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Plaek Phibunsongkhram

Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram (Thai: แปลก พิบูลสงคราม [plɛ̀ːk pʰí.būːn.sǒŋ.kʰrāːm]; alternatively transcribed as Pibulsongkram or Pibulsonggram; 14 July 1897 – 11 June 1964), locally known as Marshal P. (Thai: จอมพล ป.;[tɕɔ̄ːm.pʰōn.pɔ̄ː]), and contemporarily known as Phibun (Pibul) in the West, was a Thai military officer and politician who served as Prime Minister of Thailand from 1938 to 1944 and 1948 to 1957.

Plaek Phibunsongkhram
แปลก พิบูลสงคราม
Phibunsongkhram c. 1940s
3rd Prime Minister of Thailand
In office
8 April 1948 – 16 September 1957
MonarchBhumibol Adulyadej
Deputy
See list
Preceded byKhuang Aphaiwong
Succeeded bySarit Thanarat
(de facto)
In office
16 December 1938 – 1 August 1944
MonarchAnanda Mahidol
Deputy
See list
  • Adul Aduldetjarat
    Chaweng Saksongkhram
Preceded byPhraya Phahon
Succeeded byKhuang Aphaiwong
Ministerial offices
1934–1957
Minister of Defence
In office
12 September 1957 – 16 September 1957
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded bySarit Thanarat
Succeeded byThanom Kittikachorn
In office
28 June 1949 – 21 March 1957
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded bySuk Chatnakrob
Succeeded bySarit Thanarat
In office
15 December 1941 – 15 November 1943
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byMangkorn Phromyothi
Succeeded byPhichit Kriangsakphichit
In office
22 September 1934 – 19 August 1941
Prime Minister
  • Phraya Phahon
  • himself
Preceded byPhraya Phahon
Succeeded byMangkorn Phromyothi
Minister of Cooperatives
In office
12 September 1957 – 16 September 1957
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded bySiri Siriyothin
Succeeded byWiboon Thammaboot
Minister of Interior
In office
2 August 1955 – 21 March 1957
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byPisan Sunavinvivat
Succeeded byPhao Siyanon
In office
15 April 1948 – 25 June 1949
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byKhuang Aphaiwong
Succeeded byMangkorn Phromyothi
In office
21 December 1938 – 22 August 1941
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byThawan Thamrongnawasawat
Succeeded byChuang Kwancherd
Minister of Commerce
In office
4 February 1954 – 23 March 1954
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byBoonkerd Sutantanon
Succeeded bySiri Siriyothin
Minister of Culture
In office
24 March 1952 – 2 August 1955
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded byPisan Sunavinvivat
Minister of Finance
In office
13 October 1949 – 18 July 1950
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byPrince Vivatchai Chaiyant
Succeeded byChom Jamornmarn
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
28 June 1949 – 13 October 1949
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byMom Chao Pridithepphong Devakula
Succeeded byPote Sarasin
In office
15 December 1941 – 19 June 1942
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byDirek Jayanama
Succeeded byLuang Wichitwathakan
In office
14 July 1939 – 22 August 1941
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded byJit Na Songkhla
Succeeded byDirek Jayanama
Minister of Education
In office
16 February 1942 – 7 March 1942
Prime Ministerhimself
Preceded bySindhu Kamolnavin
Succeeded byPrayun Phamonmontri
Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces
In office
13 November 1940 – 24 November 1943
Preceded byposition established
Succeeded bySarit Thanarat
Commander in Chief of the Royal Thai Army
In office
9 November 1947 – 15 May 1948
Preceded byAdun Adundetcharat
Succeeded byPhin Choonhavan
In office
4 January 1938 – 5 August 1944
Preceded byPhraya Phahon
Succeeded byPhichit Kriangsakphichit
Personal details
Born
Plaek Khittasangkha

(1897-07-14)14 July 1897
Nonthaburi, Krung Thep, Siam (now Mueang Nonthaburi, Nonthaburi, Thailand)
Died11 June 1964(1964-06-11) (aged 66)
Sagamihara, Kanagawa, Japan
Political partySeri Manangkhasila Party (1955–57)
Other political
affiliations
Khana Ratsadon (1927–54)
SpouseLa-iad Bhandhukravi (1903–1964)
Domestic partner(s)Phitsamai Wilaisak
Khamnuengnit Phibunsongkhram
Children6, including Nitya
RelativesKrissanapoom Pibulsonggram (great-grandson)
Signature
Military service
Allegiance Thailand
Branch/service
Years of service1914–1957
Rank
CommandsSupreme Commander
Battles/wars

Phibunsongkhram was a member of the Army wing of Khana Ratsadon, the first political party in Thailand, and a leader of the Siamese revolution of 1932, which replaced Thailand's absolute monarchy with a constitutional monarchy. Phibun became the third Prime Minister of Thailand in 1938 while serving as Commander of the Royal Siamese Army. Inspired by the Italian fascism of Benito Mussolini, he established a de facto military dictatorship run along fascist lines, promoted Thai nationalism and Sinophobia, and allied Thailand with Imperial Japan in World War II. Phibun launched a modernization campaign known as the Thai Cultural Revolution that included a series of cultural mandates, which changed the country's name from "Siam" to "Thailand", and promoted the Thai language.

Phibun was ousted as prime minister by the National Assembly in 1944 and replaced by members of the Free Thai Movement, but returned to power after the Siamese coup d'état of 1947, led by the Coup Group. Phibun aligned Thailand with anti-communism in the Cold War, entered the Korean War under the United Nations Command, and abandoned fascism for a façade of democracy. Phibun's second term as prime minister was plagued by political instability and several attempts to launch a coup d'etat against him were made, including the Army General Staff plot in 1948, the Palace Rebellion in 1949, and the Manhattan Rebellion in 1951. Phibun attempted to transform Thailand into an electoral democracy from the mid-1950s onward, but was overthrown in 1957 and went into exile in Japan, where he died in 1964.

At fifteen years and one month, Phibun's term as Prime Minister of Thailand was the longest to date.

Early years edit

 
Phibunsongkhram as a teenager

Phibun was born Plaek Khittasangkha (Thai: แปลก ขีตตะสังคะ [plɛ̀ːk kʰìːt.tà.sǎŋ.kʰá]) on 14 July 1897 in Mueang Nonthaburi, Nonthaburi Province, in the Kingdom of Siam, to Keed Khittasangkha and his wife.[1] Plaek's paternal grandfather was said to be a Cantonese-speaking Chinese immigrant. However, the family was completely assimilated, being considered Central Thai people and Plaek did not pass the criteria for being considered Chinese,[2] enabling him to successfully conceal and deny his Chinese roots.[3] Plaek's parents owned a durian orchard and he received his given name – meaning "strange" or "weird" in English – because of his unusual appearance as a child. He attended Buddhist temple schools, before being appointed to the Royal Military Academy; upon graduation in 1914, he was commissioned into the Royal Siamese Army as a second lieutenant in the artillery. Following World War I, he was sent to France to study artillery tactics at the École d'application d'artillerie. In 1928, as he rose in rank, he received the noble title Luang from King Prajadhipok, and became known as Luang Phibunsongkhram. He would later drop his Luang title but permanently adopted Phibunsongkhram as his surname.

