was instrumental in approving its purchase.[78]

Weapons and equipment edit

 
The aircraft carrier HTMS Chakri Naruebet of the Royal Thai Navy.
 
Saab JAS 39 Gripen of the Royal Thai Air Force.

Thailand's defense spending has soared since 2006. Since then the military has seized control from civilian governments on two occasions. Defense spending has increased by US$1 billion since the latest coup in 2014.[79]

Equipment[80] Quantity In Service On Order
Main battle tank and light tank 788 788 200
APCs, IFVs, ARVs, LCVs 2620 2620 300
Self-propelled artillery 1072 1072 60
Combat warplanes 183 179 0
Transport warplanes 114 114 0
Training warplanes 56 55 12
Military helicopters 282 282 25
Aircraft carriers 1 1 0
Warships 17 17 2 LPD
Fast attack craft – missile (FAC-M)s 6 6 6
Submarines 0 0 3
Patrol boats 127 127 2

In early January 2022, Thailand's cabinet backed a plan to buy four fighter jets starting in 2023 with 13.8 billion baht ($413.67 million) budgeted for the purchase over a 4 year period to replace some of the country's aging F-16 jets.[81]

Uniforms, ranks, insignia edit

To build institutional solidarity and esprit de corps, each Thai service component has developed its own distinctive uniforms, ranking system, and insignia.[82] Many Thai military uniforms reflect historical foreign influences. For example, most of the distinctive service uniforms were patterned on those of the US, but lower ranking enlisted navy personnel wear uniforms resembling those of their French counterparts. The early influence of British advisers to the Thai royal court and the historical role of the military in royal pomp and ceremony contributed to the splendor of formal dress uniforms worn by high-ranking officers and guards of honour on ceremonial occasions.

 
The Royal Thai Army Band in uniforms of various royal guards unit, ranked in the shape of the flag of Thailand

The rank structures of the three armed services are similar to those of the respective branches of the US Armed Forces, although the Thai system has fewer NCO and warrant officer designations. The king, as head of state and constitutional head of the armed forces, commissions all officers. Appointments to NCO ranks are authorised by the minister of defence. In theory, the authority and responsibilities of officers of various ranks correspond to those of their US counterparts. However, because of a perennial surplus of senior officers—in 1987 there were some 600 generals and admirals in a total force of about 273,000—Thai staff positions are often held by officers of higher rank than would be the case in the US or other Western military establishments.

Thai military personnel are highly conscious of rank distinctions and of the duties, obligations, and benefits they entail. Relationships among officers of different grades and among officers, NCOs, and the enlisted ranks are governed by military tradition in a society where observance of differences in status are highly formalised. The social distance between officers and NCOs is widened by the fact that officers usually are college or military academy graduates, while most NCOs have not gone beyond secondary school. There is a wider gap between officers and conscripts, most of whom have even less formal education, service experience, or specialised training.

Formal honours and symbols of merit occupy an important place in Thai military tradition. The government grants numerous awards, and outstanding acts of heroism, courage, and meritorious service receive prompt recognition.

Officer and enlisted rank insignia edit

Rank group General / flag officers Senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet
  Royal Thai Army[83]
                   
จอมพล
Chom phon
พลเอก
Phon ek
พลโท
Phon tho
พลตรี
Phon tri
พันเอก
Phan ek
พันโท
Phan tho
พันตรี
Phan tri
ร้อยเอก
Roi ek
ร้อยโท
Roi tho
ร้อยตรี
Roi tri
นักเรียนนายร้อย
Nak-rian nairoi


  Royal Thai Navy[83]
                   
จอมพลเรือ
Chom phon ruea
พลเรือเอก
Phon ruea ek
พลเรือโท
Phon ruea tho
พลเรือตรี
Phon ruea tri
นาวาเอก
Nawa ek
นาวาโท
Nawa tho
นาวาตรี
Nawa tri
เรือเอก
Ruea ek
เรือโท
Ruea tho
เรือตรี
Ruea tri
นักเรียนนายเรือ
Nak-rian nairuea


  Royal Thai Air Force[83]
                   
จอมพลอากาศ
Chom phon akat
พลอากาศเอก
Phon akat ek
พลอากาศโท
Phon akat tho
พลอากาศตรี
Phon akat tri
นาวาอากาศเอก
Nawa akat ek
นาวาอากาศโท
Nawa akat tho
นาวาอากาศตรี
Nawa akat tri
เรืออากาศเอก
Ruea akat ek
เรืออากาศโท
Ruea akat tho
เรืออากาศตรี
Ruea akat tri
นักเรียนนายเรืออากาศ
Nak-rian nairuea akat
Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted
  Royal Thai Army[83]
            No insignia
จ่าสิบเอก
Cha sip ek
จ่าสิบโท
Cha sip tho
จ่าสิบตรี
Cha sip tri
สิบเอก
Sip ek
สิบโท
Sip tho
สิบตรี
Sip tri
พลทหาร
Phon thahan


  Royal Thai Navy[83]
            No insignia
พันจ่าเอก
Phan cha ek
พันจ่าโท
Phan cha tho
พันจ่าตรี
Phan cha tri
จ่าเอก
Cha ek
จ่าโท
Cha tho
จ่าตรี
Cha tri
พลทหาร
Phon thahan


  Royal Thai Air Force[83]
            No insignia
พันจ่าอากาศเอก
Phan cha akat ek
พันจ่าอากาศโท
Phan cha akat tho
พันจ่าอากาศตรี
Phan cha akat tri
จ่าอากาศเอก
Cha akat ek
จ่าอากาศโท
Cha akat tho
จ่าอากาศตรี
Cha akat tri
พลทหาร
Phon thahan

Gallery edit

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain. Country Studies. Federal Research Division.

