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On October 5th, the Disaster Prevention and Mitigation Department of Thailand issued a notice: Due to continuous heavy rainfall and floods, 16 provinces across the country have been affected, resulting in 12 unfortunate deaths, 3 missing and more than 340,000 people affected.

The 16 districts affected by the disaster are not randomly distributed, the northern Qingdao is the headquarters of the Thai Army's 3rd Military District, the eastern Rohingya is located in Thailand's largest deep-water port, and the central Suko Tae controls the southern and northern traffic arteries.

Thailand adopts a balanced strategy: accepting technical guidance from U.S. military engineers, but using disaster relief equipment provided by China; welcoming hydrological experts from Japan’s International Cooperation Agency, but rejecting Australian observers.

It's not just farmland that floods flood. The suspension of auto parts factory in Ayutthaya affects Japan's Toyota global supply chain; Closure of petrochemical park in Rayong causes volatile oil prices in Singapore; The paralysis of Pattaya's tourism industry has caused a daily loss of 30 million dollars in Thailand's service industry.

This economic shock will eventually feed back to the defense budget. Thailand’s military spending was expected to grow by 7% in 2026, but the post-catastrophe reconstruction needs to be drawn up, potentially compromising the scale of equipment procurement.

The Thai army showed rare efficiency in this disaster relief. The newly established digital command platform realizes real-time visualization of disaster situation; The Pterosaur-2 UAV imported from China has completed 200 precise deliveries; Even amphibious armored vehicles just received from South Korea were used.

The disaster relief application of these advanced equipment has objectively tested the achievements of the Thai military's modernization. In particular, digital command capabilities are designed for modern battlefields, but they play a miraculous role in disaster management.

The disaster relief network of Thai monasteries is amazing. Dharma Temple dispatched 3,000 monks to participate in the rescue, and its organizational efficiency surpassed that of the government system; Suthep Temple in Chiang Mai used the network of believers to raise 200 million baht of materials within 48 hours. This social mobilization ability is actually an integral part of national resilience.

What is more profound is the cultural dimension. The Buddhist concept of "mercy for the world" has made monk soldiers a special disaster relief force. This combination of religion and security is Thailand's unique security model.

King Vajiralongkorn made a rare speech to the country and announced a donation of 500 million baht for disaster relief. This symbolic action strengthens the role of the monarchy as a national stabilizer. More substantively, the royal-led disaster relief fund avoids the bureaucratic system and directly allocates funds to the affected people.

Historical experience has shown that after every major disaster in Thailand, the royal prestige increases.This political effect leads disaster relief beyond the mere humanitarian sphere.

Thailand and Laos and Cambodia have launched the "Joint Mechanism for Disaster Response to the Mekong River", and the troops of the three countries have established hotline connections and shared hydrological data.

Especially in the context of the conflict in Northern Myanmar, Thailand and Cambodia silently strengthened border control coordination through disaster relief cooperation.This model of "disaster-promote reconciliation" could become a new regional security paradigm.

The hydrological monitoring data provided by the U.S. National Oceanic Administration, with an accuracy of up to cm, can clearly show the changes in the Mekong River water level.

The cloud map of China's Fengyun-4 meteorological satellite can not only predict rainfall, but also analyze surface vegetation changes and indirectly judge human activities in border areas. This kind of "multiple uses of one number" reflects the intelligence characteristics of non-traditional security.

Thailand’s major disaster insurance coverage involves international agencies such as Munich Reinsurance. Reimbursement assessment requires foreign investigators to enter military sensitive areas, and this open practice brings security risks. The Thai military has to send personnel to accompany the entire journey, both protecting security and preventing reconnaissance.

What is more far-reaching is the impact of insurance clauses. Reinsurance companies require Thailand to improve infrastructure as a condition for renewal, which indirectly promotes national defense construction. The shaping of national security by this market force is a new phenomenon in the era of globalization.

The Thai government strictly controls disaster reporting and prohibits filming of damage to military facilities. On the surface, this kind of information control is to maintain stability, but in fact it is to prevent external forces from taking advantage of the disaster to create chaos.

In particular, false information on social media, such as exaggerating the death toll and forging videos of the military's ineffective disaster relief, has been confirmed to be manipulated by foreign forces. This kind of cognitive domain operations makes natural disasters a new carrier of hybrid warfare.

Whether the typhoon season will intensify in late October, whether the King’s birthday will be celebrated as scheduled in November, and whether the tourist season in December will be resumed, these nodes will test Thailand’s resistance to disasters.

In particular, the US-Thailand "Cobra Golden" joint military exercise requires the mobilization of tens of thousands of troops. If the disaster area does not recover, it may be forced to reduce its scale. This squeeze of non-traditional security on traditional security will become the new normal.

Floods in Thailand warn us that when sea level rise becomes a more real danger than missile threats, and when extreme weather occurs more frequently than military invasions, the connotation of national security is being profoundly reconstructed. The army must not only prepare for war, but also learn to live with natural crises.

This paradigm shift requires countries to establish a "all-disaster" national security concept. Thailand's experience shows that the strongest national defense is a resilient system that can protect its citizens from any threat.

The flood report in Thailand, on the surface, is a natural disaster news, in fact, the abbreviation of the era of non-traditional security.When the flood peaks become a more terrifying enemy than tanks, when disaster rescue capabilities can measure the power of the country more than missiles precision, humanity is entering a new era of security definition.

The most profound revelation of this disaster is that true national security is not only the ability to resist foreign invasion, but also the commitment to protect every citizen from the threat of the climate crisis.

Source: Rainfall and floods in many places in Thailand killed 12 people
2025-10-05 13:13·Guangming Net


News raw data sources → https://www.toutiao.com/w/1845230189373448

17WorldNews[2025.10.06-19:58] 访问:30
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