History of Thailand
This page is only a modest attempt at mentionning a few  milestones in Thai history. We used various sources of information but  mainly Wikipedia, synthetizing their articles about history of Thailand, then adding maps and pictures.
1. Sukhothai and the founding of the Thai nation
 
  The Thais date the founding of their nation to the 13th  century, so this is where we shall start. Before that, during the 9th  and 10th century, the whole region was under Khmer domination. It's only  during the 11th and 12th centuries that the Thais, coming from China,  began to settle. They gained independence from the Khmer Empire at  Sukhothai, which was established as a sovereign Kingdom in 1238. This  event traditionally marks the founding of the modern Thai nation.
Under King Ramkhamhaeng the Great, the third king of  Sukhothai, who is credited with designing the Thai alphabet, Sukhothai  enjoyed a golden age of prosperity. At its peak, supposedly stretching  from Martaban (now in Burma) to Luang Prabang (now in Laos) and down the  Malay Peninsula as far south as Nakhon Si Thammarat, the kingdom's  sphere of influence was larger than that of modern Thailand, although  the degree of control exercised over outlying areas was variable. The  northern states of Phayao and Lanna also coexisted with Sukhothai.
After Ramkhamhaeng's death in 1365 the kingdom fell into  decline and became subject to another emerging Thai state known as the  Ayutthaya kingdom, which grew from the earlier kingdom of Lopburi and  dominated southern and central Thailand until the 1700's.
2. The kingdom of Ayutthaya (1350-1767)
 
  The first ruler of the Kingdom of Ayutthaya, King  Ramathibodi I, made two important contributions to Thai history: the  establishment and promotion of Theravada Buddhism as the official  religion - to differentiate his kingdom from the neighbouring Hindu  kingdom of Angkor - and the compilation of the Dharmashastra, a legal  code based on Hindu sources and traditional Thai custom. The  Dharmashastra remained a tool of Thai law until late in the 19th  century.
Beginning with the Portuguese in the 16th century,  Ayutthaya had some contact with the West. The court of King Narai  (1656-1688) had strong links with that of King Louis XIV of France.
Ayutthaya dominated a considerable area, ranging from the  Islamic states on the Malay Peninsula to states in northern Thailand.  Under King Naresuan the Great, who reigned from 1590 to 1605, Thailand  had the biggest territorial extent in history.
Nonetheless, the Burmese, who had control of Lanna and  had also unified their kingdom under a powerful dynasty, launched  several invasion attempts in the 1750s and 1760s. Finally, in 1767,  Burma invaded Ayutthaya and took back Lannathai, while totally  destroying Ayutthaya. The royal family fled the city and the King died.  The Ayutthaya royal line had been extinguished.
3. Thonburi and Bangkok period (1768-1932)
 
  Taksin the Great (1769-1782)
Despite its complete defeat and occupation by Burma, Siam  made a rapid recovery. The resistance to Burmese rule was led by a  noble of Chinese descent, Taksin, a capable military leader. Within a  year, he had defeated the Burmese occupation army and re-established a  Siamese state with its capital at Thonburi, on the west bank of the Chao  Phraya. In 1768 he was crowned as King Taksin (now officially known as  Taksin the Great). He rapidly re-united the central Thai heartlands  under his rule, and in 1769 he also occupied western Cambodia. He then  re-established Siamese rule over the Malay Peninsula, as far as Penang.  Having secured his base in Siam, Taksin attacked the Burmese in the  north in 1774 and captured Chiang Mai in 1776, permanently uniting Siam  and Lanna.
Rama I (1782-1809)
General Chakri succeeded Taksin in 1782 as Rama I, the  first king of the Chakri dynasty. In the same year he founded the new  capital city at Bangkok. Rama I restored most of the social and  political system of the Ayutthaya kingdom, promulgating new law codes,  reinstating court ceremonies and imposing discipline on the Buddhist  monkhood. The Burmese invaded Siam again in 1785. They occupied both the  north and the south, but were defeated in a battle near Kanchanaburi.  This was the last major Burmese invasion of Siam, although as late as  1802 Burmese forces had to be driven out of Lanna. In 1792 the Siamese  occupied Luang Prabang and brought most of Laos under indirect Siamese  rule. Cambodia was also effectively ruled by Siam. By the time of his  death in 1809, Rama I had created a Siamese Empire dominating an area  considerably larger than modern Thailand.
Rama II (1809-1824)
During Rama II's reign, western influences again began to  be felt in Siam. In 1785 the British occupied Penang, and in 1819 they  founded Singapore. In 1821 the government of British India sent a  mission to demand that Siam lift restrictions on free trade - the first  sign of an issue which was to dominate 19th century Siamese politics.
 