1932 revolution edit

In 1932, Phibun was one of the leaders of the Royal Siamese Army branch of the People's Party (Khana Ratsadon), a political organization that staged a coup d'état which overthrew Siam's absolute monarchy and replaced it with a constitutional monarchy. Phibun, at the time a lieutenant colonel, quickly rose to prominence in the military as a "man-on-horseback".[4] The 1932 coup was followed by the nationalization of several companies and increased state control of the economy.

The following year, Phibun and his military allies successfully crushed the Boworadet Rebellion, a royalist revolt led by Prince Boworadet. The new king, Ananda Mahidol, was still a child studying in Switzerland, and the Parliament appointed Colonel Prince Anuwatjaturong, Lieutenant Commander Prince Aditya Dibabha, and Chao Phraya Yommaraj (Pun Sukhum) as his regents.

Prime Minister of Thailand edit

 
Phibunsongkhram giving a nationalist speech to the crowds at the Ministry of Defence opposite Swasti Sopha gate of Grand Palace in 1940.

First premiership edit

On 16 December 1938, Phibun replaced Phraya Phahon as Prime Minister of Thailand and as the Commander of the Royal Siamese Army. Phibun became a de facto dictator, and established a military dictatorship, consolidating his position by rewarding several members of his own army clique with influential positions in his government.[citation needed]

After the revolution of 1932, the Thai government of Phraya Phahol was impressed by the success of the March on Rome of Benito Mussolini's Italian fascist movement. Phibun, also an admirer of Italian fascism, sought to replicate fascist-style propaganda tactics, valued in Italy as one of the most powerful propaganda instruments of political power. In Italy, its main purpose was to promote nationalism and militarism, strengthen the unity and harmony of the state, and glorify the policy of ruralisation in Italy and abroad. As a consequence of the fascist leanings of Thai political leaders, Italian propaganda films including newsreels, documentaries, short films, and full-length feature films, such as Istituto Luce Cinecittà, were shown in Thailand during the interwar period. Phibun adopted the fascist salute, modelled on the Roman salute, using it during speeches. The salute was not compulsory in Thailand, and it was opposed by Luang Wichitwathakan and many cabinet members as they believed it inappropriate for Thai culture. Together with Wichitwathakan, the Minister of Propaganda, he built a leadership cult in 1938 and thereafter. Photographs of Phibun were to be found everywhere, and those of the abdicated King Prajadhipok were banned. His quotes appeared in newspapers, were plastered on billboards, and were repeated over the radio.[citation needed]

Thai Cultural Revolution edit

 
Thai poster from the Phibunsongkhram era, showing prohibited "uncivilised" dress on the left and proper Western-style dress on the right.

Phibun immediately promoted Thai nationalism (to the point of ultranationalism), and to support this policy, he launched a series of major reforms, known as the Thai Cultural Revolution, to increase the pace of modernisation in Thailand. His goal aimed to uplift the national spirit and moral code of the nation and instil progressive tendencies and a newness into Thai life. A series of cultural mandates were issued by the government, which encouraged all Thais to salute the flag in public places, learn the new national anthem and use the standardised Thai language (not regional dialects or languages). People were encouraged to adopt Western-style attire as opposed to traditional clothing styles, and eat with Western-style utensils, such as forks and spoons, rather than with their hands as was customary in Thai culture at the time. Phibun saw these policies as necessary, in the interest of progressivism, to change Thailand's international image from that of an undeveloped country into a civilized and modern nation.[5]

Phibun's administration encouraged economic nationalism and espoused staunch anti-Teochew sentiment. Sinophobic policies were imposed by the government to reduce the economic power of Siam's Teochew-Hoklo population and encouraged the Central Thai people to purchase as many Thai products as possible. In a speech in 1938, Luang Wichitwathakan, himself of one-quarter Chinese ancestry, followed Rama VI's book Jews of the East in comparing the Teochew in Siam to the Jews in Germany, who at the time were harshly repressed.

On 24 June 1939, Phibun changed the country's official English name from "Siam" to "Thailand" at Wichitwathakan's urging. The name "Siam" was an exonym of unknown and probably foreign origin, which conflicted with Phibun's nationalist policies.[citation needed]

In 1941, in the midst of World War II, Phibun decreed 1 January as the official start of the new year instead of the traditional Songkran date on 13 April.[citation needed]

Franco-Thai War edit

 
Phibunsongkhram inspecting troops during the Franco-Thai War
 
Phibunsongkhram with Thai farmers in 1942 at Bang Khen

Phibun exploited the Fall of France in June 1940 and the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in September 1940 to advance Thai interests in French Indochina following a border dispute with France. Phibun believed Thailand could recover territories ceded to France by King Rama V because the French would avoid armed confrontation or offer serious resistance. Thailand fought against Vichy France over the disputed areas from October 1940 to May 1941. The technologically and numerically superior Thai force invaded French Indochina and attacked military targets in major cities. Despite Thai successes, the French tactical victory at the Battle of Ko Chang prompted intervention from the Japanese, who mediated an armistice where the French were forced to cede the disputed territories to Thailand.

Alliance with Japan edit

Phibun and the Thai public viewed the outcome of the Franco-Thai War as a victory, but it resulted in the rapidly expanding Japanese gaining the right to occupy French Indochina. Although Phibun was ardently pro-Japanese, he now shared a border with them and felt threatened by a potential Japanese invasion. Phibun's administration also realised that Thailand would have to fend for itself if a Japanese invasion came, considering its deteriorating relationships with Western powers in the area.[citation needed]

When the Japanese invaded Thailand on 8 December 1941, (because of the international date line this occurred an hour and a half before the attack on Pearl Harbor), Phibun was reluctantly forced to order a general ceasefire after just one day of resistance and allow the Japanese armies to use the country as a base for their invasions of the British colonies of Burma and Malaya.[6][7] Hesitancy, however, gave way to enthusiasm after the Japanese rolled through the Malayan Campaign in a "Bicycle Blitzkrieg" with surprisingly little resistance.[8][9] On 21 December Phibun signed a military alliance with Japan. The following month, on 25 January 1942, Phibun declared war on Britain and the United States. South Africa and New Zealand declared war on Thailand on the same day. Australia followed soon after.[10] Phibun purged all who opposed the Japanese alliance from his government. Pridi Banomyong was appointed acting regent for the absent King Ananda Mahidol, while Direk Jayanama, the prominent foreign minister who had advocated continued resistance against the Japanese, was later sent to Tokyo as an ambassador. The United States considered Thailand to be a puppet state of Japan and refused to declare war on it. When the Allies were victorious, the United States blocked British efforts to impose a punitive peace.[11]

Removal edit

In 1944, as the Japanese neared defeat and the underground anti-Japanese Free Thai Movement steadily grew in strength, the National Assembly ousted Phibun as prime minister and his six-year reign as the military commander-in-chief came to an end. Phibun's resignation was partly forced by two grandiose plans: one was to relocate the capital from Bangkok to a remote site in the jungle near Phetchabun in north central Thailand, and another was to build a "Buddhist city" in Saraburi. Announced at a time of severe economic difficulty, these ideas turned many government officers against him.[12] After his resignation, Phibun went to stay at the army headquarters in Lopburi.

