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Opinion       
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STOPPAGE  TIME
Now, can Abhisit live  without Hun Sen?

Published on  November 18, 2009 

AS FAR as Prime Minister Abhisit  Vejjajiva is concerned, the good news is 
that Hun Sen and Thaksin  Shinawatra have been a big help in making the past 
few days arguably  the Democrat leader's best spell at the country's helm. 
The bad news  is, this politically lucrative saga with Cambodia cannot last  
forever. 

Knowing Thaksin, a big marketing promotion must be  in store to offset the 
Cambodian setback. So, don't be surprised if  the Thai "spy" now in Phnom 
Penh's custody is to be released thanks  to an intervention from, ahem, a hero 
in Dubai. 
Siwarak Chotipong is in a peculiar situation. The  longer he stays in the 
Cambodian jail, the more it reflects poorly  on the very man Hun Sen has gone 
so far out of his way to help. On  the other hand, his quick release will 
ease the diplomatic tension,  and while this will relieve Abhisit, it won't 
benefit him as much  politically.  
Like Thaksin, the Pheu Thai Party must not want the  Siwarak affair to drag 
on. For the first time since the 2006 coup,  it is now a "real" political 
force, one that is not hounded by  threats of party dissolution or other 
legal roadblocks. The  Thai-Cambodian conflict is arguably Pheu Thai's softest 
spot now,  and the sooner the problem is solved, the better.  
We will see Thaksin switching back to parliamentary  games. Pheu Thai will 
certainly launch a censure attack at the very  first opportunity early next 
year. Rumours that government coalition  MPs will break ranks to vote with 
the opposition at the end of the  no-confidence debate are likely to get 
louder in the next few weeks.   
Regarding Cambodia, Pheu Thai's strategy is "no  strategy". Party sources 
admit that Hun Sen's aggression has  backfired, but they insist that in terms 
of political damage, it's  nothing a little time won't fix. The party will 
lie low - hoping  that Hun Sen will calm down and there will be no 
torch-wielding mobs  heading toward the Thai Embassy - and come out all guns 
blazing  
after the year's end.  
Despite Hun Sen, Pheu Thai will likely still win an  election if it's held 
in the next six months, although the margin of  victory may not be as large 
as it could have been without the Phnom  Penh fiasco. In the current 
political context, this means a lot. A  victorious Pheu Thai not threatened by 
legal booby traps is  something the Democrats and all other Thaksin opponents 
have never  dealt with before.  
The question is how patient can Pheu Thai be? Or, to  be more exact, how 
patient can Thaksin be, especially when the move  to seize his confiscated 
billions is making quick progress and may  be concluded before the next 
election is held? We all know what can  happen if Thaksin loses his cool. 
Thailand 
nearly had a civil war in  April, and almost severed ties with its neighbour 
just a week ago.   
Pheu Thai can play a waiting game and in the process  wear down any 
negative ramifications of the Thai-Cambodian row.  Their opponents are running 
out 
of legal weapons, and the smartest  idea is to try to keep it that way and 
bide time. That is probably  easier than controlling a potential loose cannon 
in Chavalit  Yongchaiyudh.  
Which brings us to Pheu Thai's biggest, unsolved  problem: The desperate 
absence of a genuine prime ministerial  contender. We are approaching the 
first anniversary of the  Suvarnabhumi Airport blockade and events that left 
the 
pro-Thaksin  camp exposed over this, but little has changed since. The 
party has  had to rely on Chalerm Yoobamrung as its most charismatic figure,  
until Chavalit was dragged out of virtual retirement to wreak havoc.   
While Thaksin has not yet become a Pheu Thai  liability, Chavalit is by no 
means a party asset, and that's putting  it mildly. A Thaksin of one or two 
years ago might have been able to  paper over Chavalit's numerous drawbacks, 
but both men's disastrous  stunts in Phnom Penh can only mean each will be 
better off on his  own.  
With lessons regarding Samak Sundaravej and Somchai  Wongsawat still fresh, 
it will require political naivety of the  highest order for Pheu Thai to 
risk everything on Chavalit. Whether  his Cambodian antics were impeachable is 
debatable, but that doesn't  mean nobody will give it a shot.  
Abhisit, however, will find that no matter how rocky  Pheu Thai's road 
still appears, early next year could be the most  thrilling time yet as prime 
minister. And, most ironically perhaps,  when a headless yet legally 
unshackled Pheu Thai throws everything  at him in a censure debate, he may 
think of 
one Hun Sen and all the  things he could have done to ease his trouble.  
 
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November 18, 2009 01:19 am (Thai local  time)
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