Friday, November 20, 2009

The Thaksin Card


Alternatives Watch – 20xi09
Op-Ed by Ung Bun Ang

After conquering his local opponents, prime minister Hun Sen must content himself with escalating the border dispute into a major international clash that absolutely antagonises Thai prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. His trump card is deposed Thai prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra whom he has appointed as his economic adviser.

Hun Sen appears totally committed to Thaksin, eventhough he has not disclosed his main objective. He pushes so hard for Thaksin, whom he treats as an eternal friend, to be back in power in Bangkok. He openly goads the Thai prime minister into elections: “If Abhisit is so sure of himself, then he should call an election... What are you afraid of? Is it that you are afraid you will not be the prime minister?” He virtually calls the Abhitsit government a thief when he refers to the fact that it cajoles sixteen of Thaksin’s allies in parliament to form the current government. “You claim other people's property as your own. How can we respect that?” asks Hun Sen.

However, Cambodia – not Hun Sen – may just end up missing out. The adviser seems assuring when saying he sees a lot of synergy between Cambodia and Thailand. “What is good for you will also be good for my country,” claims Thaksin. This possibly means a joint-administration of Preah Vihear and other grey areas along the border is the best option for both countries. This implication is consistent with the fact that it was Thaksin’s ally Samak government that sent Thai troops to Preah Vihear in July 2008, and that the first armed clash occurred in October 2008 when Thaksin’s brother-in-law and close ally Somchai Wongsawath was the Thai prime minister. Thus, either Thaksin supports his allies’ blatant aggression, or his influence over them is insignificant. Either way, Cambodia is unlikely to benefit from the prime minister’s eternal friend.

Cambodia is not a Thaksin’s priority. In his claimed effort to reduce Cambodian poverty, the adviser promises to attract foreign investments. Nevertheless, while accepting and appreciating his appointment, Thaksin confesses, “it's not going to be fun like working to help Thai people out of poverty”. Cambodia is pushed to the back seat.

Thaksin may also have difficulty in sharing benefits, despite his sound rhetoric: “If the benefits are shared equally, surely the government can stay longer”. The fact that his own government did not last long means he failed the benefit sharing test; subsequent governments that were regarded as Thaksin’s proxies lasted even shorter. Unless he learns from the lesson, it will be doubtful how Cambodia can benefit from the wisdom. Furthermore, for a person like Thaksin who makes a fortune of two billion dollars in just four years from a telecommunication monopolistic structure secured through his connections and corruption, sharing benefits equally may just be hot air.

However, if the adviser does believe what he claims: “Everything depends on benefits”, Hun Sen can look forward to some substantial return for his titanic investment in Thaksin. Meanwhile, disappointment, if not disaster, likely awaits Cambodian people.

Ung Bun Ang

Quotable Quote:
“Benefits make a man a slave.” - Anonymous. Arabic proverb.

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

When Thark Sen start to thark hun sen that time he will joint with Abhisit===>Half of Khmer's land will be with siam and east will be with yourn.

Anonymous said...

English: My Dear friend; German: My "Dear Feind" You only have a very bad dream.
Maybe haft of Thailand and Mekong delta will be soon one Kingdom of Khmer.

Anonymous said...

Can anyone tell me since when Khmer people start lossing their self-esteem and pride.

Why each of Khmer generation are puppets of other nations?

Anonymous said...

Why can we be Israel of the Mekong?
Why can all Khmer around the world be united?

Anonymous said...

Correct: Why CAN'T all Khmer around the world be united?

Anonymous said...

Thank you for sharing. I totally agreed with you.

Anonymous said...

The yellow shirts want to behead Hun Sen, if he goes along with Thaksin. Poor men.

Anonymous said...

Ung Bun Ang,

You said that "It was Thaksin’s ally Samak government that sent Thai troops to Preah Vihear in July 2008, and that the first armed clash occurred in October 2008 when Thaksin’s brother-in-law and close ally Somchai Wongsawath was the Thai prime minister". Well, both Thai PM before Abhisit even though, they have governed the country but they couldn't order the military.

Thai troops that invaded Cambodia near Preach Vihear temple on 15 July 2008 were ordered by Royal military council aimed to put Thai government at that time in trouble and lead to bring down Thaksin's ally one by one.

You just saw politics on the surface, you don't know much about Thailand's politics. Your comment is not helped anything to Cambodia but at the same time, it's helped Thai current PM Abhisit's policy towards Cambodia. However, if you are a SRP's supporter, you can help Abhisit and PAD in Thailand as much as you want because SRP is Abhisit's ally.

Khmer In Sydney

Anonymous said...

i thought i'm dumb, but Samak Mit @11:48 AM (land down under) is more dumber, or perhaps the dumbest!

pack me some kangaroo meat!

Anonymous said...

SRP and its stupid supporters always dumb because their brain is full of shit can't see anything good in Cambodia.