Khuang Aphaiwong replaced Phibun as prime minister, ostensibly to continue relations with the Japanese, but, in reality, to secretly assist the Free Thai Movement. At the war's end, Phibun was put on trial at Allied insistence on charges of having committed war crimes, mainly that of collaborating with the Axis powers. However, he was acquitted amid intense pressure as public opinion was still favourable to him, as he was thought to have done his best to protect Thai interests. Phibun's alliance with Japan had Thailand take advantage of Japanese support to expand Thai territory into Malaya and Burma.[13]

Second premiership edit

 
Plaek Phibunsongkhram at Hyde Park, New York, 1955

In November 1947, Royal Thai Army units under the control of Phibun known as the Coup Group carried out the Siamese coup d'état of 1947 which forced then-Prime Minister Thawan Thamrongnawasawat to resign. The rebels installed Khuang Aphaiwong again as prime minister as the military coup risked international disapproval. Pridi Phanomyong was persecuted but was aided by British and US intelligence officers, and thus managed to escape the country. On 8 April 1948, Phibun assumed the position of Prime Minister after the military forced Khuang out of office.

Phibun's second premiership was notably different, abandoning the fascist styling and rhetoric that characterised his first premiership, and instead promoted a façade of democracy. The beginning of the Cold War saw Phibun align Thailand with the anti-communist camp, and received large quantities of US aid following Thailand's entry into the Korean War as part of the United Nations Command's multi-national allied force against the communist forces of North Korea and the People's Republic of China. Phibun's anti-Chinese campaign was resumed, with the government restricting Chinese immigration and undertaking various measures to restrict economic domination of the Thai market by those of Chinese descent. Chinese schools and associations were once again shut down. Despite open pro-Western and anti-Chinese policies, in the late 1950s Phibun arranged to send two of the children of Sang Phathanothai, his closest advisor, to China with the intention of establishing a backdoor channel for dialogue between China and Thailand. Sirin Phathanothai, aged eight, and her brother, aged twelve, were sent to be brought up under the assistants of Premier Zhou Enlai as his wards. Sirin later wrote The Dragon's Pearl, an autobiography telling her experiences growing up in the 1950s and 1960s among the leaders of China.

Phibun was reportedly thrilled by the democracy and freedom of speech he had witnessed during a long trip abroad to the United States and Europe in 1955. Following the example of Hyde Park in London, he set up a "Speakers' Corner" at the Sanam Luang in Bangkok. Phibun began to democratize Thailand by allowing the formation of new political parties, amnestied political opponents, and planned free elections. Phibun founded and became chairman of his own new political party, the Seri Manangkhasila Party, which was dominated by the most influential in the military and the government. The Employment Act of January 1957 legalized trade unions, limited weekly working hours, regulated holidays and overtime, and instituted health and safety regulations. The International Workers' Day became a public holiday.

Power play edit

Thai Triumvirate, 1947–1957
 
Field Marshal
Sarit Thanarat
 
Police Gen.
Phao Siyanon
The other is Phibunsongkhram.

Phibun's second premiership was longer but plagued with political instability, and there were numerous attempts to oppose his rule and remove him from power. Unlike his first premiership, Phibun faced noticeable opposition from people connected to the Free Thai Movement due to his alliance with the Japanese, including from within the military. Additionally, Phibun was indebted to the powerful Coup Group that had returned him to power.

On 1 October 1948, the unsuccessful Army General Staff Plot was launched by members of the army general staff to topple his government, but failed when discovered by the Coup Group. As a result, more than fifty army and reserve officers and several prominent supporters of Pridi Phanomyong were arrested.

On 26 February 1949, the Palace Rebellion was another failed coup attempt against Phibun to restore Pridi Phanomyong by occupying the Grand Palace in Bangkok and declaring a new government led by Direk Jayanama, a close associate of Pridi. The civilian rebels were quickly ousted from the palace, but fighting broke out between military rebels and loyalists which lasted for over a week.

On 29 June 1951, Phibun was attending a ceremony aboard the Manhattan, a US dredge boat, when he was taken hostage by a group of Royal Thai Navy officers, who then quickly confined him aboard the warship Sri Ayutthaya. Negotiations between the government and the coup organizers swiftly broke down, leading to violent street fighting in Bangkok between the navy and the army, which was supported by the Royal Thai Air Force. Phibun was able to escape and swim back to shore when the Sri Ayutthaya was bombed by the air force, and with their hostage gone, the navy were forced to lay down their arms.

"...tell your father [Pridi] that I want [him] to come back [and] help me work for the nation. I alone can no longer contest Sakdina."[14]

Plaek to one of Pridi's sons in June 1957.

On 29 November 1951, the Silent Coup was staged by the Coup Group and it consolidated the military's hold on the country. It reinstated the Constitution of 1932, which effectively eliminated the Senate, established a unicameral legislature composed equally of elected and government-appointed members, and allowed serving military officers to supplement their commands with important ministerial portfolios.

In 1956, it became clearer that Plaek, allied to Phao, was losing to another influential group led by Sarit which consisted of "Sakdina" (royalties and royalists). Both Plaek and Phao intended to bring home Pridi Banomyong to clear his name from the mystery around the death of King Rama VIII. However, the US government disapproved, and they cancelled the plan.[14]

1957 coup and exile edit

 
Phibunsongkhram in 1957
 
On 31 October 1956, the monk Bhumibalo visited the Government House. Phibun is on the right.

In February 1957, public opinion turned against Phibun at the end of his second term when his party was suspected of fraudulent practices during an election, including the intimidation of the opposition, buying votes, and electoral fraud. In addition, critics of Phibun accused him of a lack of respect for the Thai monarchy, as the anti-aristocratic prime minister had always sought to limit the role of the monarchy to a constitutional minimum and had taken on religious functions that traditionally belonged to the monarch. For example, Phibun led the celebrations of the 2500th anniversary of Buddhism in 1956/57 instead of the King Bhumibol Adulyadej, who was openly critical of Phibun. On 16 September 1957, Phibun was eventually overthrown in a coup d'etat by members of the Royal Thai Army under the command of Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat, who had earlier sworn to be Phibun's most loyal subordinate. Sarit was supported by many royalists who wanted to regain a foothold, and there were rumours that the United States was "deeply involved" in the coup.[15]

Phibun was then forced into exile after the coup, first fleeing to Cambodia, but later settled in Japan after Sarit's new regime rejected his requests to allow him to return to Thailand. In 1960, Phibun briefly travelled to India to be a monk in the Buddhist temple in Bodhgaya. [citation needed]

Death edit

Phibun died on 11 June 1964 from heart failure while in exile in Sagamihara, Kanagawa Prefecture, Japan. After his death, Phibun's ashes were transferred to Thailand in an urn and decorated with military honours in Wat Phra Sri Mahathat (also called "The Temple of Democracy") he had founded in Bang Khen.