Further reading edit

  • Osornprasop, Sutayut. "Thailand and the Secret War in Laos", 1960–1974 (in) Albert Lau (ed.), Southeast Asia and the Cold War. Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon; New York: Routledge, 2012. ISBN 978-0415684507 (hardback).
  • Ruth, Richard A (2011). In Buddha's Company: Thai Soldiers in the Vietnam War. Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press. ISBN 978-0-8248-3489-0. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  • Chambers, Paul; Waitoolkiat, Napisa, eds. (2007). Khaki Capital: The Political Economy of the Military in Southeast Asia (Paper). NIAS Press. ISBN 978-87-7694-225-0.

External links edit

  • Official website of Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine
  • Official website of Royal Thai Navy
  • Official website of Royal Thai Air Forces 28 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  • "" – (2 September 2009) article in Asia Times Online giving an overview of the Thai army's use of paramilitary forces.

royal, thai, armed, forces, rtarf, thai, กองท, พไทย, rtgs, kong, thap, thai, armed, forces, kingdom, thailand, กองท, พไทยemblem, flag, founded18, january, 1852, years, january, 1852, service, branches, royal, thai, army, royal, thai, navy, royal, thai, marine,. The Royal Thai Armed Forces RTARF Thai kxngthphithy RTGS Kong Thap Thai are the armed forces of the Kingdom of Thailand Royal Thai Armed ForceskxngthphithyEmblem of the Royal Thai Armed ForcesFlag of the Royal Thai Armed ForcesFounded18 January 1852 172 years ago 18 January 1852 Service branches Royal Thai Army Royal Thai Navy Royal Thai Marine Corps Royal Thai Air ForceHeadquartersRoyal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters BangkokLeadershipHighest Commander of the Armed ForcesKing VajiralongkornPrime MinisterSrettha ThavisinMinister of DefenceSutin KlungsangChief of Defence ForcesGeneral Songwit NoonpakdeePersonnelMilitary age21 45ConscriptionYesActive personnel860 000 1 Reserve personnel3 600 000 1 ExpendituresBudget 197 29 billion FY2023 2 Percent of GDP1 5 3 IndustryDomestic suppliersPanus Assembly Preecha Thavorn Industry Chaiseri Defence Defense Technology Institute Thai Rung Union Car Thai Aviation Industry Bangkok Dock Italthai Marine Mahidol Adulyadej Naval Dockyard Marsun Shipbuilding Asian Marine ServicesForeign suppliers Australia Brazil Canada China a Czech Republic France Germany India Indonesia Israel Italy Japan South Korea Netherlands Poland Russia Singapore South Africa Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Ukraine United Kingdom United StatesRelated articlesHistoryMilitary history of Thailand List of engagementsHaw wars 1865 1890 Franco Siamese conflict 1893 World War I 1917 1918 Western Front 1917 1918 Asian and Pacific theatre 1914 1919 Boworadet rebellion 1933 World War II 1940 1945 Franco Thai War 1940 1941 South East Asian Theatre 1941 1945 Pacific War 1941 1945 Japanese invasion of Thailand 1941 Malayan campaign 1941 1942 Burma campaign 1941 1945 Bombing of Bangkok 1941 1945 Cold War Korean War 1950 1955 Malayan Emergency 1948 1960 Laotian Civil War 1959 1975 Vietnam War 1967 1973 Cambodian Civil War 1967 1975 Communist insurgency in Thailand 1965 1983 Communist insurgency in Malaysia 1968 1989 Third Indochina War 1975 1991 Vietnamese border raids in Thailand 1979 1989 Thai Laotian Border War 1987 1988 Persian Gulf War 1990 1991 1999 East Timorese crisis 1999 2000 International Force East Timor 1999 2000 War on drugs Internal conflict in Myanmar Humanitarian Global War on Terrorism 2001 present Iraq War Humanitarian 2003 2004 OEF Afghanistan Humanitarian 2012 OEF Horn of Africa Humanitarian 2014 present South Thailand insurgency 2004 present Burundian Civil War 2004 Cambodian Thai border dispute 2008 2011 RanksMilitary ranks of Thailand The Highest Commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces cxmthphithy RTGS Chom Thap Thai is the King of Thailand 4 The armed forces are managed by the Ministry of Defence of Thailand which is headed by the minister of defence and commanded by the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters which in turn is headed by the Chief of Defence Forces 5 The commander in chief of the Royal Thai Army is considered the most powerful position in the Thai Armed Forces 6 Royal Thai Armed Forces Day is celebrated on 18 January to commemorate the victory of King Naresuan the Great in battle against the Viceroy of Burma in 1593 7 Contents 1 Role 2 Personnel 2 1 Conscription 3 Budget 4 History 4 1 Ancient military forces 4 2 Conflicts 4 2 1 Franco Siamese conflict 1893 4 2 2 World War I 1917 1918 4 2 3 Franco Thai War 1940 1941 4 2 4 World War II 1942 1945 4 2 5 Korean War 1950 1953 4 2 6 Vietnam War 1955 1975 4 2 7 Communist insurgency 1976 1980s 4 2 8 Vietnamese border raids 1979 1988 4 2 9 Thai Laotian Border War 1987 1988 4 2 10 East Timor 1999 2002 4 2 11 Iraq War 2003 2004 4 2 12 South Thailand insurgency 2001 ongoing 4 2 13 Cambodian Thai border stand off 2008 2011 4 2 14 Sudan 2010 2011 4 3 Current developments 4 3 1 Thai military deputized as police 4 3 2 Corruption 5 Weapons and equipment 6 Uniforms ranks insignia 6 1 Officer and enlisted rank insignia 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksRole editThe Royal Thai Armed Forces primarily aim to protect the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Thailand Their duties include defending the Thai monarchy against all threats 8 maintaining public order and assisting in national disaster relief and drug control Additionally they support social development by cooperating with civilian government initiatives There are differing perspectives on the roles of the Thai armed forces While their official duties are well defined some critics argue that their functions extend to preserving ruling class hegemony against democratic movements and facilitating the self enrichment of high ranking military officials However these assertions represent specific viewpoints and should be understood as such 9 10 11 The Royal Thai Armed Forces have also played a role in international peacekeeping efforts Notably they contributed to the United Nations peacekeeping forces including their participation in the International Force for East Timor INTERFET from 1999 to 2002 12 Additionally they were part of the multinational force in Iraq contributing 423 personnel from 2003 to 2004 13 This international involvement