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BANGKOK, Thailand -- President Donald Trump may strengthen
	Washington's support for Bangkok's military government after sending
	the head of the U.S. Pacific Command to open a 10-day Cobra Gold
	military exercise on Valentine's Day, the highest-level officer to
	arrive since Thailand's 2014 coup.
	   But Mr. Trump's silence on U.S.-Thailand relations has analysts
	wondering if he will follow through, or risk allowing Bangkok to drift
	closer to Beijing.
	   The Trump administration's focus in the Asia-Pacific region
	includes Beijing's territorial claims in the South China Sea, Taiwan's
	separate status from China, North Korea's nuclear ambitions, and the
	spread of Islamic terrorism.
	   "A Trump administration, less concerned with issues of human
	rights, could see a return to full American engagement, but at this
	point, Trump's approach to Asia is unclear and contradictory at best,"
	former Canadian ambassador to Thailand Phil Calvert said on February 7
	in "A Diplomat's Assessment" published by the Canadian International
	Council.
	   "Given the long history of cooperation and the key strategic role
	of Thailand in the Pacific, it is unlikely that Thailand would have a
	major break with the U.S.," Mr. Calvert said.
	   "Foreign policy was limited and largely incoherent in Trump's
	election campaign, characterized by an isolationism both anachronistic
	and ill-advised," said Benjamin Zawacki in a recent opinion piece.
	   "Thailand [was] not even mentioned," said Mr. Zawacki, author of a
	forthcoming book titled, "Thailand: Shifting Ground Between the U.S.
	and a Rising China."
	   The February 14-24 Cobra Gold will stage an amphibious assault
	along the gulf near Bangkok, evacuation of non-combatants from
	multiple locations, and live firing of combined weaponry.
	   Cobra Gold drills began on Thai soil in 1982. It is the largest
	multilateral military exercise in Asia.
	   "There will be up to 29 nations either directly participating in,
	or observing, Cobra Gold 2017 with approximately 3,600 U.S. personnel
	directly participating in the various events both ashore and afloat,"
	the U.S. Embassy in Thailand announced.
	   Washington shrank Cobra Gold from 7,000 U.S. personnel to 3,600 in
	2015 after the Thai military seized power in a bloodless 2014 coup by
	toppling an elected government.
	   Washington also stopped $4.7 million in security assistance,
	training and other military aid.
	   Pacific Command's [PACOM's] Adm. Harry Harris's arrival "would send
	a strong signal to the international community that the U.S. remains
	engaged strategically in the region as before," wrote Kavi
	Chongkittavorn, a columnist at Thailand's Nation news.
	   "Trump and his foreign policy team have made contradictory remarks
	on the future of U.S. foreign agenda in Asia, generating lots of
	anxieties among regional leaders," Mr. Kavi said.
	   Adm. Harris's opening of Cobra Gold "is clearly a further step
	toward a renormalization of the security relationship," said Gregory
	Poling, an Asia expert with the Washington-based Center for Strategic
	and International Studies.
	   "I think what PACOM is trying to do is send a message that we want
	to get over this hump," Mr. Poling said according to Stars and
	Stripes, a news outlet authorized by the U.S. Department of Defence.
	   "It is not common for an officer of Adm. Harris's rank to attend
	these sorts of events," Gen. Thanchaiyan Srisuwan, head of Thailand's
	Joint Chiefs of Staff, told Reuters.
	   "It is a good signal for Thai-American relations, and shows that
	the U.S. has given importance to this region and this exercise," Gen.
	Thanchaiyan said.
	   Adm. Harris's visit comes after Gen. Chalermchai Sittisart's
	promotion in September to be the new army commander-in-chief, a
	powerful position which sometimes leads to becoming prime minister.
	   Gen. Chalermchai received military training in America.
	   "If we exercise our authority justly, the people will eventually
	accept us," Gen. Chalermchai said in a speech to Thai troops on
	February 7.
	   The army "will become a main pillar supporting government efforts
	to run the country," he told the 1st Army which participated in past
	and recent coups.
