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BANGKOK, Thailand -- Coup leader Prayuth Chan-ocha ended his
	five-year-long junta and took over the defense ministry when his new
	government was sworn in on July 16, nearly four months after an
	election to reaffirm him as prime minister.
	
	President Trump's support during Prime Minister Prayuth's military-led
	regime is expected to continue amid Thailand's increasing closeness
	with neighboring China which supplies diplomatic, economic and
	military support.
	
	The U.S., a treaty ally, trains Thailand's military which remains
	under Army Chief Gen. Apirat Kongsompong, son of a 1991 coup leader
	former supreme commander Sunthorn Kongsompong.
	
	"After the coup in Thailand, we severed a significant amount of
	mil-to-mil [military-to-military] engagement," said Army Command Sgt.
	Maj. Eric Curran. "We lost a lot of traction."
	
	Some new Thai military captains have "no desire to come to the United
	States. They want to go train in Russia and China.  That's one of the
	impacts we notice on the ground level," he said according to Army
	Times.
	
	"I am so happy Prayuth won. I hope they end those who are against
	him," said a Thai executive.
	
	Asking not to be named, he described his fantasy of pro-democracy
	candidates being fed to "hungry baby crocodiles."
	
	Others were less supportive of Mr. Prayuth's first election after he
	seized power in a bloodless 2014 coup as army commander-in-chief by
	toppling a popular civilian government.
	
	"Now Thailand has moved from a military government to a civil-military
	authoritarian rule under disguised and manipulated electoral
	legitimacy," said Thitinan Pongsudhirak, director of Bangkok's
	influential Institute of Security and International Studies.
	
	Wearing identical white uniforms, the staunchly royalist Mr. Prayuth
	and 35 cabinet members began their new administration after being
	sworn in on July 16 by King Maha Vajiralongkorn in the Dusit Palace, a
	requirement under Thailand's constitutional monarchy.
	
	In addition to the prime ministry, Mr. Prayuth also became defense
	minister after relieving the previous elderly holder, Prawit
	Wongsuwon, because of ill health. Mr. Prawit retained his post as one
	of several deputy prime ministers.
	
	The powerful interior ministry, which also controls Thailand's police,
	remained under retired Army Commander-in-Chief Gen. Anupong Paojinda
	who supported Mr. Prayuth's 2014 coup and a 2006 military putsch.
	
	Foreign Minister Don Pramundwinai also retained his post.
	
	The new health minister is Bhumjai Thai party leader Anutin Charnvirakul.
	
	He campaigned on promises to allow each household to grow six
	marijuana plants and sell the crop to the government for its recently
	legalized medical marijuana industry. Mr. Anutin also became a deputy
	prime minister.
	
	Mr. Prayuth's most immediate challenge will be ruling this
	Buddhist-majority Southeast Asian nation without his dreaded Section
	44 law which gave him absolute powers and immunity from prosecution.
	
	Now that his junta has ended and he leads a new Palang Pracharat
	party, that law also expired.
	
	His new government however kept other feared tools against opponents,
	including continuation of Mr. Prayuth's infamously Orwellian "attitude
	adjustment" punishment.
	
	That includes being taken to a military camp where dissidents are
	convinced to stop speaking or acting against the government.
	
	Mr. Prayuth's newest enemy is Thanathorn Juangroongruangkit. He leads
	the recently created youth-backed, Internet-savvy Future Forward
	party.
	
	The 40-year-old scion of wealthy industrialists wants to stop the
	military's role in politics, slash their escalating budget, and end
	the draft.
	
	Mr. Thanathorn was warmly received by many diplomats, academics and
	others. He became darling of the opposition's diverse parties and
	their surprise nominee for prime minister.
	
	His supporters insist he will not flee the country after recently
	being charged with "sedition" because he allegedly gave a protest
	leader an "escape" ride in his vehicle.  If convicted, Mr. Thanathorn
	faces up to nine years imprisonment.
	
	He is also accused of election violations involving his previous media
	investments, and could lose his House seat.
	
	Mr. Thanathorn denied all accusations of wrongdoing.
	
	"Regime supporters have been resorting to witch-hunting...often
	accusing opponents of being disloyal to the monarchy and chastising
	them to 'go live in another country if you're not happy with
	Thailand'," wrote Bangkok Post columnist Wasant Techawongtham.
	
	Meanwhile, both Mr. Prayuth and Mr. Thanathorn face cases in the
	Constitutional Court, which could disqualify them from power.
	
	More than 100 opposition Parliament members petitioned the court to
	declare Mr. Prayuth unfit as a prime ministerial candidate because he
	was simultaneously a "state official" in the junta's ruling and
	now-defunct National Council for Peace and Order.
	
	Mr. Thanathorn and his Future Forward party Secretary-General Piyabutr
	Saengkanokkul are fighting in the court against allegations that they
	attempted to overthrow the constitutional monarchy.  The two denied
	those charges.
	
	The court allowed Mr. Prayuth to remain in power while he contests his
	case but barred Mr. Thanathorn from taking his Parliament seat because
	of the separate case involving an alleged financial conflict of
	interest.
	
	The polls on March 24 allowed only the House of Representative's 500
	seats to be elected.
	
	Mr. Prayuth's junta appointed the 250-seat Senate, including 101 army
	and police senior officers.
	
	Mr. Prayuth's brother, Mr. Prawit's brother, and the brother of Deputy
	Prime Minister Wissanu Krea-ngam are among those 101. The head of the
	army, navy, air force and national police were also appointed
	senators.
	
	On June 6, by combining elected pro-Prayuth candidates in the House
	and adding the Senate seats, Mr. Prayuth won 500 while Mr. Thanathorn
	scored 244.
	
	Mr. Prayuth's four-year term may be cut short by rivalries within his
	coalition and resistance to his policies by opposition House members.
	
	"Even though the new government can be established, it might not be
	able to stay in power for a long time, given the cohesiveness of the
	newly established 19-party coalition government," said World Bank
	Senior Economist for Thailand Kiatipong Ariyapruchya.
	
	"It's a key risk factor for the Thai economic outlook."
	
	Thailand's top forensic investigator, appointed Senator Porntip
	Rojanasunan, used her knowledge of fatal diseases and corpses while
	supporting Mr. Prayuth on her Facebook page:
	
	"Good governance will drive the country forward. Any finger which is
	bad must not be saved. If the situation is left unchecked, the disease
	will spread to the other fingers which may lead to death."
	
	***
	
	Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based American correspondent reporting
	from Asia since 1978.
Richard S. Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist from San Francisco, California, reporting news from Asia since 1978, and recipient of Columbia University's Foreign Correspondent's Award. He is a co-author of three non-fiction books about Thailand, including "Hello My Big Big Honey!" Love Letters to Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews; 60 Stories of Royal Lineage; and Chronicle of Thailand: Headline News Since 1946. Mr. Ehrlich also contributed to the final chapter, Ceremonies and Regalia, in a new book titled King Bhumibol Adulyadej, A Life's Work: Thailand's Monarchy in Perspective.