  Rama III (1824-1851)
Rama II died in 1824, and was peacefully succeeded by his  son. In 1825 the British sent another mission to Bangkok. They had by  now annexed southern Burma and were thus Siam's neighbours to the west,  and they were also extending their control over Malaysia. The King was  reluctant to give in to British demands, but his advisors warned him  that Siam would meet the same fate as Burma unless the British were  accommodated. In 1826, therefore, Siam concluded its first commercial  treaty with a western power. Under the treaty, Siam agreed to establish a  uniform taxation system, to reduce taxes on foreign trade and to  abolish some of the royal monopolies. As a result, Siam's trade  increased rapidly, many more foreigners settled in Bangkok, and western  cultural influences began to spread. The kingdom became wealthier and  its army better armed.
A Lao rebellion led by Anouvong was defeated in 1827,  following which Siam destroyed Vientiane, carried out massive forced  population transfers from Laos to the more securely held area of Isan.  In 1842-1845, Siam waged a successful war with Vietnam, which tightened  Siamese rule over Cambodia. Rama III's most visible legacy in Bangkok is  the Wat Pho temple complex, which he enlarged and endowed with new  temples.
In 1850 the British and Americans sent missions to  Bangkok demanding the end of all restrictions on trade, the  establishment of a western-style government and immunity for their  citizens from Siamese law (extraterritoriality). Rama III's government  refused these demands, leaving his successor, his brother Mongkut, with a  dangerous situation. 
Rama IV (1851-1868)
Mongkut came to the throne as Rama IV in 1851. He was  determined to save Siam from colonial domination, but he lacked real  power and had to yield to the British, by signing a treaty which  restricted import duties, abolished royal trade monopolies, and granted  extraterritoriality to British subjects. Other western powers soon  demanded and got similar concessions.
The King soon came to consider that the real threat to  Siam came from the French, not the British. The British were interested  in commercial advantage, the French in building a colonial empire. They  occupied Saigon in 1859, and established a protectorate over southern  Vietnam and eastern Cambodia. Rama IV hoped that the British would  defend Siam if he gave them the economic concessions they demanded. In  the next reign this would prove to be an illusion, but it is true that  the British saw Siam as a useful buffer state between British Burma and  French Indochina.
 
  
  Rama V (1868-1910)
King Chulalongkorn was the first Siamese king to have a  full western education. He created a Privy Council and a Council of  State, a formal court system and budget office. He announced that  slavery would be gradually abolished and debt-bondage restricted. He  established Cabinet government, an audit office and an education  department. The semi-autonomous status of Chiang Mai was ended and the  army was reorganised and modernised.
In 1893 the French authorities in Indochina used a minor  border dispute to provoke a crisis. French gunboats appeared at Bangkok,  and demanded the cession of Lao territories east of the Mekong. The  King appealed to the British, but the British minister told the King to  settle on whatever terms he could get, and he had no choice but to  comply. Britain's only gesture was an agreement with France guaranteeing  the integrity of the rest of Siam. In exchange, Siam had to give up its  claim to the Tai-speaking Shan region of north-eastern Burma to the  British.
The French, however, continued to pressure Siam, and in  1906-1907 they manufactured another crisis. This time Siam had to  concede French control of territory on the west bank of the Mekong  opposite Luang Prabang and around Champasak in southern Laos, as well as  western Cambodia. The British interceded to prevent more French  bullying of Siam, but their price, in 1909, was the acceptance of  British sovereignty over four Malayan provinces (Kedah, Kelantan, Perlis  and Terengganu). The treaty also made the modern border between Siam  and British Malaya by securing the Thai authority on the provinces of  Pattani, Yala, Narathiwat and Satun, which were previously part of the  semi-independent Malay sultanates of Pattani and Kedah.
By 1910, when the King died, Siam had become at least a  semi-modern country, and continued to escape colonial rule. It is a  widely held view in Thailand that the diplomatic skills of these  monarchs, combined with the modernising reforms of the Thai Government,  made Siam the only country in South and Southeast Asia to avoid European  colonisation.
Since that time, Rama V has become the object of worship.  Nowadays his picture can be seen in many houses and shops, and many  Thai people believe he can bring good fortune. His death is commemorated  on October 23, a national holiday in Thailand.
Rama VI (1910-1925)
Vajiravudh (Rama VI), with his British education, applied  his observation of the success of the British monarchy, appearing more  in public and instituting more royal ceremonies. But he also carried on  his father's modernisation programme. Polygamy was abolished, primary  education made compulsory, and in 1916 higher education came to Siam  with the founding of Chulalongkorn University, which in time became the  seedbed of a new Siamese intelligentsia.
In 1917, Siam declared war on Germany, mainly to gain  favour with the British and the French. Siam's token participation in  World War I gained it a seat at the Versailles Peace Conference, and  Foreign Minister Devrawongse used this opportunity to argue for the  repeal of the 19th century treaties and the restoration of full Siamese  sovereignty. The United States obliged in 1920, while France and Britain  delayed until 1925. This victory gained the King some popularity, but  it was soon undercut by discontent over other issues, such as his  extravagance, which became more noticeable when a sharp postwar  recession hit Siam in 1919.
Rama VII (1925-1935)
The initial legacy that Prajadhipok (Rama VII) received  from his elder brother were problems of the sort that had become chronic  in the Sixth Reign. The most urgent of these was the economy: the  finances of the state were in chaos and the budget heavily in deficit.  The King managed to restore stability to the economy, although at a  price of making a significant amount of the civil servants redundant and  cutting the salary of those that remained. This was obviously unpopular  among the officials, and was one of the trigger events for the coup of  1932.
On June 24, 1932, while the King was holidaying at the  seaside, the Bangkok garrison mutinied and seized power. Thus ended 150  years of Siamese absolute monarchy.
4. Military rule (1932-1973)
Constitutional monarchy
The coup d'état of 1932 transformed the government of  Thailand from an absolute to a constitutional monarchy. Siam's first  constitution included a National Assembly, half appointed and half  indirectly-elected. A prime minister and Cabinet were appointed and a  facade of constitutional rule was maintained.
Conflict began to erupt among the members of the new  ruling coalition. The royalists also led a revolt against the government  in 1933, but the army remained loyal to the government and the  royalists were defeated. The King accused the government of having no  regard for democratic principles (there was indeed no debate and heavy  censorship), and he finally abdicated. The government chose Prince  Ananda Mahidol as the next king, who was at that time in school in  Switzerland. In the eyes of some, the youth of the new King and his  absence from the country were the main reasons that he was selected. For  the first time in history, Siam was without a resident monarch and was  to remain so for the next fifteen years.
The government carried out some important reforms. The  currency went off the gold standard, allowing trade to recover.  Expenditures on education was increased, thereby significantly raising  the literacy rate. Thammasat University was founded, as a more  accessible alternative to the elitist Chulalongkorn University. Elected  local and provincial governments were introduced, and in November 1937  democratic development was brought forward when direct elections were  held for the National Assembly, although political parties were still  not allowed. Military expenditure was also greatly expanded, a clear  indication of the increasing influence of the military.
Phibun: the pursuit of nationalism
The military, now led by Major General Phibun as Defence  Minister, and the civilian liberals led by Pridi Phanomyong as Foreign  Minister, worked together harmoniously for several years, but when  Phibun became prime minister in December 1938 this co-operation broke  down. Phibun was an admirer of Benito Mussolini, and his regime soon  developed some fascist characteristics. In early 1939 forty political  opponents were arrested and eighteen were executed, the first political  executions in Siam in over a century. Phibun launched a demagogic  campaign against the Chinese business class. Chinese schools and  newspapers were closed, and taxes on Chinese businesses increased.
 
