420 Thai Troops Dispatched To Iraq
by Richard S. Ehrlich
BANGKOK, Thailand -- Anxious to strengthen its
military partnership with America and qualify as
a "major non-NATO ally," Thailand has dispatched
more than 420 troops to Iraq.
Wearing camouflage uniforms topped with berets
and carrying U.S.-made M-16 assault rifles and
other weapons, the biggest batch of a total of
more than 420 mostly Buddhist Thai troops headed
to Iraq on Sunday (Sept. 28) night.
"Thailand and the U.S. are allies,'' Prime
Minister Thaksin Shinawatra said on Saturday
(Sept. 27). "When the U.S. requests help from
us, we respond. It is a gesture of hospitality."
Religious amulets, considered lucky by most
Thais and usually worn on a necklace, were
handed out by Thai officers to boost the
soldiers' confidence, though Thai scholars
insist amulets are a corrosive, superstitious
belief which Buddhism is supposed to correct.
A small number of Thai female and Muslim
soldiers were included in the contingent to
ensure Islamic sensitivities are well-handled
during body searches and other contact with
Iraqis.
America trains Thai troops each year in military
exercises in Thailand.
Thai officials were nervous, however, about
sending soldiers to Iraq and insisted they were
mostly engineers and others on a humanitarian
mission who would shoot only in self-defense.
They are to be replaced in six months with a
fresh batch of about 400 troops.
Thai officials played down fears that
anti-American insurgents would consider the
Thais legitimate targets because they were U.S.
allies.
"I believe Thai troops are not the attackers'
targets because we are there to help," said
General Surayud Chulanont, the armed forces
supreme commander who saluted their departure on
Sunday night.
"He [Surayud] warned the soldiers to follow the
strict code of conduct and customs, particularly
the prohibition against physical contact with
Muslim women," the Bangkok Post reported.
Thailand was earlier believed to be ready to
send a total of about 800 troops to Iraq all at
once, but worry about the unraveling security
situation apparently prompted the number to be
cut in half.
"No one feels safe in Iraq now, and not a day
goes by without more civilians being killed or
injured by U.S. soldiers or by armed groups
acting with impunity," said London-based Amnesty
International on Sept. 25, criticizing the lack
of investigations whenever American soldiers
kill civilians.
"U.S. forces are facing direct attacks and a
serious law and order emergency, but that cannot
be justification for a virtual licence to kill,"
the human rights group said.
"We admit the situation in Baghdad following the
bomb attack on the U.N. headquarters is not
good," Prime Minister Thaksin said in August.
Thai troops will be under Poland's command and
be posted in Karbala where some Iraqis have
expressed anger to foreign occupation.
Karbala is a holy city revered by Islam's
minority Shia (Shiite) sect, who are considered
heretics by the fundamentalist Sunni Muslims
that Osama bin Laden, the Taliban and Saudi
Arabia's Wahabi faction have drawn some support
from.
In such an alien environment, the Thais may
enjoy companionship with a contingent of about
180 Mongolian Army soldiers, who share some
similar Tibetan Buddhist and Chinese traditions
and who are also under Poland's command.
The Philippines -- a former U.S. colony in
Southeast Asia which is currently fighting its
own southern Muslim insurgency against
Hispanic-borne, Catholic domination -- also
agreed to send forces to Iraq.
When Prime Minister Thaksin met President George
W. Bush in Washington in June, the White House
announced "the United States is actively
considering Thailand's designation as a Major
Non-NATO Ally (MNNA)," to mark their close
military ties.
The Thai public, meanwhile, has mixed opinions
about the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq.
Some hope the war will end the spread of
terrorism, while others fear it has worsened the
danger.
"Thailand may be abundant in food, but it
doesn't produce oil, so we may have to
reconsider our position and continue to hold the
farangs' [Caucasians'] toilet paper for some
time to come," wrote a contributor to an online
chat group dominated by anti-war comments and
hosted by the website of Thailand's respected
Nation newspaper.
When the U.S. began bombing Iraq, a small "stop
the war" rally was held in Bangkok.
But many Thais are now more concerned about
Southeast Asia's own Islam-inspired terrorism
spreading in Thailand.
In Bangkok, souvenir sellers offer T-shirts
emblazoned, "The Twin Terrorists," illustrated
with portraits of President Bush and Mr. bin
Laden.
Other T-shirts show Mr. bin Laden's head as a
bull's eye target.
The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency benefited
from Thailand's cooperation in August when they
jointly captured Hambali -- also known as Riduan
Isamuddin -- in the Thai city of Ayutthaya.
Hambali was a suspected leader of Indonesia's al
Qaeda-inspired Jemaah Islamiyah militant
organization.
Hambali is currently undergoing interrogation by
the U.S. at an undisclosed site.
In Thailand's Muslim-majority south, meanwhile,
Thai officials have suffered deadly hit-and-run
attacks by a handful of local Islamic
separatists for decades.
A few years ago, Thailand sent several hundred
soldiers to East Timor to help stabilize the
infant nation after it broke from Indonesia's
domination, but that was under a U.N. mandate.
Thailand also sent forces to Afghanistan to
support the U.S.-led occupation.
Copyright by Richard S. Ehrlich
email: animists *at* yahoo dot com
Richard S. Ehrlich, a freelance journalist who has reported news from Asia for the past 25 years, is co-author of the non-fiction book, "HELLO MY BIG BIG HONEY!" -- Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews.
His web page is
http://www.oocities.org/asia_correspondent
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