	   Thailand is a U.S. treaty ally. But after the 2014 putsch, the
	junta dramatically improved relations with China and Russia.
	   Meanwhile, relations with the U.S. zigzagged whenever the
	Washington criticized the regime's lack of human rights and political
	freedom or called for fresh elections.
	   During the past year however Washington's public statements
	appeared less frequently, with U.S. Ambassador Glyn Davies tweeting
	enthusiastic updates about meeting Thai officials.
	   The envoy is a foreign service career diplomat and is expected to
	remain in place under President Trump.
	   Competitive weapons sales to Thailand are also a U.S. concern.
	   The junta recently backed away from buying more U.S.-made Black
	Hawk helicopters and now prefers Russian MI-17 helicopters, the
	Bangkok Post reported.
	   Purchases of Chinese tanks and submarines are also planned.
	   In 2015, the first-ever joint air exercise by China and Thailand
	included 180 Chinese officers and top pilots at a Thai base in Korat,
	used by the U.S. Air Force to bomb Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia during
	the Vietnam War.
	   Minority ethnic Malay-Thai Muslim separatists in three southern
	provinces continue to pose a danger to this Buddhist-majority
	country's armed forces.
	   More than 6,000 people on all sides have died in the conflict since
	2004, which the army struggles to contain.
	   "The conflict in Thailand's south does not have a military
	solution, but governments are slow or reluctant to realize this," Mr.
	Calvert said.
	   Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who led the 2014 when he was army
	chief, sent a congratulatory message to President Trump on January 20.
	   "Your victory is remarkable and clear evidence that the American
	people have placed their trust and confidence in you to lead the
	country forward," Mr. Prayuth said in his message, emphasizing more
	than 180 years of relations shared by the two countries.
	   Mr. Prayuth often expresses anger during news conferences and
	castigates reporters, so when asked if he and Mr. Trump had similarly
	blunt personalities, Mr. Prayuth replied:
	   "I don’t know. Is that good or not? I'm not a politician.
	   "Sometimes I speak too sincerely and might not be polite, but I
	actually never hold grudges against anyone," Mr. Prayuth told
	journalists.
	   "I could be angry again, but it's my own personality."
	   President Trump and Mr. Prayuth apparently have not talked by
	telephone, one senior Thai official said.
	   "I asked my colleagues and they said, 'Not yet. They haven't talked
	yet.'  I have no idea why not.
	   "We might not be on the top of their priority," he said, asking not
	to be identified because he was not authorized to discuss the issue.
	   Thai government officials heard that Rex Tillerson was "a
	businessman" and are interested in how he will direct the State
	Department, he said.
	   "I do not have any information to share on the issues," about a
	Trump-Prayuth phone call or Mr. Tillerson's previous work in Thailand,
	a U.S. Embassy spokeswoman said.
	   Thai media reported Mr. Tillerson was president of Esso Exploration
	and Production Korat in northeast Thailand from 1995-98.
	   Exxon Mobil Corp. is the parent of Esso, Mobil and ExxonMobil companies.
	   He "oversaw the Thai exploration and production unit of Esso in
	Khon Kaen province. The unit operated a small natural gas field," The
	Nation news reported.
	   "He was not permanently posted in Thailand. Instead, he made trips
	from the United States."
	   When Mr. Tillerson later became ExxonMobil Corp.'s chief executive,
	he "visited the Thai operation in 2012," the report said.
	   "ExxonMobil has had a business presence in Thailand for more than
	120 years," Exxon said on its website.
	   "We have a full range of downstream operations including a refinery
	and chemical manufacturing at Sriracha, a network of distribution
	terminals and service stations along with a strong lubricants
	presence. We also operate an onshore natural gas production site in
	the Nam Phong district, Khon Kaen province.
	   "In addition, we have a Business Support Center in Bangkok that
	provides accounting, human resources, information technology, retail
	operations, procurement, treasury, card operations, taxes and customer
	services to various ExxonMobil affiliates around the world."