reflects their expanding role beyond national borders Personnel editAs of 2020 update the Royal Thai Armed Forces RTARF comprised approximately 360 850 active duty and 200 000 reserve personnel 14 which is nearly one percent of Thailand s population of 70 million This proportion of military personnel in relation to the total population is higher than that of the United States but lower than Vietnam s 15 5 16 The Thai military includes over 1 700 flag officers generals and admirals equating to about one general for every 212 troops 17 18 This ratio is notably higher than that of the United States military which as of November 1 2018 had 920 active duty general and flag officers for a force of 1 317 325 personnel resulting in one flag officer for every 1 430 troops 19 2 5 On May 2 2015 1 043 new flag officers from all three services of the Thai military were sworn in 20 The number of officers who retired during the same period is not specified Observations by some analysts suggest that the goals of Thai generals include aligning with politically favorable parties securing advantageous postings and personal enrichment which reportedly involves sharing gains with subordinates to maintain loyalty 11 In early 2021 Thailand s Ministry of Defence announced a plan to reduce the number of flag officers by 25 by 2029 As of March 2021 the RTARF had about 1 400 generals and admirals 250 at RTARF headquarters 400 in the army 250 in the navy 190 in the air force and 300 in the Office of the Permanent Secretary of Defence 21 Conscription edit Conscription a national duty outlined in the Constitution of the Kingdom of Thailand 22 was initiated in 1905 23 It mandates military service for all Thai citizens although in practice it primarily applies to males over 21 years of age who have not completed reserve training The annual conscription process typically held in early April begins with eligible individuals reporting to their selection center at 07 00 on the designated day During this process draftees have the option to volunteer for service or participate in a lottery if they do not volunteer Those who choose to volunteer undergo thorough physical and mental health evaluations including a drug test 24 The results of these drug tests are recorded in the Narcotics Control Board s database In 2018 data showed that out of 182 910 men tested 12 209 or 6 7 percent tested positive for drugs with the majority detected for methamphetamine followed by marijuana and other substances Individuals who test positive for drugs are subject to different treatments based on their conscription status Over 3 000 men who tested positive and were drafted into the military received drug rehabilitation treatment as part of their service Conversely those who tested positive but were not drafted underwent a 13 day rehabilitation program in their home provinces 24 Candidates who do not meet the physical and mental health standards are exempted from service Those who pass the examinations and volunteer for enlistment select their preferred service branch Royal Thai Army Royal Thai Navy or Royal Thai Air Force and a reporting date They receive official documentation summarizing the draft selection of the year along with an enlistment order detailing the specifics of their basic training including the time and location The process concludes for the day with the dismissal of the enlistees who then await their reporting date for basic training Following the dismissal of the volunteers the conscription lottery commences at each selection center The number of individuals conscripted via the lottery is determined by the center s set quota minus the number of volunteers Like the volunteers those participating in the lottery undergo the same physical and mental health assessments with ineligible individuals being similarly dismissed During the lottery each man draws a card from an opaque box A black card signifies exemption from military service and the individual receives a letter of exemption Conversely drawing a red card mandates military service with the induction date specified on the card Individuals with higher educational qualifications may request a reduction in their service obligation In 2018 over 500 000 men were called for selection by the Royal Thai Armed Forces The combined quota across the forces was approximately 104 000 including 80 000 for the Royal Thai Army 16 000 for the Royal Thai Navy and 8 700 for the Royal Thai Air Force On the selection day 44 800 men volunteered for service After accounting for these volunteers and those dismissed due to ineligibility the remaining quota was approximately 60 000 slots This quota was to be filled by the approximately 450 000 men participating in the draft lottery making the overall probability of drawing a red card about 13 percent 25 In 2017 a total of 103 097 men participated in the military draft in Thailand conducted from April 1 to 12 The armed forces required 77 000 conscripts annually In some cases certain selection centers did not need to conduct the balloting lottery because their quotas were already fulfilled by volunteers In these instances individuals who opted not to volunteer and instead waited for the lottery were issued certificates of exemption The duration of military service in Thailand varies depending on whether an individual volunteers and their level of educational attainment Volunteers are generally required to serve for shorter periods Those without a high school diploma must serve for two years irrespective of their volunteer status High school graduates who volunteer are obligated to serve for one year whereas those who do not volunteer and draw red cards during the lottery are required to serve for two years Individuals holding an associate degree or higher and who volunteer have a six month service period Those with similar educational qualifications who draw red cards during the lottery may request a reduction in their service time up to a maximum of one year University students are permitted to defer their conscription until they have completed their degree or reached the age of 26 All conscripts in the Thai military are assigned the rank of Private Seaman or Aircraftman OR 1 and they retain this rank throughout their service regardless of their educational qualifications Their wages are subject to increase after completing basic training and with time in grade It is reported by some sources that a