Honours edit

Noble titles edit

  • 7 May 1928: Luang Phibunsongkhram (หลวงพิบูลสงคราม)
  • 15 May 1942: Abolition of nobility

Military rank edit

Thai decorations edit

Plaek Phibunsongkhram received the following royal decorations in the Honours System of Thailand:[18]

Foreign honours edit

Academic rank edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (in Thai)ผู้นำทางการเมืองไทยกับสงครามโลกครั้งที่ 2: จอมพล ป.พิบูลสงคราม และ ปรีดี พนมยงค์ 27 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Batson, Benjamin Arthur; Shimizu, Hajime (1990). The Tragedy of Wanit: A Japanese Account of Wartime Thai Politics. University of Singapore Press. p. 64. ISBN 9971622467. Retrieved 29 September 2018.
  3. ^ Ansil Ramsay (2001). Grant H. Cornwell; Eve Walsh Stoddard (eds.). The Chinese in Thailand: Ethnicity, Power and Cultural Opportunity Structures. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 63. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  4. ^ "man on horseback". The Free Dictionary. Retrieved 30 June 2011. n. A man, usually a military leader, whose popular influence and power may afford him the position of dictator, as in a time of political crisis
  5. ^ Numnonda, Thamsook (September 1978). "Pibulsongkram's Thai Nation-Building Programme during the Japanese Military Presence, 1941-1945". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 9 (2): 234–247. doi:10.1017/S0022463400009760. JSTOR 20062726. S2CID 162373204.
  6. ^ Churchill, Winston S. The Second World War, Vol 3, The Grand Alliance, p.548 Cassell & Co. Ltd, 1950
  7. ^ "Pattaya Mail – Pattaya's First English Language Newspaper". pattayamail.com.
  8. ^ Ford, Daniel (June 2008). "Colonel Tsuji of Malaya (part 2)". Warbirds Forum. Retrieved 30 June 2011. Though outnumbered two-to-one, the Japanese never stopped to consolidate their gains, to rest or regroup or resupply; they came down the main roads on bicycles.
  9. ^ . National Archives of Singapore. 2002. Archived from the original on 10 February 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2011. Even the long-legged Englishmen could not escape our troops on bicycles.
  10. ^ "Columns". pattayamail.com.
  11. ^ I.C.B Dear, ed, The Oxford companion to World War II (1995) p 1107
  12. ^ Roeder, Eric (Fall 1999). . Southeast Asian Studies. 3. Southeast Asian Studies Student Association. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 30 June 2011. Judith A. Stowe, Siam becomes Thailand (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1991), pp. 228-283
  13. ^ Aldrich, Richard J. The Key to the South: Britain, the United States, and Thailand during the Approach of the Pacific War, 1929-1942. Oxford University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-19-588612-7
  14. ^ a b "สมศักดิ์ เจียมธีรสกุล: พูนศุข พนมยงค์ ให้สัมภาษณ์กรณีสวรรคต พฤษภาคม 2500". prachatai.com.
  15. ^ Darling, Frank C. (1962). "American Policy in Thailand". The Western Political Quarterly. 15 (1): 93–110. doi:10.2307/446100. JSTOR 446100 – via JSTOR.
  16. ^ (PDF). ratchakitcha.soc.go.th. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2011. Retrieved 8 September 2020.
  17. ^ (PDF). ratchakitcha.soc.go.th. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 July 2018. Retrieved 15 February 2021.
  18. ^ Biography of Field Marshal P. 26 August 2002 at the Wayback Machine, Royal Thai Army website. Retrieved on 4 December 2008.
  19. ^ Royal Thai Government Gazette. แจ้งความสำนักนายกรัฐมนตรี เรื่อง ให้ประดับเครื่องราชอิสสริยาภรณ์ต่างประเทศ Vol. 56 Page 3594 on 11 March 1939
  20. ^ a b ราชกิจจานุเบกษา, , เล่ม ๗๒ ตอนที่ ๖๓ ง หน้า ๒๐๘๕, ๙ สิงหาคม ๒๔๙๘
  21. ^ (PDF). ratchakitcha.soc.go.th. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 August 2018. Retrieved 15 February 2021.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Duncan Stearn:A Slice of Thai History: The Japanese invasion of Thailand, 8 December 1941 Pattaya Mail – Pattaya's First English Language Newspaper (part one) Columns (part two) Columns (part three)
  • Kopkuea Suwannathat-Phian (1989). (PDF) (in Thai). Bangkok: Thammasat University Press. ISBN 9745724165. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 February 2021. Retrieved 25 December 2013.

