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To help you learn more about Thailand, we provide the comprehensive and educational history resource from the early establishment to the recent development of Thailand. We continue making research and gathering the information to make for a hub of Thailand history guide. You will get all and more by clicking the sections below.
THAILAND HISTORY
• Early History • Phibun Regime
• Mon and Khmer • Thailand In World War Ii
• Tai People • Pridi And Civilian Regime
• Sukhothai Period • Return Of Phibun
• Aytthaya Era • Coup D'etat In 1947
• Thai Kingship • Coup D ' Etat In 1951
• Ayutthaya Final Phase • Sarit And Thanom
• Bangkok Period • Sarit's Return
• Chakkri Dynasty • Politics 1963 - 1971
• Mongkut Policy • Coup D' Etat In 1971
• Chulalongkern Reforms • End Of Thanom Regime
• Crisis of 1893 • Military Rule Period
• Constitutional Era • Prem In Power
• Coup D'etat In 1932 • Coup D' Etat In 2006
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Coup d' Etat in 1971
 
THE COUP D'ETAT IN NOVEMBER 1971
In November 1971, Prime Minister Thanom executed a coup against his own government, thereby ending the three-year experiment with what had passed for parliamentary democracy. The 1968 constitution was suspended, political parties banned, and undisguised military rule imposed on the country. Under the new regime, executive and legislative authority was held by a military junta, the National Executive Council. Heading the council was a triumvirate that included Thanom, who retained the office of prime minister; Field Marshal Praphat Charusathian, his deputy prime minister; and Thanom's son (also Praphat's son-in- law), Narong Kittikachorn, an army colonel.
Despite stern moves to suppress opposition, popular dissatisfaction with the dictatorial regime mounted in the universities and labor organizations as well as among rival military factions. The discontent focused on United States support for Thanom, the growth of Japanese economic influence, and the official corruption that the regime made no effort to conceal. The civilian political elite joined students and workers in opposing Thanom's apparent aim to perpetuate a political dynasty through his son, Narong, whose rise the officer corps particularly resented. Thanom's aggrandizement of his family was at odds with the image he tried to project and the standards of the "civic religion" with its call for veneration of "NationReligion -King." The triumvirate also ignored the king, who had moderated his earlier enthusiasm for Thanom, and opponents charged that the junta disregarded religion. Some critics detected signs of republicanism in the regime and feared another Thanom-sponsored coup to overthrow the monarchy.