วันศุกร์ที่ 12 กันยายน พ.ศ. 2557

King Rama IV and Thailand’s Foreign Policy




The policy of balance of power was followed by King Mongkut (Rama IV), who reigned from 1851 to 1868. 

King Mongkut succeeded in conduction a foreign policy for maintaining Thailand’s independence. As such, his skillful diplomacy  is worth studying  for, as Hall has observed, “ It is perhaps not too much to say that Siam owed much to Mongkut more than anyone else the fact that she preserved her independence when by the end of the Nineteenth Century all the other states of South-East Asia had come under European control.”

At the beginning of King Mongkut’s reign, the Thais increasingly feared that their very existence as a nation was at stake.

British imperial expansionism was in full flood. The Thais had no way of knowing that the British in Burma would not expand eastward beyond the Burmese border.

In 1852, the year following King Mongkut’s assumption of the crown, the British started their second Burma War by which they annexed Pegu.

Dictated by his fear of Great Britain, King Mongkut took an initiative to appease the British. In 1855, in line with this policy of appeasement, the king concluded a treaty of friendship and commerce with Great Britain, through which Thailand lost its judicial freedom.

British consular jurisdiction was established in Bangkok and thereby extra-territoriality descended upon Thailand for the first time in its modern history.

The treaty also prescribed an import and export tariff which gave Great Britain greater security for freedom of commerce.

King Mongkut’s  Policy to give commercial and judicial concessions was based on fear rather than on respect and admiration.

The king and his advisers regarded the English as” rapacious tyrants who were seizing on the whole of Asia.” 

They granted such concessions not because they liked the English, but because they feared them. To prevent the English from making further demands, King Mongkut showed the same astuteness as his brother, King Rama III, in conducting a policy of seeking balance and counterweight in foreign associations.

He approached the United States and France, whose naval capability was believed to match that of Great Britain.

In 1856 King Mongkut signed a treaty of friendship and commerce with both the United States and France.

Before signing the treaty with the United States, the makers of foreign policy in Bangkok were impressed with the American attitude towards Thailand.

Townsend Harris, who was sent to Thailand to conclude this treaty, stated the good feeling of the United States government towards Thailand and its general desire only for justice and mutually beneficial relations.

Ruling out any American desire for territorial concession from Thailand, Harris contrasted his country’s policy with that of Great Britain.

 The Thai rulers were told that the United States had no colony in the East, nor did it desire any. The form of the American government, Harris stated, forbade the holding of colonies. His mission to Thailand was assigned solely for establishing a commercial relationship.

 Satisfied with this American attitude, the Thai Prime Minister(Phra Kalahom), in his diplomatic initiative to use the United States to counter-balance Great Britain, stated  that ” We love the Americans, for they have never done us or any one else in the East any injury.”

The Americans, he further appreciated, were not seeking conquest in the East, and American missionaries had been of vast value to the Thais, teaching many valuable arts.

While admiring and respecting the American, Phra Khlang, the Thai Minister of Commerce and Foreign Affairs, proposed to Harris that”…we would like to have an article in the treaty providing that in case of any trouble with any western power(Great Britain) the United States would act as umpire.”

But Phra Khlang’s demand for such political commitment from the United States met with a negative response.

Harris thanked him for the proposal and assured him that no such provision would be necessary because the United States felt it an obligation of friendship to comply with any such request.

Harris’ reluctant attitude led the Thais to conclude a Thai-American treaty, in which the Thais made concessions to the Americans similar to those made to the British.

Thailand then turned to France, whose envoy, M. de Montigny, was waiting at the mouth of the Chao Phraya River for the departure of the American envoy.

Prior to the arrival of the French mission, Thailand had already shown a disposition to negotiate a commercial treaty with France at the close of 1851.

The government of France, accordingly, empowered Admiral Lapierre, who commanded the naval station of Reunion Island and Indo-China, to treat with the government of Thailand on the basis of the most-favored nation, being guided by commercial treaties already negotiated with Cochin-China and Muscat.

Lapierre never fulfilled his mission, however, because war with Russia intervened before he could visit Bangkok. ]

France then waited until 1856. In this year Montigny was commissioned to visit Bangkok and to negotiate a treaty. His mission also included a visit to Cambodia and Annam.

In making an approach to France, the Thais knew very well that the French mixed commercial and religious with political interests in the Far East.

To accommodate the French commercial interests, the Thais signed a treaty of trade and commerce, the provisions of which were similar to those obtained by the United States and Great Britain.

As Montigny’s mission to Thailand was bound up with the activities of French missionaries in that area, the Thais gave considerable freedom to French missionaries to carry on their work in Thailand.

In the course of negotiations with the French envoy, the Thais went so far as to prefer France for a neighbor.

To this end, they proposed that Thailand would cede the island of Koh Door (Pulo Condore) to France.

For his part, the French envoy took advantage of the Thai desire to use French power to counteract that of Great Britain by putting a French counter-proposal that Thailand, who feared Britain, should accept a French protectorate.

To this counter-proposal the Thais did not agree. In reference to this episode of Franco-Thai negotiations, King Mongkut, in a long letter of March 4, 1867 to the head of the embassy that he had dispatched to Paris, wrote:

When Montigny came here he tried to turn Siam into a French protectorate by seduction, using as his argument the dangers of British domination. The Siamese were not to be easily seduced, however, and he spent some time here employing various method of allurement.

Fear of the English did not drive King Mongkut more closely into the arms of the French. The king tried his utmost to avoid being dependent  solely on France.

Instead, he made further attempts to attract the attention of other European powers and signed treaties of friendship and commerce with them.

These powers included Denmark, Portugal,  Holland, Prussia, Belgium, Italy, Norway and Sweden.

Before the end of King Mongkut’s reign, France constituted the most threat to Thailand’s security. French imperialism accentuated the threat coming from the east,” for in building her empire France had behaved towards Siam much as a powerful Vietnamese emperor might have done and had made the same demands.”

In 1862 France concluded a treaty with King of Vietnam(Annan), which ceded Cochin-China. It began to extend into Cambodia, which had long been a subject of contention between Thailand and Vietnam.

After the defeat of Vietnam, the French put forward the theory that they were the heirs to Vietnamese claims.

In 1863, the French concluded a treaty with the King of Cambodia by which he recognized French suzerainty.

From the Thai point of view, this treaty was  exacted by force and against the wishes of both Cambodia and Thailand.

In the wake of this French aggression in the east, King Mongkut found it difficult to maintain Thailand’s long-standing political and strategic interests in Cambodia.

In the west, Thailand still faced  Great Britain as a threatening power. Under these circumstances, King Mongkut dared not try to play off Great Britain against France for fear that it would provide Great Britain with a good change to colonize Thailand.

The king then had two choices, either to directly negotiate with France or to demand assistance from Great Britain at the risk of the loss of Thailand’s independence.

Referring to these two choices, the king, in consultation with his diplomats in Paris, wrote in this manner: “…it is for us to decide what we are going to do; whether to swim up-river to make friends with the crocodile(France) or swim out to sea and hang on to the whale(Great Britain)…”

 With strong pressure diplomatically and militarily from France, the King finally made the first choice. In 1867 he agreed to a treaty whereby Thailand gave up its rights in Cambodia in return for French recognition of Thailand’s control of two Cambodian provinces of Siemreap and Battambang.

These two provinces, though nominally Cambodian territory, had in fact been in Thai hands since 1795.

Hesitating to employ the tactic of playing off Great Britain against France, the King felt it necessary to sacrifice Thailand’s former power and influence over Cambodia for the sake of its independence or ” to keep ourselves within our house and home”’ in his own words.

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