  Phibun copied the propaganda techniques used by Hitler  and Mussolini to build up the cult of the leader. Government slogans  were constantly aired on the radio and plastered on newspapers and  billboards. Phibun's picture was also to be seen everywhere in society,  while portraits of the ex-monarch King Prajadhipok, an outspoken critic  of the autocratic regime, were banned. At the same time he passed a  number of authoritarian laws which gave the government the power of  almost unlimited arrest and complete press censorship. During the Second  World War, newspapers were instructed to print only good news emanating  form Axis sources.
In 1939, Phibun also changed the country's name from Siam  to Prathet Thai, or Thailand, meaning "land of the free". This was a  nationalist gesture: it implied the unity of all the Tai-speaking  peoples, including the Lao and the Shan, but excluding the Chinese. The  regime's slogan became "Thailand for the Thai". The Thais had to salute  the flag, know the National Anthem, and speak the national language.  Patriotism was taught in schools and was a recurrent theme in song and  dance.
At the same time, Phibun worked rigorously to rid society  of its royalist influences - traditional royal holidays were replaced  with new national events, royal and aristocratic titles were abandoned.
World War II
 
  In 1940 most of France was occupied by Nazi Germany, and  Phibun immediately set out to avenge Siam's humiliations by France in  1893 and 1904, when the French had redrawn the borders of Siam with Laos  and Cambodia by forcing a series of treaties. In 1941, Thailand invaded  French Indochina, beginning the French-Thai War. The Thais, better  equipped and outnumbering the French forces, dominated the war on the  ground and in the air, but suffered a crushing naval defeat at the  battle of Koh Chang. The Japanese then stepped in to mediate the  conflict. The final settlement thus gave back to Thailand the disputed  areas in Laos and Cambodia.
The war was celebrated as a great victory, and Victory  Monument was erected a few months later in Bangkok. It became an  embarrassment in 1945 when the Allied victory in the Pacific War forced  Thailand to evacuate the territories it had gained in 1941 and return  them to France.
Thailand's campaign for territorial expansion came to an  end on December 8, 1941 when Japan invaded the country along its  southern coastline and from Cambodia. After initially resisting, the  Phibun regime allowed the Japanese to pass through the country in order  to attack Burma and invade Malaya. Convinced by the Allied defeats of  early 1942 that Japan was winning the war, Phibun decided to form an  actual military alliance with the Japanese.
As a reward, Japan allowed Thailand to invade and annex  the Shan States in northern Burma, and to resume sovereignty over the  sultanates of northern Malaya which had previously been lost in a treaty  with Britain. In January 1942, Phibun declared war on Britain and the  United States, but the Thai Ambassador in Washington, Seni Pramoj,  refused to deliver it to the State Department. Instead, Seni denounced  the Phibun regime as illegal and formed hiw own movement in Washington.
 