plaek, phibunsongkhram, phibunsongkhram, redirects, here, other, uses, phibunsongkhram, disambiguation, field, marshal, thai, แปลก, ลสงคราม, plɛ, pʰí, būːn, sǒŋ, kʰrāːm, alternatively, transcribed, pibulsongkram, pibulsonggram, july, 1897, june, 1964, locally,. Phibunsongkhram redirects here For other uses see Phibunsongkhram disambiguation Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram Thai aeplk phibulsngkhram plɛ ːk pʰi buːn sǒŋ kʰraːm alternatively transcribed as Pibulsongkram or Pibulsonggram 14 July 1897 11 June 1964 locally known as Marshal P Thai cxmphl p tɕɔ ːm pʰōn pɔ ː and contemporarily known as Phibun Pibul in the West was a Thai military officer and politician who served as Prime Minister of Thailand from 1938 to 1944 and 1948 to 1957 Field MarshalPlaek PhibunsongkhramPChW MPCh MWM NRaeplk phibulsngkhramPhibunsongkhram c 1940s3rd Prime Minister of ThailandIn office 8 April 1948 16 September 1957MonarchBhumibol AdulyadejDeputySee list Fuen Ronnaphagrad RitthakhaneePrayoon YuthasastrkosolWorakarn BanchaPhin ChoonhavanSawat Sawatdironnachai SawatdikeaPreceded byKhuang AphaiwongSucceeded bySarit Thanarat de facto In office 16 December 1938 1 August 1944MonarchAnanda MahidolDeputySee list Adul AduldetjaratChaweng SaksongkhramPreceded byPhraya PhahonSucceeded byKhuang AphaiwongMinisterial offices1934 1957Minister of DefenceIn office 12 September 1957 16 September 1957Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded bySarit ThanaratSucceeded byThanom KittikachornIn office 28 June 1949 21 March 1957Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded bySuk ChatnakrobSucceeded bySarit ThanaratIn office 15 December 1941 15 November 1943Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byMangkorn PhromyothiSucceeded byPhichit KriangsakphichitIn office 22 September 1934 19 August 1941Prime MinisterPhraya PhahonhimselfPreceded byPhraya PhahonSucceeded byMangkorn PhromyothiMinister of CooperativesIn office 12 September 1957 16 September 1957Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded bySiri SiriyothinSucceeded byWiboon ThammabootMinister of InteriorIn office 2 August 1955 21 March 1957Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byPisan SunavinvivatSucceeded byPhao SiyanonIn office 15 April 1948 25 June 1949Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byKhuang AphaiwongSucceeded byMangkorn PhromyothiIn office 21 December 1938 22 August 1941Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byThawan ThamrongnawasawatSucceeded byChuang KwancherdMinister of CommerceIn office 4 February 1954 23 March 1954Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byBoonkerd SutantanonSucceeded bySiri SiriyothinMinister of CultureIn office 24 March 1952 2 August 1955Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byposition establishedSucceeded byPisan SunavinvivatMinister of FinanceIn office 13 October 1949 18 July 1950Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byPrince Vivatchai ChaiyantSucceeded byChom JamornmarnMinister of Foreign AffairsIn office 28 June 1949 13 October 1949Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byMom Chao Pridithepphong DevakulaSucceeded byPote SarasinIn office 15 December 1941 19 June 1942Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byDirek JayanamaSucceeded byLuang WichitwathakanIn office 14 July 1939 22 August 1941Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded byJit Na SongkhlaSucceeded byDirek JayanamaMinister of EducationIn office 16 February 1942 7 March 1942Prime MinisterhimselfPreceded bySindhu KamolnavinSucceeded byPrayun PhamonmontriSupreme Commander of the Armed ForcesIn office 13 November 1940 24 November 1943Preceded byposition establishedSucceeded bySarit ThanaratCommander in Chief of the Royal Thai ArmyIn office 9 November 1947 15 May 1948Preceded byAdun AdundetcharatSucceeded byPhin ChoonhavanIn office 4 January 1938 5 August 1944Preceded byPhraya PhahonSucceeded byPhichit KriangsakphichitPersonal detailsBornPlaek Khittasangkha 1897 07 14 14 July 1897Nonthaburi Krung Thep Siam now Mueang Nonthaburi Nonthaburi Thailand Died11 June 1964 1964 06 11 aged 66 Sagamihara Kanagawa JapanPolitical partySeri Manangkhasila Party 1955 57 Other politicalaffiliationsKhana Ratsadon 1927 54 SpouseLa iad Bhandhukravi 1903 1964 Domestic partner s Phitsamai WilaisakKhamnuengnit PhibunsongkhramChildren6 including NityaRelativesKrissanapoom Pibulsonggram great grandson SignatureMilitary serviceAllegiance ThailandBranch service Royal Thai Army Royal Thai Armed ForcesYears of service1914 1957RankField MarshalAdmiral of the FleetMarshal of the Air ForceCommandsSupreme CommanderBattles warsSiamese Revolution Boworadet Rebellion World War II Franco Thai War Pacific War Palace Rebellion Phibunsongkhram was a member of the Army wing of Khana Ratsadon the first political party in Thailand and a leader of the Siamese revolution of 1932 which replaced Thailand s absolute monarchy with a constitutional monarchy Phibun became the third Prime Minister of Thailand in 1938 while serving as Commander of the Royal Siamese Army Inspired by the Italian fascism of Benito Mussolini he established a de facto military dictatorship run along fascist lines promoted Thai nationalism and Sinophobia and allied Thailand with Imperial Japan in World War II Phibun launched a modernization campaign known as the Thai Cultural Revolution that included a series of cultural mandates which changed the country s name from Siam to Thailand and promoted the Thai language Phibun was ousted as prime minister by the National Assembly in 1944 and replaced by members of the Free Thai Movement but returned to power after the Siamese coup d etat of 1947 led by the Coup Group Phibun aligned Thailand with anti communism in the Cold War entered the Korean War under the United Nations Command and abandoned fascism for a facade of democracy Phibun s second term as prime minister was plagued by political instability and several attempts to launch a coup d etat against him were made including the Army General Staff plot in 1948 the Palace Rebellion in 1949 and the Manhattan Rebellion in 1951 Phibun attempted to transform Thailand into an electoral democracy from the mid 1950s onward but was overthrown in 1957 and went into exile in Japan where he died in 1964 At fifteen years and one month Phibun s term as Prime Minister of Thailand was the longest to date Contents 1 Early years 1 1 1932 revolution 2 Prime Minister of Thailand 2 1 First premiership 2 1 1 Thai Cultural Revolution 2 1 2 Franco Thai War 2 1 3 Alliance with Japan 2 1 4 Removal 2 2 Second premiership 2 2 1 Power play 2 3 1957 coup and exile 3 Death 4 Honours 4 1 Noble titles 4 2 Military rank 4 3 Thai decorations 4 4 Foreign honours 4 5 Academic rank 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 External linksEarly years edit nbsp Phibunsongkhram as a teenager Phibun was born Plaek Khittasangkha Thai aeplk khittasngkha plɛ ːk kʰiːt ta sǎŋ kʰa on 14 July 1897 in Mueang Nonthaburi Nonthaburi Province in the Kingdom of Siam to Keed Khittasangkha and his wife 1 Plaek s paternal grandfather was said to be a Cantonese speaking Chinese immigrant However the family was completely assimilated being considered Central Thai people and Plaek did not pass the criteria for being considered Chinese 2 enabling him to successfully conceal and deny his Chinese roots 3 Plaek s parents owned a durian orchard and he received his given name meaning strange or weird in English because of his unusual appearance as a child He attended Buddhist temple schools before being appointed to the Royal Military Academy upon graduation in 1914 he was commissioned into the Royal Siamese Army as a second lieutenant in the artillery Following World War I he was sent to France to study artillery tactics at the Ecole d application d artillerie In 1928 as he rose in rank he received the noble title Luang from King Prajadhipok and became known as Luang Phibunsongkhram He would later drop his Luang title but permanently adopted Phibunsongkhram as his surname 1932 revolution edit Main article 1932 Siamese coup d etat In 1932 Phibun was one of the leaders of the Royal Siamese Army branch of the People s Party Khana Ratsadon a political organization that staged a coup d etat which overthrew Siam s absolute