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Chief of Defence Forces (Thailand)
Senior appointment in the armed forces of Thailand
Senior appointment in the armed forces of Thailand
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| post | Chief of Defence Forces |
| native_name | ผู้บัญชาการทหารสูงสุด |
| flag | Flag of the Chief of the Defence Forces of Thailand.svg |
| flagcaption | Flag of the Chief of Defence Forces |
| imagesize | 200px |
| incumbent | General Ukris Boontanondha |
| incumbentsince | 1 October 2025 |
| member_of | Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters |
| department | Ministry of Defence |
| reports_to | Minister of Defence |
| seat | Lak Si, Bangkok |
| nominator | Minister of Defence |
| appointer | King of Thailand |
| formation | 13 November 1940 |
| first | Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram |
| website |
The Chief of Defence Forces, previously known as the Supreme Commander, (, RTGS: Phu Bancha Kan Thahan Sung Sut) is the overall field commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces. He is also in charge of managing the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters. Not to be confused with the ceremonial Highest Commander of the Royal Thai Armed Forces who is the constitutional monarch of Thailand.
Prior to 1960 the post was an ad hoc creation by Field Marshal Plaek Phibunsongkhram, during World War II. However, under Field Marshal Sarit Thanarat the position became permanent, and in its early life was even combined with the post of Prime Minister of Thailand. In February 2008 the English name of the post was changed from Supreme Commander to Chief of Defence Forces with the reorganization of the Supreme Command Headquarters into the Royal Thai Armed Forces Headquarters (though the Thai term remained the same).
The enactment of 1997 Constitution of Thailand on 11 October 1997 prohibits double-hatting of this position and each service branch commander-in-chief, the general officer appointed to the Chief of Defence Forces after the date acts more like a coordinator between three military branches. Still, he commands smaller military force than the Army, the Navy, or the Air Force has. So, the position is usually reserved for senior army generals who will not be appointed as the Commander-in-Chief of the Royal Thai Army and will retire on the same year with the latter. It is customary to appoint the chief of defence to four-star rank in all three branches in the Armed Forces for inspection of other branches of the Armed Forces.
List of chiefs
Supreme Commanders (1941−2008)
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Chiefs of Defence Forces (2008−present)
References
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