  In 1942, Japanese forces, supplies and equipment  transported to Burma by sea were vulnerable to attack by Allied  submarines, and an alternative means of transport was needed. The  Japanese started the Thailand-Burma Railway, also known also as the  Death Railway, in June 1942. Forced labour was used in its construction.  About 200,000 Asian labourers and 60,000 Allied prisoners of war (POWs)  worked on the railway. Of these, around 100,000 Asian labourers and  16,000 Allied POWs died as a direct result of the project.
By 1944, it was evident that the Japanese were going to  lose the war, and their behaviour in Thailand had become increasingly  arrogant. Bangkok also suffered heavily from the Allied bombing raids.  This, plus the economic hardship caused by the loss of Thailand's rice  export markets, made both the war and Phibun's regime very unpopular. In  July 1944, Phibun was ousted by the infiltrated government of Seni  Pramoj. The new government hastily evacuated the British territories  that Phibun had occupied.
The Japanese surrendered on August 15, 1945. The British  regarded Thailand as having been partly responsible for the immeasurable  damage dealt upon the Allied cause and favoured treating the kingdom as  a defeated enemy. However, the Americans had no sympathy for British  and French colonialism and supported the new government. Thailand thus  received little punishment for its wartime role under Phibun. In the  postwar period Thailand enjoyed close relations with the United States,  which it saw as a protector from the communist revolutions in  neighbouring countries.
Postwar Thailand
Seni Pramoj became Prime Minister in 1945, and promptly  restored the name Siam as a symbol of the end of Phibun's nationalist  regime. Democratic elections were held in January 1946. These were the  first elections in which political parties were legal, and Pridi  Phanomyong's People's Party and its allies won a majority. In March 1946  Pridi became Siam's first democratically elected Prime Minister. In  1947 he agreed to hand back the French territory occupied in 1940 as the  price for admission to the United Nations, the dropping of all wartime  claims against Siam and a substantial package of American aid.
 
  In December 1945 the young king Ananda Mahidol (Rama  VIII) had returned to Siam from Europe, but he died in 1946 under  somewhat mysterious circumstances, the official explanation being that  he shot himself by accident while cleaning his gun. The King was  succeeded by his younger brother Bhumibol Adulyadej, who was a schoolboy  in Europe. In August Pridi was forced to resign amid suspicion that he  had been involved in the regicide. Without his leadership, the civilian  government floundered, and in November 1947 the army, its confidence  restored after the debacle of 1945, seized power. In April 1948 the army  brought Phibun back from exile and made him Prime Minister. Pridi in  turn was driven into exile.
Phibun's return to power coincided with the onset of the  Cold War and the establishment of a Communist regime in North Vietnam.  He soon won the support of the U.S., beginning a long tradition of  U.S.-backed military regimes in Thailand (as the country was again  renamed in July 1949, this time permanently). Once again political  opponents were arrested and tried, and some were executed. There were  attempted counter-coups by Pridi supporters in 1948, 1949 and 1951, the  second leading to heavy fighting between the army and navy before Phibun  emerged victorious.
In 1951 the regime abolished the National Assembly as an  elected body. This provoked strong opposition from the universities and  the press, and led to a further round of trials and repression. The  regime was greatly helped, however, by a postwar boom which gathered  pace through the 1950s, fuelled by rice exports and U.S. aid. Thailand's  economy began to diversify, while the population and urbanisation  increased.
By 1955 Phibun was losing his leading position in the  army to younger rivals led by Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat and General  Thanom Kittikachorn. To shore up his position he restored the 1949  constitution and called elections, which his supporters won. But the  army was not prepared to give up power, and in September 1957 it  demanded Phibun's resignation. When Phibun tried to have Sarit arrested,  the army staged a bloodless coup on September 17, 1957, ending Phibun's  career for good. Thanom became Prime Minister until 1958, then yielded  his place to Sarit, the real head of the regime. Sarit held power until  his death in 1963, when Thanom again took the lead.
Sarit and Thanom were the first Thai leaders to have been  educated entirely in Thailand, and were less influenced by European  political ideas, whether fascist or democratic, than the generation of  Pridi and Phibun had been. Rather, they were Thai traditionalists, who  sought to restore the prestige of the monarchy and to maintain a society  based on order, hierarchy and religion. They saw rule by the army as  the best means of ensuring this, and also of defeating Communism, which  they now associated with Thailand's traditional enemies the Vietnamese.  The young King Bhumibol, who returned to Thailand in 1951, co-operated  with this project. The Thai monarchy's present elevated status thus has  its origins in this era.
The Vietnam War and the 60's
While the war in Indochina was being fought between the  Vietnamese and the French, Thailand (disliking both equally) stayed  aloof, but once it became a war between the U.S. and the Vietnamese  Communists, Thailand committed itself strongly to the U.S. side. The  Vietnamese retaliated by supporting the Communist Party of Thailand's  insurgency in the north, northeast and sometime in the south.
The Vietnam War hastened the modernisation and  westernisation of Thai society. The American presence and the exposure  to western culture that came with it had an effect on almost every  aspect of Thai life. The population began to grow explosively as the  standard of living rose, and a flood of people began to move from the  villages to the cities, and above all to Bangkok. Thailand had 30  million people in 1965, while by the end of the 20th century the  population had doubled. Bangkok's population had grown tenfold since  1945 and had tripled since 1970.
Educational opportunities and exposure to mass media  increased during the Vietnam War years. As bright university students  learned more about ideas related to Thailand's economic and political  systems resulting in a revival of student activism. The Vietnam War  period also saw the growth of the Thai middle class which gradually  developed its own identity and consciousness.
Economic development certainly did not bring prosperity  to all. During the 1960s many of the rural poor felt increasingly  dissatisfied with their condition in society and disillusioned by their  treatment by the central government in Bangkok. By the early 1970s rural  discontent had manifested itself into a peasant's activist movement.  The protests focused on land loss, high rents, the heavy handed role of  the police, corruption among the bureaucracy and the local elite, poor  infrastructure, and overwhelming poverty.
 