monarchy and replaced it with a constitutional monarchy Phibun at the time a lieutenant colonel quickly rose to prominence in the military as a man on horseback 4 The 1932 coup was followed by the nationalization of several companies and increased state control of the economy The following year Phibun and his military allies successfully crushed the Boworadet Rebellion a royalist revolt led by Prince Boworadet The new king Ananda Mahidol was still a child studying in Switzerland and the Parliament appointed Colonel Prince Anuwatjaturong Lieutenant Commander Prince Aditya Dibabha and Chao Phraya Yommaraj Pun Sukhum as his regents Prime Minister of Thailand edit nbsp Phibunsongkhram giving a nationalist speech to the crowds at the Ministry of Defence opposite Swasti Sopha gate of Grand Palace in 1940 First premiership edit On 16 December 1938 Phibun replaced Phraya Phahon as Prime Minister of Thailand and as the Commander of the Royal Siamese Army Phibun became a de facto dictator and established a military dictatorship consolidating his position by rewarding several members of his own army clique with influential positions in his government citation needed After the revolution of 1932 the Thai government of Phraya Phahol was impressed by the success of the March on Rome of Benito Mussolini s Italian fascist movement Phibun also an admirer of Italian fascism sought to replicate fascist style propaganda tactics valued in Italy as one of the most powerful propaganda instruments of political power In Italy its main purpose was to promote nationalism and militarism strengthen the unity and harmony of the state and glorify the policy of ruralisation in Italy and abroad As a consequence of the fascist leanings of Thai political leaders Italian propaganda films including newsreels documentaries short films and full length feature films such as Istituto Luce Cinecitta were shown in Thailand during the interwar period Phibun adopted the fascist salute modelled on the Roman salute using it during speeches The salute was not compulsory in Thailand and it was opposed by Luang Wichitwathakan and many cabinet members as they believed it inappropriate for Thai culture Together with Wichitwathakan the Minister of Propaganda he built a leadership cult in 1938 and thereafter Photographs of Phibun were to be found everywhere and those of the abdicated King Prajadhipok were banned His quotes appeared in newspapers were plastered on billboards and were repeated over the radio citation needed Thai Cultural Revolution edit Main article Thai cultural mandates nbsp Thai poster from the Phibunsongkhram era showing prohibited uncivilised dress on the left and proper Western style dress on the right Phibun immediately promoted Thai nationalism to the point of ultranationalism and to support this policy he launched a series of major reforms known as the Thai Cultural Revolution to increase the pace of modernisation in Thailand His goal aimed to uplift the national spirit and moral code of the nation and instil progressive tendencies and a newness into Thai life A series of cultural mandates were issued by the government which encouraged all Thais to salute the flag in public places learn the new national anthem and use the standardised Thai language not regional dialects or languages People were encouraged to adopt Western style attire as opposed to traditional clothing styles and eat with Western style utensils such as forks and spoons rather than with their hands as was customary in Thai culture at the time Phibun saw these policies as necessary in the interest of progressivism to change Thailand s international image from that of an undeveloped country into a civilized and modern nation 5 Phibun s administration encouraged economic nationalism and espoused staunch anti Teochew sentiment Sinophobic policies were imposed by the government to reduce the economic power of Siam s Teochew Hoklo population and encouraged the Central Thai people to purchase as many Thai products as possible In a speech in 1938 Luang Wichitwathakan himself of one quarter Chinese ancestry followed Rama VI s book Jews of the East in comparing the Teochew in Siam to the Jews in Germany who at the time were harshly repressed On 24 June 1939 Phibun changed the country s official English name from Siam to Thailand at Wichitwathakan s urging The name Siam was an exonym of unknown and probably foreign origin which conflicted with Phibun s nationalist policies citation needed In 1941 in the midst of World War II Phibun decreed 1 January as the official start of the new year instead of the traditional Songkran date on 13 April citation needed Franco Thai War edit Main article Franco Thai War nbsp Phibunsongkhram inspecting troops during the Franco Thai War nbsp Phibunsongkhram with Thai farmers in 1942 at Bang Khen Phibun exploited the Fall of France in June 1940 and the Japanese invasion of French Indochina in September 1940 to advance Thai interests in French Indochina following a border dispute with France Phibun believed Thailand could recover territories ceded to France by King Rama V because the French would avoid armed confrontation or offer serious resistance Thailand fought against Vichy France over the disputed areas from October 1940 to May 1941 The technologically and numerically superior Thai force invaded French Indochina and attacked military targets in major cities Despite Thai successes the French tactical victory at the Battle of Ko Chang prompted intervention from the Japanese who mediated an armistice where the French were forced to cede the disputed territories to Thailand Alliance with Japan edit Main article Thailand in World War II Phibun and the Thai public viewed the outcome of the Franco Thai War as a victory but it resulted in the rapidly expanding Japanese gaining the right to occupy French Indochina Although Phibun was ardently pro Japanese he now shared a border with them and felt threatened by a potential Japanese invasion Phibun s administration also realised that Thailand would have to fend for itself if a Japanese invasion came considering its deteriorating relationships with Western powers in the area citation needed When the Japanese invaded Thailand on 8 December 1941 because of the international date line this occurred an hour and a half before the attack on Pearl Harbor Phibun was reluctantly forced to order a general ceasefire after just one day of resistance and allow the Japanese armies to use the country as a base for their invasions of the British colonies of Burma and Malaya 6 7 Hesitancy however gave way to enthusiasm after the Japanese rolled through the Malayan Campaign in a Bicycle Blitzkrieg with surprisingly little resistance 8 9 On 21 December Phibun signed a military alliance with Japan The following month on 25 January 1942 Phibun declared war on Britain and the United States South Africa and New Zealand declared war on Thailand on the same day Australia followed soon after 10 Phibun purged all who opposed the Japanese alliance from his government Pridi Banomyong was appointed acting regent for the absent King Ananda Mahidol while Direk Jayanama the prominent foreign minister who had advocated continued resistance against the Japanese was later sent to Tokyo as an ambassador The United States considered Thailand to be a puppet state of Japan and refused to declare war on it When the Allies were victorious the United States blocked British efforts to impose a punitive peace 11 Removal edit In 1944 as the Japanese neared defeat and the underground anti Japanese Free Thai Movement steadily grew in strength the National Assembly ousted Phibun as prime minister and his six year reign as the military commander in chief came to an end Phibun s resignation was partly forced by two grandiose plans one was to relocate the capital from Bangkok to a remote site in the jungle near Phetchabun in north central Thailand and another was to build a Buddhist city in Saraburi Announced at a time of severe economic difficulty these ideas turned many government officers against him 12 After his resignation Phibun went to stay at the army headquarters in Lopburi Khuang Aphaiwong replaced Phibun as prime minister ostensibly to continue relations with the Japanese but in reality to secretly assist the Free Thai