significant number of conscripts over half according to these claims are utilized as servants 26 to senior officers or clerks in military cooperative shops 27 28 However it is important to note that the placement of conscripts irrespective of their volunteer status and educational background is typically determined by the operational needs of their respective service branches The most common roles assigned include infantryman for Royal Thai Army conscripts Royal Marine for Royal Thai Navy conscripts and security forces specialist for Royal Thai Air Force conscripts Their duties can vary encompassing military operations manning security checkpoints force generation and performing manual labor or clerical tasks as required by their unit Upon completing their service conscripts are presented with the option to reenlist In April 2020 for instance only 5 460 out of 42 000 conscripts eligible for discharge at the end of the month chose to continue their service in the military 29 Top government officials in Thailand maintain that conscription is essential for the country 30 31 However there is an ongoing debate regarding the necessity and effectiveness of conscription in 21st century Thailand 32 33 34 Critics argue that as of 2019 the external threats to Thailand are minimal This perspective seems to align with Thailand s new National Security Plan published in the Royal Gazette on November 22 2019 Effective from November 19 2019 to September 30 2022 the plan suggests that external geopolitical threats are not significant in the forthcoming years focusing instead on domestic issues notably concerns about declining faith in the monarchy and political divisions 35 In September 2023 the Defence Minister announced that conscription will be gradually abolished from April 2024 to 2027 36 Amnesty International in a report from March 2020 alleges that Thai military conscripts are subjected to institutionalized abuse which is often overlooked by military authorities 37 The report describes this practice as a long standing open secret in Thai society 38 One notable case cited by Amnesty occurred in 2011 involving the death of Wichian Pueksom allegedly due to torture by 10 officers As of the report s publication no verdict had been rendered in this case 39 Budget editThe defence budget nearly tripled from 78 1 billion baht in 2005 to 207 billion baht for FY2016 1 October 2015 30 September 2016 amounting to roughly 1 5 of GDP 40 The budget for FY2017 is 214 billion baht US 6 1 billion including funds for a submarine purchase 41 a nominal increase of three percent 42 The proposed budget again represents around 1 5 of GDP and eight percent of total government spending for FY2017 43 The FY2018 defence budget is 220 billion baht 7 65 of the total budget 44 According to Jane s Defence Budgets the Royal Thai Army generally receives 50 of defense expenditures while the air force and navy receive 22 each 15 29 The Ministry of Defense budget for FY2021 is 223 464 million baht down from 231 745M baht in FY2020 45 History editMain article Military history of Thailand Ancient military forces edit Main article History of the Thai armed forces before 1852 The Royal Siamese Armed Forces was the military arm of the Siamese monarchy from the 12th to the 19th centuries It refers to the military forces of the Sukhothai Kingdom the Ayutthaya Kingdom the Thonburi Kingdom and the early Rattanakosin Kingdom in chronological order The Siamese army was one of the dominant armed forces in Southeast Asia As Thailand has never been colonized by a European power the Royal Thai Armed Forces boasts one of the longest and uninterrupted military traditions in Asia The army was organized into a small standing army of a few thousand which defended the capital and the palace and a much larger conscription based wartime army Conscription was based on the ahmudan system which required local chiefs to supply in times of war a predetermined quota of men from their jurisdiction on the basis of population The wartime army also consisted of elephantry cavalry artillery and naval units In 1852 the Royal Siamese Armed Forces came into existence as permanent force at the behest of King Mongkut who needed a European trained military force to thwart any Western threat and any attempts at colonialisation By 1887 during the next reign of King Chulalongkorn a permanent military command in the Kalahom Department was established The office of Kalahom as a permanent office of war department was established by King Borommatrailokkanat 1431 1488 in the mid 15th century during the Ayutthaya Kingdom 46 Siam s history of organized warfare is thus one of Asia s longest and uninterrupted military traditions 47 However since 1932 when the military with the help of civilians overthrew the system of absolute monarchy and instead created a constitutional system the military has dominated and been in control of Thai politics providing it with many prime ministers and carrying out many coups d etat the most recent being in 2014 Conflicts edit Main article List of wars involving Thailand The Royal Thai Armed Forces were involved in many conflicts throughout its history including global regional and internal conflicts However most these were within Southeast Asia The only three foreign incursions into Thai territory were the Franco Siamese conflict of 1893 the Japanese invasion of Thailand in December 1941 and in the 1980s with Vietnamese incursions into Thailand that led to several battles with the Thai Army Operations on foreign territory were either territorial wars such as the Laos Civil War or conflicts mandated by the United Nations Franco Siamese conflict 1893 edit With the rapid expansion of the French Empire into Indochina conflicts necessarily occurred War became inevitable when a French mission led by Auguste Pavie to King Chulalongkorn to try to bring Laos under French rule ended in failure The French colonialists invaded Siam from the northeast and sent two warships to fight their way past the river forts and train their guns on the Grand Palace in Bangkok the Paknam Incident The French also declared a blockade around Bangkok which almost brought them into conflict with the United Kingdom Siam was forced to accept the French ultimatum and surrendered Laos to France also allowing French troops to occupy the Thai province of Chantaburi for several decades 48 nbsp The Siamese Expeditionary Force in Paris 1919 World