  By the late 1960s, more elements in Thai society had  become openly critical of the military government which was seen as  being increasingly incapable of dealing with the country's problems. It  was not only the student activists, but also the business community that  had begun to question the leadership of the government as well as its  relationship with the United States. Thanom came under increasing  pressure to loosen his grip on power when the King commented that it was  time for parliament to be restored and a new constitution put into  effect. Finally in 1968 the government issued a new constitution and  scheduled elections for the following year. The government party founded  by the military junta won the election and Thanom remained prime  minister.
Surprisingly, the Assembly was not totally tame. A number  of MPs (mostly professionals such as doctors, lawyers, and journalists)  began to openly challenge some of the government's policies, producing  evidence of widespread government corruption on a number of large  projects. As a new budget was being debated in 1971, it actually  appeared that the military's demand for more funds might be voted down.  Rather than suffer such a loss of face, Thanom carried out a putsch  against his own government, suspended the constitution and dissolved the  Parliament. Once again Thailand had been returned to absolute military  rule.
This strongman approach which had worked for Phibun in  1938 and 1947, and for Sarit in 1957-58 would prove to be unsuccessful.  By the early 1970s Thai society as a whole had developed a level of  political awareness where it would no longer accept such unjustified  authoritarian rule. The King, using various holidays to give speeches on  public issues, became openly critical of the Thanom regime. He  expressed doubt on the use of extreme violence in the efforts to combat  insurgency. He mentioned the widespread existence of corruption in the  government and expressed the view that coups should become a thing of  the past in the Thai political system. Furthermore, the junta began to  face increasing opposition from within the military itself.
The 1973 democracy movement
In the end it was the students that played the decisive  role in the fall of the junta. Student demonstrations had started in  1968 and grew in size and numbers in the early 1970s despite the  continued ban on political meetings. In October 1973, 13 students were  arrested on charges of conspiracy to overthrow the government. The  demonstrations swelled to several hundred thousand and the issue  broadened from the release of the arrested students to demands for a new  constitution and the replacement of the current government.
 