Movement At the war s end Phibun was put on trial at Allied insistence on charges of having committed war crimes mainly that of collaborating with the Axis powers However he was acquitted amid intense pressure as public opinion was still favourable to him as he was thought to have done his best to protect Thai interests Phibun s alliance with Japan had Thailand take advantage of Japanese support to expand Thai territory into Malaya and Burma 13 Second premiership edit nbsp Plaek Phibunsongkhram at Hyde Park New York 1955 This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message In November 1947 Royal Thai Army units under the control of Phibun known as the Coup Group carried out the Siamese coup d etat of 1947 which forced then Prime Minister Thawan Thamrongnawasawat to resign The rebels installed Khuang Aphaiwong again as prime minister as the military coup risked international disapproval Pridi Phanomyong was persecuted but was aided by British and US intelligence officers and thus managed to escape the country On 8 April 1948 Phibun assumed the position of Prime Minister after the military forced Khuang out of office Phibun s second premiership was notably different abandoning the fascist styling and rhetoric that characterised his first premiership and instead promoted a facade of democracy The beginning of the Cold War saw Phibun align Thailand with the anti communist camp and received large quantities of US aid following Thailand s entry into the Korean War as part of the United Nations Command s multi national allied force against the communist forces of North Korea and the People s Republic of China Phibun s anti Chinese campaign was resumed with the government restricting Chinese immigration and undertaking various measures to restrict economic domination of the Thai market by those of Chinese descent Chinese schools and associations were once again shut down Despite open pro Western and anti Chinese policies in the late 1950s Phibun arranged to send two of the children of Sang Phathanothai his closest advisor to China with the intention of establishing a backdoor channel for dialogue between China and Thailand Sirin Phathanothai aged eight and her brother aged twelve were sent to be brought up under the assistants of Premier Zhou Enlai as his wards Sirin later wrote The Dragon s Pearl an autobiography telling her experiences growing up in the 1950s and 1960s among the leaders of China Phibun was reportedly thrilled by the democracy and freedom of speech he had witnessed during a long trip abroad to the United States and Europe in 1955 Following the example of Hyde Park in London he set up a Speakers Corner at the Sanam Luang in Bangkok Phibun began to democratize Thailand by allowing the formation of new political parties amnestied political opponents and planned free elections Phibun founded and became chairman of his own new political party the Seri Manangkhasila Party which was dominated by the most influential in the military and the government The Employment Act of January 1957 legalized trade unions limited weekly working hours regulated holidays and overtime and instituted health and safety regulations The International Workers Day became a public holiday Power play edit Thai Triumvirate 1947 1957 nbsp Field MarshalSarit Thanarat nbsp Police Gen Phao SiyanonThe other is Phibunsongkhram Phibun s second premiership was longer but plagued with political instability and there were numerous attempts to oppose his rule and remove him from power Unlike his first premiership Phibun faced noticeable opposition from people connected to the Free Thai Movement due to his alliance with the Japanese including from within the military Additionally Phibun was indebted to the powerful Coup Group that had returned him to power On 1 October 1948 the unsuccessful Army General Staff Plot was launched by members of the army general staff to topple his government but failed when discovered by the Coup Group As a result more than fifty army and reserve officers and several prominent supporters of Pridi Phanomyong were arrested On 26 February 1949 the Palace Rebellion was another failed coup attempt against Phibun to restore Pridi Phanomyong by occupying the Grand Palace in Bangkok and declaring a new government led by Direk Jayanama a close associate of Pridi The civilian rebels were quickly ousted from the palace but fighting broke out between military rebels and loyalists which lasted for over a week On 29 June 1951 Phibun was attending a ceremony aboard the Manhattan a US dredge boat when he was taken hostage by a group of Royal Thai Navy officers who then quickly confined him aboard the warship Sri Ayutthaya Negotiations between the government and the coup organizers swiftly broke down leading to violent street fighting in Bangkok between the navy and the army which was supported by the Royal Thai Air Force Phibun was able to escape and swim back to shore when the Sri Ayutthaya was bombed by the air force and with their hostage gone the navy were forced to lay down their arms tell your father Pridi that I want him to come back and help me work for the nation I alone can no longer contest Sakdina 14 Plaek to one of Pridi s sons in June 1957 On 29 November 1951 the Silent Coup was staged by the Coup Group and it consolidated the military s hold on the country It reinstated the Constitution of 1932 which effectively eliminated the Senate established a unicameral legislature composed equally of elected and government appointed members and allowed serving military officers to supplement their commands with important ministerial portfolios In 1956 it became clearer that Plaek allied to Phao was losing to another influential group led by Sarit which consisted of Sakdina royalties and royalists Both Plaek and Phao intended to bring home Pridi Banomyong to clear his name from the mystery around the death of King Rama VIII However the US government disapproved and they cancelled the plan 14 1957 coup and exile edit nbsp Phibunsongkhram in 1957 nbsp On 31 October 1956 the monk Bhumibalo visited the Government House Phibun is on the right In February 1957 public opinion turned against Phibun at the end of his second term when his party was suspected of fraudulent practices during an election including the intimidation of the opposition buying votes and electoral fraud In addition critics of Phibun accused him of a lack of respect for the Thai monarchy as the anti aristocratic prime minister had always sought to limit the role of the monarchy to a constitutional minimum and had taken on religious functions that traditionally belonged to the monarch For example Phibun led the celebrations of the 2500th anniversary of Buddhism in 1956 57 instead of the King Bhumibol Adulyadej who was openly critical of Phibun On 16 September 1957 Phibun was eventually overthrown in a coup d etat by members of the Royal Thai Army under the command of Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat who had earlier sworn to be Phibun s most loyal subordinate Sarit was supported by many royalists who wanted to regain a foothold and there were rumours that the United States was deeply involved in the coup 15 Phibun was then forced into exile after the coup first fleeing to Cambodia but later settled in Japan after Sarit s new regime rejected his requests to allow him to return to Thailand In 1960 Phibun briefly travelled to India to be a monk in the Buddhist temple in Bodhgaya citation needed Death editPhibun died on 11 June 1964 from heart failure while in exile in Sagamihara Kanagawa Prefecture Japan After his death Phibun s ashes were transferred to Thailand in an urn and decorated with military honours in Wat Phra Sri Mahathat also called The Temple of Democracy he had founded in Bang Khen Honours editNoble titles edit 7 May 1928 Luang Phibunsongkhram hlwngphibulsngkhram 15 May 1942 Abolition of nobility Military rank edit 1916 Second lieutenant 1920 Lieutenant 1927 Captain 1930 Major 1933 Lieutenant colonel 1934 Colonel 1939 Major General Rear Admiral Air Vice Marshal 1941 Field Marshal Admiral of the Fleet Marshal of the Royal Thai Air Force 16 1955 Volunteer Defense Corps General 17 Thai decorations edit Plaek Phibunsongkhram received the following royal decorations in the Honours System of Thailand 18 