War I 1917 1918 edit Main article Siam in World War I King Vajiravudh on 22 July 1917 declared war on the Central Powers and joined the Entente Powers on the Western Front He sent a volunteer corps the Siamese Expeditionary Force composed of 1 233 modern equipped and trained men commanded by Field Marshal Prince Chakrabongse Bhuvanath The force included air and medical personnel the medical units actually seeing combat Siam became the only independent Asian nation with forces in Europe during the Great War Although Siam s participation militarily was minimal it enabled the revision or complete cancellation of so called unequal treaties with the Western powers 49 The Expeditionary Force was given the honour of marching in the victory parade under the Arc de Triomphe in Paris 50 Nineteen Siamese soldiers died during the conflict and their ashes are interred in the World War I monument at the north end of Bangkok s Pramane Grounds Franco Thai War 1940 1941 edit The Franco Thai War began in October 1940 when the country under the rule of Field Marshal Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram followed up border clashes by invading a French Indo China under the Vichy regime after the Nazi occupation of Paris to regain lost land and settle territorial disputes The war also bolstered Phibun s program of promoting Thai nationalism 51 The war ended indecisively with Thai victories on land and a naval defeat at sea However the disputed territories in French Indochina were ceded to Thailand World War II 1942 1945 edit Main article Thailand in World War II To attack British India British Burma and British Malaya the Empire of Japan needed to use bases in Thailand By playing both nations against one another Prime Minister Phibunsongkhram was able to maintain a degree of neutrality for some time However this ended in the early hours of 8 December 1941 when Japan launched a surprise attack on Thailand at nine places along the coastline and from French Indo China The greatly outnumbered Thai forces put up resistance but were soon overwhelmed By 07 30 Phibun ordered an end to hostilities though resistance continued for at least another day until all units could be notified Phibun signed an armistice with Japan that allowed the empire to move its troops through Thai territory Impressed by Japan s easy conquest of British Malaya Phibun formally made Thailand part of the Axis by declaring war on the United Kingdom and the United States though the Regent refused to sign it in the young king s name The Thai ambassador to Washington refused to deliver the declaration and the United States continued to consider Thailand an occupied country An active and foreign assisted underground resistance movement the Free Thai was largely successful and helped Thailand to be viewed positively in the eyes of the victorious Allies after the war and be treated as an occupied nation rather than a defeated enemy 52 53 Korean War 1950 1953 edit Main article Thailand in the Korean War nbsp Thailand soldiers arriving at Busan During the United Nations mandated conflict in the Korean peninsula Thailand provided the reinforced 1st Battalion of the 21st Infantry Regiment Some 65 000 clarification needed Thais served in Korea during the war Thai foot soldiers took part in the 1953 Battle of Pork Chop Hill During the war the battalion was attached at various times to U S 187th Airborne Regimental Combat Team and the British 29th Infantry Brigade The kingdom also provided four naval vessels the HTMS Bangprakong Bangpako Tachin and Prasae and an air transport unit to the UN command structure The Thai contingent was actively engaged and suffered heavy casualties including 139 dead and more than 300 wounded clarification needed They remained in South Korea after the cease fire returning to Thailand in 1955 54 55 56 Vietnam War 1955 1975 edit Main article Thailand in the Vietnam War nbsp Thai soldiers boarding a USAF aircraft during the Vietnam War Due to its proximity to Thailand Vietnam s conflicts were closely monitored by Bangkok Thai involvement did not become official until the total involvement of the United States in support of South Vietnam in 1963 The Thai government then allowed the United States Air Force in Thailand to use its air and naval bases At the height of the war almost 50 000 American military personnel were stationed in Thailand mainly airmen 57 In October 1967 a regiment size Thai unit the Queen s Cobras were sent to Camp Bearcat at Bien Hoa to fight alongside the Americans Australians New Zealanders and South Vietnamese About 40 000 Thai military would serve in South Vietnam with 351 killed in action and 1 358 wounded 57 58 59 Thai troops earned a reputation for bravery and would serve in Vietnam until 1971 when the men of the Royal Thai Army Expeditionary Division Black Panthers returned home 58 Thailand was also involved in the Laotian Civil War supporting covert operations against the communist Pathet Lao and the North Vietnamese from 1964 to 1972 By 1975 relations between Bangkok and Washington had soured and the government of Kukrit Pramoj requested the withdrawal of all US military personnel and the closure of all US bases This was completed by March 1976 60 Communist insurgency 1976 1980s edit The communist victory in Vietnam in 1975 emboldened the communist movement in Thailand which had been in existence since the 1920s After the Thammasat University massacre of leftist student demonstrators in 1976 and the repressive policies of right wing Prime Minister Tanin Kraivixien sympathies for the movement increased By the late 1970s it is estimated that the movement had as many as 12 000 armed insurgents 61 mostly based in the northeast along the Laotian border and receiving foreign support By the 1980s however all insurgent activities had been defeated In 1982 Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda issued a general amnesty for all former communist insurgents Vietnamese border raids 1979 1988 edit With the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in 1978 communist Vietnam had a combined force of about 300 000 in Laos and Cambodia This posed a massive potential threat to the Thais as they could no longer rely on Cambodia to act as a buffer state Small encounters occasionally took place when Vietnamese forces crossed into Thailand in pursuit of fleeing Khmer Rouge troops However a full and official conflict was never