  On October 13, the government yielded to the public's  demand and the detainees were released. Leaders of the demonstrations  called off the march, in accordance with the wishes of the King who was  publicly against the democracy movement. As the crowds were breaking up  the next day, the historic October 14th, many students found themselves  unable to leave because the police had attempted to control the flow of  the crowd by blocking the southern route to Rajavithi Road. Cornered and  overwhelmed by the hostile crowd, the police soon responded with  violence by launching barrages of teargas and gunfire. Within minutes, a  full scale riot had erupted.
The military was called in, and Bangkok witnessed the  horrifying spectacle of tanks rolling down Rajdamnoen Avenue and  helicopters firing down at Thammasat University. A number of students  commandeered buses and fire engines in an attempt to halt the progress  of the tanks by ramming into them, with disastrous results.
With chaos reigning on the streets, King Bhumibol opened  the gates of Chitralada Palace opened to the students who were being  gunned down by the army. Despite orders from Thanom that the military  action be intensified, army commander Kris Sivara had the army withdrawn  from the streets.
The King condemned the government's inability to handle  the demonstrations, and notably condemned the students' supposed role as  well. Thanom resigned and was ordered by the King to leave the country.
The junta had fallen, at the cost of 1,577 lives.
5. History of Thailand since 1973
1973-1976
The events of October 1973 amounted to a revolution in  Thai politics. For the first time the urban middle class, led by the  students, had defeated the combined forces of the old ruling class and  the army, and had gained the apparent blessing of the King for a  transition to full democracy.
However, Thailand had not yet produced a political class  able to make this bold new democracy function smoothly. The January 1975  elections failed to produce a stable party majority, and fresh  elections in April 1976 produced the same result. The veteran politician  Seni Pramoj and his brother Kukrit Pramoj alternated in power, but were  unable to carry out a coherent reform programme. The sharp increase in  oil prices in 1974 led to recession and inflation, weakening the  government's position. The democratic government's most popular move was  to secure the withdrawal of American forces from Thailand.
The wisdom of this move was soon questioned, however,  when Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia fell to communist forces in 1975. The  arrival of communist regimes on Thailand's borders, the abolition of the  600-year-old Lao monarchy, and the arrival of a flood of refugees from  Laos and Cambodia, swung public opinion in Thailand back to the right.
A return to military rule
By late 1976 moderate middle class opinion had turned  away from the activism of the students. The army and the right-wing  parties began a propaganda war against student liberalism, by accusing  student activists of being communists. In October Thanom returned to  Thailand to enter a royal monastery. Two student protesters were accused  of a communist conspiracy and were hung after they had protesting  against his return. Students in Thammasat University held protests, and  on October 6, 1976, the army unleashed the paramilitaries. Hundreds of  students were tortured and killed, the constitution was suspended and  the army seized power.
The army installed Thanin, an ultra-conservative former  judge, as prime minister, and carried out a sweeping purge of the  universities, the media and the civil service. The Minister of the  Interior was Samak Sundaravej, who was to become Prime Minister in 2008.  Thousands of students, intellectuals and other leftists fled Bangkok  and joined the Communist Party's insurgent forces in the north and  north-east. Others left for exile, including the Rector of Thammasat  University. The economy was in serious difficulties, as the new regime  proved as unstable as the democratic experiment had been. In October  1977 a different section of the army staged another "coup" and replaced  Thanin with General Kriangsak. Kriangsak was forced to step down in  February 1980 at a time of economic troubles. He was succeeded by the  army commander-in-chief, General Prem Tinsulanonda, a staunch royalist  with a reputation for being incorruptible.
The Prem era
For most of the 1980s, Thailand was ruled by Prem, a  democratically-inclined strongman who restored parliamentary politics.  Thereafter and until 2006 the country remained a democracy, apart from a  brief period of military rule from 1991 to 1992.  
 
  The King and Prem acted to put an end to violent military  interventions. In April 1981 a clique of junior army officers staged a  coup, taking control of Bangkok, but Prem, with the King's support,  managed to recapture the capital in a bloodless counterattack. This  episode raised the prestige of the monarchy still further, and also  enhanced Prem's status as a relative moderate. Another constitution was  promulgated and elections were held in April 1983, giving Prem, now in  the guise of a civilian politician, a large majority.
Prem was also the beneficiary of the accelerating  economic revolution which was sweeping south-east Asia. After the  recession of the mid 1970s, economic growth took off. For the first time  Thailand became a significant industrial power, and manufactured goods  such as computer parts, textiles and footwear overtook rice, rubber and  tin as Thailand's leading exports. Tourism developed rapidly and became a  major earner. While Thailand did not grow as fast as the "East Asian  Tigers" like Taiwan and South Korea, it achieved sustained growth.
Prem held office for eight years and remained personally  popular, but the revival of democratic politics led to a demand for a  more adventurous leader. In 1988 fresh elections brought former General  Chatichai to power, but he proved both incompetent and corrupt.
 
  1992: Bloody May
By allowing one faction of the military to get rich on  government contracts, Chatichai provoked a rival faction, led by General  Suchinda Kraprayoon and other generals, to stage a coup in February  1991. The junta called itself the National Peace Keeping Council. The  NPKC brought in a civilian prime minister, Anand Panyarachun, who was  still responsible to the military. Anand's anti-corruption measures  proved popular. Another general election was held in March 1992.
The winning coalition appointed coup leader Suchinda  Kraprayoon to become Prime Minister, in effect breaking a promise he had  made earlier to the King and confirming the widespread suspicion that  the new government was going to be a military regime in disguise.  Suchinda's action brought hundreds of thousands of people out in the  largest demonstrations ever seen in Bangkok, led by the former governor  of Bangkok, Major-General Chamlong Srimuang. Suchinda brought military  units personally loyal to him into the city and tried to suppress the  demonstrations by force, leading to a massacre in the heart of the city  in which hundreds died. The Navy mutinied in protest, and the country  seemed on the verge of civil war. In May the King intervened: he  summoned Suchinda and Chamlong to a televised audience. The result of  this was the resignation of Suchinda.
 
  1997 Asian Crisis
The King re-appointed Anand as interim prime minister  until elections could be held in September 1992, which brought the  Democrat Party under Chuan Leekpai to power, mainly representing the  voters of Bangkok and the south. Chuan was a competent administrator who  held power until 1995, when he was defeated at elections by a coalition  of conservative and provincial parties led by Banharn Silpa-acha.  Tainted by corruption charges from the very beginning, Banharn's  government was forced to call early elections in 1996, in which General  Chavalit Yongchaiyudh's New Aspiration Party managed to gain a narrow  victory.
Soon after coming into office, Prime Minister Chavalit  was confronted by the Asian Financial Crisis in 1997. After coming under  strong criticism for his handling of the crisis, Chavalit resigned in  November 1997 and Chuan returned to power. Chuan came to an agreement  with the International Monetary Fund which stabilised the currency and  allowed IMF intervention on Thai economic recovery. In contrast to the  country's previous history, the crisis was resolved by civilian rulers  under democratic procedures.
Thaksin Shinawatra
From 2001 to 2006 Thai politics was dominated by the  populist Thai Rak Thai ("Thais Love Thais") party of telecommunications  millionaire Thaksin Shinawatra. Thaksin, an ex-policeman, campaigned  effectively against the old politics, corruption, organized crime, and  drugs. In January 2001 he had a sweeping victory at the polls, winning a  larger popular mandate than any Thai prime minister has ever had in a  freely elected National Assembly.
 
