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THAILAND'S MOMENT OF TRUTH - ZENJOURNALIST

THAILAND'S MOMENT OF TRUTH - ZENJOURNALIST

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And yet even as he basked in the adoration of his people and the respect of the world, Bhumibol was<br />

acutely aware that everything he had built during his 60 years on the throne was at risk of being reduced<br />

to ruins by mounting internal and external challenges that threatened to undermine the foundations of the<br />

Thai monarchy and destroy his legacy.<br />

The father of the nation was facing serious problems within his own divided family: Boyce refers to<br />

the celebrations in his cable as “the dysfunctional family picnic”. Bhumibol had been estranged from<br />

Queen Sirikit for two decades since she suffered a breakdown following the mysterious death of her<br />

favourite military aide. Rama IX’s son and heir, Crown Prince Maha Chakri Vajiralongkorn, was a cruel<br />

and corrupt womanizer, reviled by most Thais almost as viscerally as Bhumibol was loved. The king's<br />

second daughter, Princess Maha Chakri Sirindhorn, was the overwhelming favourite of the Thai people<br />

to succeed her father, even though her gender and royal tradition seemed to render this impossible. As<br />

Boyce wrote in his cable:<br />

In a shot heavy with unintentional meaning on Friday, the television broadcast showed the<br />

unpopular Crown Prince reading a message of congratulations to the King, who was seated on<br />

the royal balcony above the Prince. Just visible behind the King, however, was the smiling face<br />

of Princess Sirindorn - the widely respected "intellectual heir" of the monarch - chatting with her<br />

sisters and trying to take a picture of the adoring crowd below. The physical distance between the<br />

King and his legal heir far below, and his beloved daughter just behind him, captured the internal<br />

family dynamic - and the future of the monarchy - quite nicely.<br />

Besides marital strife and an underachieving wayward son, Bhumibol was also troubled by the bitter<br />

power struggle between Thaksin and Thailand's traditional elites, which was becoming increasingly<br />

divisive and dangerous:<br />

In his public remarks on Friday, the King thanked the assembled dignitaries and crowd for<br />

their congratulations and called upon the Thai people to show compassion, cooperate with each<br />

other, display integrity, and be reasonable. In a not-so-veiled reference to the ongoing political<br />

crisis, the King stated, "unity is the basis for all Thai to help preserve and bring prosperity to the<br />

country".<br />

Prime Minister Thaksin had been fighting a rearguard action for months against a determined effort by<br />

Thai monarchists to oust him. His role in the celebrations was deeply ambivalent, Boyce noted:<br />

Prime Minister Thaksin was front and center for much of the festivities: greeting foreign guests,<br />

and reading a congratulatory message for the King on behalf of the caretaker government. In an<br />

unfortunate bit of timing, the television camera covering the opening ceremony on Friday panned<br />

on the PM just as he was checking his watch. Aside from this minor gaffe - not mentioned in the<br />

newspapers, yet - the PM's personal perspective on the celebration remains unclear... Thaksin<br />

recently told the Ambassador that his own popularity in the countryside is seen by the palace as<br />

threatening to the King's popular standing. After this weekend's massive, unprecedented display<br />

of public adoration for the monarch, however, one hopes that Thaksin has a firm enough grasp of<br />

reality to reconsider this idea.

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