declared as neither country wanted it Thai Laotian Border War 1987 1988 edit This was a small conflict over mountainous territory including three disputed villages on the border between Sainyabuli Province in Laos and Phitsanulok Province in Thailand whose ownership had been left unclear by the map drawn by the French some 80 years earlier Caused by then Army commander Chavalit Yongchaiyudh against the wishes of the government the war ended with a stalemate and return to status quo ante bellum The two nations suffered combined casualties of about 1 000 62 East Timor 1999 2002 edit After the East Timor crisis Thailand with 28 other nations provided troops for the International Force for East Timor or INTERFET Thailand also provided the force commander Lieutenant General Winai Phattiyakul 12 The force was based in Dili and lasted from 25 October 1999 to 20 May 2002 nbsp Thai and US military training together during Cobra Gold 2001 Iraq War 2003 2004 edit After the successful US invasion of Iraq Thai Humanitarian Assistance Task Force 976 Thai Iraq Thailand contributed 423 non combat troops in August 2003 to nation building and medical assistance in post Saddam Iraq 63 The Thais could not leave their base in Karbala as their rules governing their participation restricted them to humanitarian assistance which could not be accomplished due to the insurgency during the Thai s tenure in Iraq 64 Troops of the Royal Thai Army were attacked in the 2003 Karbala bombings which killed two soldiers and wounded five others 65 However the Thai mission in Iraq was considered an overall success and Thailand withdrew its forces in August 2004 The mission is considered the main reason the United States decided to designate Thailand as a major non NATO ally in 2003 13 South Thailand insurgency 2001 ongoing edit The ongoing southern insurgency had begun in response to Prime Minister Plaek Phibunsongkhram s 1944 National Cultural Act which replaced the use of Malaya in the region s schools with the Thai language and also abolished the local Islamic courts in the three ethnic Malay and Muslim majority border provinces of Yala Pattani and Narathiwat 66 circular reference However it had always been on a comparatively small scale The insurgency intensified in 2001 during the government of Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra Terrorist attacks were now extended to the ethnic Thai minority in the provinces 67 The Royal Thai Armed Forces also went beyond their orders and retaliated with strong armed tactics that only encouraged more violence 68 By the end of 2012 the conflict had claimed 3 380 lives including 2 316 civilians 372 soldiers 278 police 250 suspected insurgents 157 education officials and seven Buddhist monks Many of the dead were Muslims themselves but they had been targeted because of their presumed support of the Thai government 69 Cambodian Thai border stand off 2008 2011 edit Is an event that began in June 2008 over the border dispute with the Temple of Preah Vihear afterwards There were many clashes between the two sides Along with the claims of each party over the said dispute territory Sudan 2010 2011 edit Thai soldiers joined UNMIS in 2011 70 Current developments edit nbsp Thai and US Army Soldiers practice tactical manoeuvres during exercise Cobra Gold 2006 in Lop Buri Thai military deputized as police edit On 29 March 2016 in a move that the Bangkok Post said will will inflict serious and long term damage the NCPO under a Section 44 order NCPO Order 13 2559 signed by junta chief Prayut Chan o cha granted to commissioned officers of the Royal Thai Armed Forces broad police powers to suppress and arrest anyone they suspect of criminal activity without a warrant and detain them secretly at almost any location without charge for up to seven days Bank accounts can be frozen and documents and property can be seized Travel can be banned Automatic immunity for military personnel has been built into the order and there is no independent oversight or recourse in the event of abuse The order came into immediate effect The net result is that the military will have more power than the police and less oversight 71 The government has stated that the purpose of this order is to enable military officers to render their assistance in an effort to suppress organized crimes such as extortion human trafficking child and labor abuses gambling prostitution illegal tour guide services price collusion and firearms It neither aims to stifle nor intimidate dissenting voices Defendants in such cases will go through normal judicial process with police as the main investigator trial s will be conducted in civilian courts not military ones Moreover this order does not deprive the right of the defendants to file complaints against military officers who have abused their power 72 The NCPO said that the reason for its latest order is that there are simply not enough police in spite of the fact that there are about 230 000 officers in the Royal Thai Police force They make up about 17 percent of all non military public servants This amounts to 344 police officers for every for every 100 000 persons in Thailand more than twice the ratio in Myanmar and the Philippines one and a half times that of Japan and Indonesia and roughly the same proportion as the United States 73 In a joint statement released on 5 April 2016 six groups including Human Rights Watch HRW Amnesty International and the International Commission of Jurists ICJ condemned the move 74 Corruption edit The Asia Sentinel in 2014 called the Thai military one of the most deeply corrupt militaries in Asia 75 The Thai armed forces have a history of procurement scandals and dodgy dealings dating back to at least the 1980s 75 In the 1980s the army bought hundreds of substandard armored personnel carriers APC from the Chinese that were so shoddy that light was visible through the welds securing the armor plate 75 The Thai air force bought Chinese jets with short lived engines so delicate that the planes were towed to the flight line for takeoff and towed back on landing in order to minimize engine hours 75 In 1997 the HTMS Chakri Naruebet aircraft carrier was commissioned Due to its lackluster operational history the Thai media have nicknamed the ship Thai tanic and consider her to be a white elephant 76 77 The Aeros 40D S N 21 airship nicknamed Sky Dragon was purchased for 350 million baht in 2009 78 It cost 2 