  In power, Thaksin presided over the rapid recovery of the  Thai economy and repaid all debts borrowed from IMF before due time. By  2002 Thailand, and Bangkok in particular, was once again booming. As  low-end manufacturing moved to China and other low-wage economies,  Thailand moved upscale into more sophisticated manufacturing, both for a  rapidly expanding domestic middle class market and for export. Tourism,  and particularly sex tourism, also remained a huge revenue earner  despite intermittent "social order" campaigns by the government to  control the country's nightlife. Thaksin's policies were particularly  effective at alleviating rural poverty and at providing near universal  access to affordable health care. His main support base was the rural  poor in the north, northeast east and central part of Thailand. He won  an even bigger majority at elections in February 2005, securing his  second consecutive term.
However, his government was frequently challenged with  allegations of corruption, dictatorship, demagogy, treason, conflicts of  interest, acting undiplomatically, tax evasion, the use of legal  loopholes and hostility towards a free press. Thaksin was accused of  lèse-majesté, selling domestic assets to international investors, and  presiding over extrajudicial killings (especially in the restive south,  and during his war campaign against drug dealers).
Accusations also included the improper handling of  privatization of PTT and EGAT, the unfairness of the U.S.-Thailand free  trade agreement, and the corruption in the Suvarnabhumi Airport project.  In January 2006, the 73,000 million baht tax free buy-out of his family  holding in Shin Corporation, while legal, brought on more accusations  by Sonthi and opposition parties on the grounds of what they said was  immorality and conflict of interest. Anti-Thaksin and pro-Thaksin mass  rallies were held from January to March 2006, and Thaksin responded by  calling a snap election in April. His party won but the election was  later invalidated.
On September 19, 2006, with the prime minister in New  York for a meeting of the United Nations General Assembly, Army  Commander-in-Chief Lieutenant General Sonthi Boonyaratglin launched a  coup, the 18th coup since 1932.
The 2006 coup and its aftermath
The coup followed a year-long political crisis involving  Thaksin and political opponents, and occurred less than a month before  nation-wide House elections were originally scheduled to be held. The  military cancelled the upcoming elections, suspended the Constitution,  dissolved Parliament, banned protests and all political activities,  suppressed and censored the media, declared martial law, and arrested  Cabinet members.
There were widespread displays of public kindness to  soldiers controlling positions throughout Bangkok. People brought food,  drinks and flowers to troops, and often posed for pictures next to  soldiers and tanks. Yellow ribbons (yellow is the color of the King),  could be seen on tanks and machine guns, and it was assumed by some Thai  analysts and the international media that the coup had the support of  King Bhumibol Adulyadej. The silence of both the King and Privy Council  President General Prem Tinsulanonda on the day following the coup was  enough to be taken as indicating support.
 
  The new rulers, led by general Sonthi Boonyaratglin and  organised in a Council of National Security, appointed retired General  Surayud Chulanont as Prime Minister on 1 October 2006. Surayud and Prem  Tinsulanonda had played a key role in the promotion of Sonthi to the  position of Army Commander.
There was a significant worsening in perceived levels of  corruption during Surayud's government. He raised the military budget by  35% and was accused of economic mismanagement, rampant human rights  abuses, and flip-flopping on numerous policies. Thailand fell behind  Cambodia and Indonesia in terms of freedom of expression. Thailand's  economic growth rate slowed to the lowest level in five years and was  ranked the lowest in the region. In spite of Sonthi being the first  Muslim ruling the army, and in spite of Surayud's apologies for  atrocities committed by the Thai military, violence continued to  escalate in the south of Thailand throughout 2006 and 2007.
A new constitution, the 16th in 60 years, was drafted by a  committee established by the military junta. The junta passed a law  that made criticism of the draft and opposition to the constitutional  referendum a criminal act. The junta also claimed to the public that  general democratic elections would only occur if the draft were  approved. On 19 August 2007 a referendum was held and 57.8% of the  voters accepted the constitution.
On 30 May 2007, a junta-appointed Constitutional Tribunal  dissolved the Thai Rak Thai Party and banned over 100 of its  executives, including Thaksin, from politics for 5 years. Elections were  then scheduled for 23 December 2007, but the Thai Rak Thai party was  quickly refounded under a new name, People Power Party.
On December 23, elections were held and won by the People  Power Party. Its leader Samak Sundaravej was elected Prime Minister by  the Parliament a month later, in a period of mourning following the  death of HRH Princess Galyani Vadhana, the elder sister of the King, in  early January. Samak, 72 year-old, had been Minister of the Interior in  the Thanin's anti-communist administration in 1976, and Deputy Prime  Minister in the Suchinda administration in 1992. He had then justified  the military's brutal suppression of pro-democracy demonstrators by  declaring that the military had the right to do so, to restore law and  order.
 