1941 nbsp Knight of The Ancient and Auspicious Order of the Nine Gems 1942 nbsp The Ratana Varabhorn Order of Merit 1942 nbsp Knight Grand Cross First Class of The Most Illustrious Order of Chula Chom Klao 1940 nbsp Knight Grand Cordon Special Class of The Most Exalted Order of the White Elephant 1937 nbsp Knight Grand Cordon Special Class of The Most Noble Order of the Crown of Thailand 1944 nbsp Bravery Medal 1941 nbsp Victory Medal Franco Thai War with flames 1943 nbsp Victory Medal Pacific War 1934 nbsp Safeguarding the Constitution Medal 1934 nbsp Dushdi Mala Medal Pin Service to the Nation Military 1943 nbsp Dushdi Mala Medal Pin of Arts and Science Military 1943 nbsp Medal for Service Rendered in the Interior Pacific War 1954 nbsp Border Service Medal 1930 nbsp Chakra Mala Medal 1938 nbsp King Rama VIII Royal Cypher Medal 1st 1953 nbsp King Rama IX Royal Cypher Medal 1st 1911 nbsp King Rama VI Coronation Medal 1925 nbsp King Rama VII Coronation Medal 1932 nbsp Commemorative Medal on the Occasion of the 150th Years of Rattanakosin Celebration Foreign honours edit nbsp Nazi Germany 1937 nbsp Order of the German Red Cross 1939 nbsp 1st Class of the Order of the German Eagle 19 nbsp Kingdom of Italy 1937 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Saints Maurice and Lazarus 1938 nbsp Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy nbsp Francoist Spain 1955 nbsp Grand Cross with White Decoration of the Order of Military Merit 20 1954 nbsp Grand Cross White Decoration of the Cross of Naval Merit nbsp Empire of Japan 1942 nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun nbsp Philippines 1955 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of Sikatuna 20 nbsp UK 1939 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George nbsp USA 1955 nbsp Chief Commander of the Legion of Merit nbsp France 1938 nbsp Grand Croix of the Legion of Honour nbsp Belgium 1955 nbsp Grand Cordon of the Order of Leopold nbsp Netherlands 1955 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the Netherlands Lion nbsp Denmark 1955 nbsp Grand Commander of the Order of the Dannebrog nbsp Italian Republic 1955 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic nbsp Kingdom of Laos 1955 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of the Million Elephants and the White Parasol nbsp Cambodia 1955 nbsp Knight Grand Cross of the Royal Order of Cambodia nbsp Kingdom of Greece 1956 nbsp Grand Cross of the Order of George I nbsp Germany 1955 nbsp Grand Cross 1st Class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany nbsp Union of Burma 1956 nbsp Order of the Order of Sirisudharma Academic rank edit 1939 Adjunct Professor of Thammasat University 21 See also editHistory of Thailand 1932 1973 Saharat Thai Doem Nitya Pibulsonggram Ramwong Thai cultural mandates Suharto Francisco Franco Antonio Salazar Joseph McCarthyReferences edit in Thai phunathangkaremuxngithykbsngkhramolkkhrngthi 2 cxmphl p phibulsngkhram aela pridi phnmyngkh Archived 27 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine Batson Benjamin Arthur Shimizu Hajime 1990 The Tragedy of Wanit A Japanese Account of Wartime Thai Politics University of Singapore Press p 64 ISBN 9971622467 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Ansil Ramsay 2001 Grant H Cornwell Eve Walsh Stoddard eds The Chinese in Thailand Ethnicity Power and Cultural Opportunity Structures Rowman amp Littlefield p 63 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help man on horseback The Free Dictionary Retrieved 30 June 2011 n A man usually a military leader whose popular influence and power may afford him the position of dictator as in a time of political crisis Numnonda Thamsook September 1978 Pibulsongkram s Thai Nation Building Programme during the Japanese Military Presence 1941 1945 Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 9 2 234 247 doi 10 1017 S0022463400009760 JSTOR 20062726 S2CID 162373204 Churchill Winston S The Second World War Vol 3 The Grand Alliance p 548 Cassell amp Co Ltd 1950 Pattaya Mail Pattaya s First English Language Newspaper pattayamail com Ford Daniel June 2008 Colonel Tsuji of Malaya part 2 Warbirds Forum Retrieved 30 June 2011 Though outnumbered two to one the Japanese never stopped to consolidate their gains to rest or regroup or resupply they came down the main roads on bicycles The Swift Japanese Assault National Archives of Singapore 2002 Archived from the original on 10 February 2012 Retrieved 30 June 2011 Even the long legged Englishmen could not escape our troops on bicycles Columns pattayamail com I C B Dear ed The Oxford companion to World War II 1995 p 1107 Roeder Eric Fall 1999 The Origin and Significance of the Emerald Buddha Southeast Asian Studies 3 Southeast Asian Studies Student Association Archived from the original on 5 June 2011 Retrieved 30 June 2011 Judith A Stowe Siam becomes Thailand Honolulu University of Hawaii Press 1991 pp 228 283 Aldrich Richard J The Key to the South Britain the United States and Thailand during the Approach of the Pacific War 1929 1942 Oxford University Press 1993 ISBN 0 19 588612 7 a b smskdi eciymthirskul phunsukh phnmyngkh ihsmphasnkrniswrrkht phvsphakhm 2500 prachatai com Darling Frank C 1962 American Policy in Thailand The Western Political Quarterly 15 1 93 110 doi 10 2307 446100 JSTOR 446100 via JSTOR Data PDF ratchakitcha soc go th Archived from the original PDF on 11 November 2011 Retrieved 8 September 2020 Data PDF ratchakitcha soc go th Archived from the original PDF on 10 July 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2021 Biography of Field Marshal P Archived 26 August 2002 at the Wayback Machine Royal Thai Army website Retrieved on 4 December 2008 Royal Thai Government Gazette aecngkhwamsanknaykrthmntri eruxng ihpradbekhruxngrachxissriyaphrntangpraeths Vol 56 Page 3594 on 11 March 1939 a b rachkiccanuebksa aecngkhwamsankkhnarthmntri eruxng phrarachthanphrabrmrachanuyatpradbekhruxngxisriyaphrntangpraeths elm 72 txnthi 63 ng hna 2085 9 singhakhm 2498 Data PDF ratchakitcha soc go th Archived from the original PDF on 4 August 2018 Retrieved 15 February 2021 Bibliography editBaker Chris Phongpaichit Pasuk 2009 A History of Thailand 2nd ed Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781139194877 Retrieved 29 September 2018 Chaloemtiarana Thak 2007 Thailand The Politics of Despotic Paternalism Ithaca Cornell Southeast Asia Program ISBN 978 0 87727 742 2 Fineman Daniel 1997 A Special Relationship The United States and Military Government in Thailand 1947 1958 Honolulu University of Hawaiʻi Press ISBN 0 8248 1818 0 Mokarapong Thawatt 1972 History of Thai Revolution A study in political behaviour Bangkok Chalermnit ISBN 974 07 5396 5 Numnonda Thamsook 1977 Thailand and the Japanese Presence 1941 1945 Singapore Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Reynolds E Bruce 2004 Phibun Songkhram And Thai Nationalism in the Fascist Era European Journal of East Asian Studies Vol 3 pp 99 134 doi 10 1163 1570061033004686 Stowe Judith A 1991 Siam Becomes Thailand A Story of Intrigue London C Hurst amp Co ISBN 0 8248 1393 6 Suwannathat Pian Kobkua 1995 Thailand s Durable Premier Phibun through three decades 1932 1957 Oxford University Press ISBN 967 65 3053 0 Terwiel Barend Jan 1980 Field Marshal Plaek Phibun Songkhram St Lucia University of Queensland Press ISBN 0 7022 1509 0 Staniczek Lukasz 1999 Pibun Songkram s Role in Thailand s Entry into the Pacific War Thesis Arkadelphia Ouachita Baptist University Retrieved 2 April 2020 Wyatt David K 2003 Thailand A Short History 2 ed Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 08475 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Plaek Phibunsongkhram Duncan Stearn A Slice of Thai History The Japanese invasion of Thailand 8 December 1941 Pattaya Mail Pattaya s First English Language Newspaper part one Columns part two Columns part three Kopkuea Suwannathat Phian 1989 Foreign Policies of Phibunsongkhram Government 1938 1944 PDF in Thai Bangkok Thammasat University Press ISBN 9745724165 Archived from the original PDF on 28 February 2021 Retrieved 25 December 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Plaek Phibunsongkhram amp oldid 1219993058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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