8 million baht to inflate and 280 000 baht a month to keep inflated 75 It served for eight years mostly in storage and crashed once The present leadership of the NCPO was instrumental in approving its purchase 78 Weapons and equipment edit nbsp The aircraft carrier HTMS Chakri Naruebet of the Royal Thai Navy nbsp Saab JAS 39 Gripen of the Royal Thai Air Force Thailand s defense spending has soared since 2006 Since then the military has seized control from civilian governments on two occasions Defense spending has increased by US 1 billion since the latest coup in 2014 79 Equipment 80 Quantity In Service On Order Main battle tank and light tank 788 788 200 APCs IFVs ARVs LCVs 2620 2620 300 Self propelled artillery 1072 1072 60 Combat warplanes 183 179 0 Transport warplanes 114 114 0 Training warplanes 56 55 12 Military helicopters 282 282 25 Aircraft carriers 1 1 0 Warships 17 17 2 LPD Fast attack craft missile FAC M s 6 6 6 Submarines 0 0 3 Patrol boats 127 127 2 In early January 2022 Thailand s cabinet backed a plan to buy four fighter jets starting in 2023 with 13 8 billion baht 413 67 million budgeted for the purchase over a 4 year period to replace some of the country s aging F 16 jets 81 Uniforms ranks insignia editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Royal Thai Armed Forces news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message Main article Military ranks of the Thai armed forces To build institutional solidarity and esprit de corps each Thai service component has developed its own distinctive uniforms ranking system and insignia 82 Many Thai military uniforms reflect historical foreign influences For example most of the distinctive service uniforms were patterned on those of the US but lower ranking enlisted navy personnel wear uniforms resembling those of their French counterparts The early influence of British advisers to the Thai royal court and the historical role of the military in royal pomp and ceremony contributed to the splendor of formal dress uniforms worn by high ranking officers and guards of honour on ceremonial occasions nbsp The Royal Thai Army Band in uniforms of various royal guards unit ranked in the shape of the flag of Thailand The rank structures of the three armed services are similar to those of the respective branches of the US Armed Forces although the Thai system has fewer NCO and warrant officer designations The king as head of state and constitutional head of the armed forces commissions all officers Appointments to NCO ranks are authorised by the minister of defence In theory the authority and responsibilities of officers of various ranks correspond to those of their US counterparts However because of a perennial surplus of senior officers in 1987 there were some 600 generals and admirals in a total force of about 273 000 Thai staff positions are often held by officers of higher rank than would be the case in the US or other Western military establishments Thai military personnel are highly conscious of rank distinctions and of the duties obligations and benefits they entail Relationships among officers of different grades and among officers NCOs and the enlisted ranks are governed by military tradition in a society where observance of differences in status are highly formalised The social distance between officers and NCOs is widened by the fact that officers usually are college or military academy graduates while most NCOs have not gone beyond secondary school There is a wider gap between officers and conscripts most of whom have even less formal education service experience or specialised training Formal honours and symbols of merit occupy an important place in Thai military tradition The government grants numerous awards and outstanding acts of heroism courage and meritorious service receive prompt recognition Officer and enlisted rank insignia edit Rank group General flag officers Senior officers Junior officers Officer cadet nbsp Royal Thai Army 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp cxmphl Chom phon phlexk Phon ek phloth Phon tho phltri Phon tri phnexk Phan ek phnoth Phan tho phntri Phan tri rxyexk Roi ek rxyoth Roi tho rxytri Roi tri nkeriynnayrxy Nak rian nairoi nbsp Royal Thai Navy 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp cxmphlerux Chom phon ruea phleruxexk Phon ruea ek phleruxoth Phon ruea tho phleruxtri Phon ruea tri nawaexk Nawa ek nawaoth Nawa tho nawatri Nawa tri eruxexk Ruea ek eruxoth Ruea tho eruxtri Ruea tri nkeriynnayerux Nak rian nairuea nbsp Royal Thai Air Force 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp cxmphlxakas Chom phon akat phlxakasexk Phon akat ek phlxakasoth Phon akat tho phlxakastri Phon akat tri nawaxakasexk Nawa akat ek nawaxakasoth Nawa akat tho nawaxakastri Nawa akat tri eruxxakasexk Ruea akat ek eruxxakasoth Ruea akat tho eruxxakastri Ruea akat tri nkeriynnayeruxxakas Nak rian nairuea akat Rank group Senior NCOs Junior NCOs Enlisted nbsp Royal Thai Army 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp No insignia casibexk Cha sip ek casiboth Cha sip tho casibtri Cha sip tri sibexk Sip ek siboth Sip tho sibtri Sip tri phlthhar Phon thahan nbsp Royal Thai Navy 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp No insignia phncaexk Phan cha ek phncaoth Phan cha tho phncatri Phan cha tri caexk Cha ek caoth Cha tho catri Cha tri phlthhar Phon thahan nbsp Royal Thai Air Force 83 vte nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp No insignia phncaxakasexk Phan cha akat ek phncaxakasoth Phan cha akat tho phncaxakastri Phan cha akat tri caxakasexk Cha akat ek caxakasoth Cha akat tho caxakastri Cha akat tri phlthhar Phon thahanGallery edit nbsp RTA troops take cover next to a Type 85 AFV near the Red Shirt barricade at Chulalongkorn Hospital nbsp Soldiers with riot shields at a barricade on Silom Road and Soi Convent nbsp Soldiers beneath Saladaeng BTS station Silom Road nbsp Soldiers and a helmeted journalist buy water and food Silom Road nbsp Troops at Chang Phueak Gate Chiang Mai days after the 2014 Thai coup d etat nbsp Troops at Chang Phueak Gate Chiang Mai nbsp Royal Thai and US Marines eliminating hostile forces during a mock raid 11 February 2011 nbsp Royal Thai Special Forces service member clears a building during a mock raid Cobra Gold 2011 nbsp Royal Thai Special Forces clear a building during a mock raid Cobra Gold 2011 nbsp Thai troops in a riverine exercise with US sailors