  2008: Yellow Shirt (PAD) protests against Thaksin's successors
Thaksin made a brief come back in 2008, then returned to exile in England as he was facing a trial in Thailand.
Samak's mandate will probably not leave any lasting  memories, except the strong opposition by the PAD, the People's Alliance  for Democracy. The PAD consists of middle and upper-class Bangkokians  and Southerners, supported by the conservative elite, factions of the  Thai Army, and state-enterprise labor unions. Claiming that the rural  population is not educated enough to vote, the PAD wants the Parliament  to be a largely royally-appointed body, with only 30% of elected MP.
Led by Chamlong Srimuang, who was already at the head of  the demonstrators in 1992, and media-mogul Sondhi Limthongkul, Thaksin's  old enemy, the PAD organized rallies, blocked public transports and  seized the Government House, forcing the government to hold their  meetings at the old Bangkok airport.
Samak declared the state of emergency in Bangkok and  threatened the demonstrators, but he didn't resort to force. In  September 2008, Samak was eventually forced to resign (he was being paid  to appear in a TV cooking show, which a court ruled unconstitutional).  The PAD rejoiced but only for a short time, as Samak's successor,  Somchai Wongsawat, happened to be Thaksin's brother-in-law. The  demonstrations resumed and the protests escalated. On October 6  thousands of protesters, some of whom were armed, surrounded Parliament  to prevent the legislature from meeting. The police charged at the  demonstrators with tear gas, leaving two people dead and more than 400  injured, some severely.
On the evening of Tuesday 25 November 2008, armed PAD  members forced their way into the terminal building of Suvarnabhumi  International Airport and blockaded the main road to the airport. All  flights were suspended, leaving thousands of travelers stranded in the  airport, which remained closed for eight days. The government called on  the Army to restore order, but the Army did not follow the orders. In a  press conference on 26 November, Army Commander General Anupong  Paochinda proposed that the PAD withdraw from the airport and that the  government resign.
The chaos ended in December when the Constitutional Court  of Thailand dissolved the governing People's Power Party and two  coalition member parties and banned leaders of the parties, including  Prime Minister Somchai Wongsawat, from politics for five years. After  this decision, many previous coalition partners of the government then  defected and joined the main opposition party, the Democrat party, to  form a new government. "We have won a victory and achieved our aims,"  said Sondhi Limthongkul. On 15 December 2008, Abhisit Vejjajiva was  elected Prime Minister by the Parliament.
2009-2010: Red Shirts protests against Abhisit
The early signs of a violent move against the new  government was seen from early April. On April 7, Abhisit was attacked  by a group of Thaksin's supporters as he was in his car. The protests  then expanded to Pattaya, the site of the 14th ASEAN summit. The  red-shirted protesters stormed the Summit, forcing its cancellation.  Visiting leaders were evacuated from the venue by helicopter to a nearby  military airbase. Abhisit declared a state of emergency in the areas of  Pattaya and Chonburi on April 11.
As the week-long Songkran (Thai New Year) holiday began,  protests escalated in Bangkok. Protesters used cars, buses, and in one  location LPG tankers to take control of several locations in central  Bangkok. Small clashes then violent clashes began between  anti-government and government supporters, and the general population.  Arrest warrants were issued for Thaksin and 13 protest leaders. Many  protest leaders voluntarily gave themselves in to police on 14 April  2009, ending the violence. Demonstrators were sent back to the provinces  by government's buses and the state of emergency was lifted on 24  April. According to government figures, over 120 people were injured in  the unrest, most of them UDD demonstrators. The UDD claimed that at  least 6 demonstrators were killed, but Army chief Anupong Paochinda  swore that no lives were lost.
 
  In early 2010 a series of events occurred in which the  situation escalated. On 26 February, assets worth 46 billion Thai baht  were seized from former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra. In early  March 2010, "red shirt" protesters converged on Bangkok to press demands  for Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva to call new elections. By April  15, clashes between protesters and the military had resulted in 24  people (both civilian and military) being killed and over 800 injured.
On May 3, the Thai Prime Minister announced he was  willing to hold elections on November 14 should the opposition red  shirts accept the offer. The following day red shirt leaders accepted  the proposal to leave the occupied parts of Bangkok in return for the  new election on the scheduled date, but some protesters refused to  leave, causing Abhisit to take back his decision. Bangkok became a war  zone, with troops setting up live fire zones and shooting anyone  entering these areas on sight.
On May 19, the Army, backed by armoured personnel  carriers attacked the protest camp resulting in the deaths of 11  protestors and an Italian journalist. The Red Shirt leaders all either  surrender or try and escape. Arson attacks resulted in the near  destruction of the Central World shopping centre and other buildings.
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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