on the Nakhon Nayok River Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training CARAT 8 June 2013 nbsp RTAF fighters JAS 39 Gripen F 16 ADF F 5 Alpha jet L 39 and SAAB 340 nbsp RTN frigate HTMS Naresuan FFG 421 moored in Victoria Harbour Hong KongSee also editBorder Patrol Police King s Guard Thailand List of flags of the Royal Thai Armed Forces Military ranks of the Thai armed forces Royal Thai Air Force Royal Thai Police Territorial Defence Student Thahan Phran Underwater Demolition Assault Unit Volunteer Defense Corps Thailand Notes edit see China Thailand relationsReferences edit a b International Institute for Strategic Studies 15 February 2023 The Military Balance 2023 London Routledge p 294 ISBN 9781032508955 Grevatt Jon Macdonald Andrew 24 March 2022 Thailand proposes 2 cut in 2023 defence budget Jane s Retrieved 5 March 2023 GDP declines at softer rate in the fourth quarter 18 February 2021 Chapter 2 of the 2007 Constitution of Thailand En wikisource org Retrieved on 18 January 2012 Ministry of Defense Archived 9 April 2010 at the Wayback Machine www globalsecurity org Retrieved on 18 January 2012 Apirach set to become Army chief in military appointments The Nation 20 July 2018 Archived from the original on 19 July 2018 Retrieved 20 July 2018 eruxng karepliynaeplngwnkxngthphithy Secretariat of the Cabinet website in Thai Retrieved 1 June 2019 Vision schq mi th Ungpakorn Giles Ji 6 February 2016 Why Does Thailand Need an Army Uglytruth Thailand Archived from the original on 6 December 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2016 Eoseewong Nidhi 19 February 2016 What s the point of having a military Prachatai English Archived from the original on 20 March 2016 Retrieved 27 March 2016 a b Rappa Antonio L 2017 Preface The King and the Making of Modern Thailand Abingdon Oxon Routledge ISBN 978 1138221031 Archived from the original on 10 April 2018 Retrieved 10 April 2018 a b UNTAET Archived 7 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Un org Retrieved on 18 January 2012 a b Thailand centcom mil Macan Markar Marwaan 24 April 2020 Thai military battles loss of recruits as abuses come to light Nikkei Asian Review Retrieved 24 April 2020 a b Chambers Paul 2015 Civil Military Relations in Thailand since the 2014 Coup The Tragedy of Security Sector Deform Frankfurt Peace Research Institute Frankfurt PRIF ISBN 978 3 946459 04 0 Archived from the original on 13 August 2016 Retrieved 22 June 2016 Active Military Manpower by Country Global Firepower Archived from the original 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stop forcing boys to be soldiers Opinion The Nation 29 August 2018 Archived from the original on 28 August 2018 Retrieved 29 August 2018 Do away with conscription Opinion Bangkok Post 24 March 2018 Retrieved 29 August 2018 Draper John Sripokangkul Siwach 30 September 2017 Transform conscription to national service Opinion Bangkok Post Retrieved 29 August 2018 Ganjanakhundee Supalak 27 November 2019 Thailand s New Security Highlights Threats to the Throne ISEAS Yusof Ishak Institute Institute of Southeast Asian Studies ISEAS Archived from the original on 5 December 2019 Retrieved 5 December 2019 bikthin chiprbeknththharaebbsmkhricem y 67 ldnayphlpi 70 Thai PBS in Thai Retrieved 3 February 2024 Weeks after Korat massacre Amnesty report describes conscript abuses Bangkok Post Reuters 23 March 2020 Retrieved 23 March 2020 We Were Just Toys to Them Physical Mental and Sexual Abuse of Conscripts in Thailand s Military PDF London Amnesty International March 2020 p 8 Archived from the original 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powers wrong human rights groups The Nation Agence France Presse 5 April 2016 Archived from the original on 8 April 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 a b c d e Thailand s Crooked Army Asia Sentinel 20 August 2014 Archived from the original on 26 September 2018 Retrieved 26 September 2018 Bishop Chris Chant Christopher 2004 Aircraft Carriers the world s greatest naval vessels and their aircraft London MBI p 88 ISBN 0 7603 2005 5 OCLC 56646560 Archived from the original on 24 March 2017 Retrieved 26 September 2018 Carpenter William M Wiencek David G 2000 Asian Security Handbook 2000 M E Sharpe p 302 ISBN 978 0 7656 0715 7 Archived from the original on 11 January 2014 Retrieved 26 September 2018 a b Nanuam Wassana 15 September 2017 Military finally dumps B350m airship Bangkok Post Retrieved 26 September 2018 Planes tanks subs the Thai generals shopping list The Economic Times AFP 14 February 2019 Archived from the original on 15 February 2019 Retrieved 14 February 2019 The Institute for National Security Studies chapter Israel 2008 23 March 2008 Thailand approves 414 mln budget for fighter jets upgrade Reuters 12 January 2022 Retrieved 19 July 2022 Thailand Archived 10 January 2009 at the Wayback Machine Lcweb2 loc gov Retrieved on 18 January 2012 a b c d e f ekhruxnghmayysthhar Military Rank Insignia navedu navy mi th in Thai Thai Naval Education Department Retrieved 13 June 2021 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Country Studies Federal Research Division Further reading editOsornprasop Sutayut Thailand and the Secret War in Laos 1960 1974 in Albert Lau ed Southeast Asia and the Cold War Milton Park Abingdon Oxon New York Routledge 2012 ISBN 978 0415684507 hardback Ruth Richard A 2011 In Buddha s Company Thai Soldiers in the Vietnam War Honolulu University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0 8248 3489 0 Retrieved 8 November 2017 Chambers Paul Waitoolkiat Napisa eds 2007 Khaki Capital The Political Economy of the Military in Southeast Asia Paper NIAS Press ISBN 978 87 7694 225 0 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Military of Thailand Official website of Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters Archived 2 February 2017 at the Wayback Machine Official website of Royal Thai Army Official website of Royal Thai Navy Official website of Royal Thai Air Forces Archived 28 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine Religion guns tear apart south Thailand 2 September 2009 article in Asia Times Online giving an overview of the Thai army s use of paramilitary forces Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Royal Thai Armed Forces amp oldid 1222282804, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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