Army chief General Prayuth Chan-ocha ousted the government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra on May 22 to end months of protests that had depressed Southeast Asia's second-biggest economy and raised fears of enduring chaos.
"It is the council's intention to create the right conditions ... to put Thailand on the path to free and fair elections," Lieutenant General Chatchalerm Chalermsukh, deputy army chief of staff, told reporters, referring to the junta.
Thailand has become polarised between supporters of Yingluck and her influential brother, deposed premier Thaksin Shinawatra, and the royalist establishment that sees Thaksin and his pro-business, populist ways as a threat to the old order.
Chatchalerm did not elaborate on what conditions were needed for an election, but said the military wanted to see reconciliation and an end to the political rift that emerged after Thaksin won his first election in 2001.
"I want to ask you how long it takes to heal divisions between two groups that have been going on for 10 years?" Chatchalerm said.
"The two sides do not have to love each other, but we want the situation to stay calm and peaceful. We need a period of time for all sides to cool down."
The United States and other allies have criticised the coup and called for a quick return to democracy.
Chatchalerm said the army had been forced to step in because of six months of debilitating anti-government protests, organised by a pro-establishment politician, Suthep Thaugsuban.
"Administrative paralysis has been devastating for Thailand. It put a strain on Thailand's GDP which became negative for the first time in many years," he said.
Gross domestic product shrank 2.1 percent in the first quarter of 2014, as the anti-government protesters damaged confidence and scared off tourists.
Data on Wednesday showed Thailand's trade shrank in April and factory output fell for the 13th straight month, underscoring the tough job the military government faces in averting recession.
Navy commander Admiral Narong Pipattanasai, the junta member overseeing tourism, told reporters 26 million people were expected to visit this year, down from a targeted 28 million, because of the unrest.
The military has moved quickly to tackle economic problems, notably preparing payments for hundreds of thousands of rice farmers that the ousted government was unable to make.
POWERFUL FIGURES
General Prayuth met a team of advisers for the first time on Thursday to map out a strategy for securing the country and propping up the stumbling economy.
Among his advisers are two powerful establishment figures hostile towards Thaksin, who remains central to the political turmoil despite being ousted in a 2006 coup and now living in self-exile.
The two, a former defence minister, General Prawit Wongsuwan, and former army chief General Anupong Paochinda, have close ties to Prayuth. All three are staunch monarchists and helped overthrow Thaksin in 2006.
It is not clear what powers Prayuth's advisers will have, but their appointment would suggest little prospect of compromise with the Shinawatras.
Since seizing power the military has detained 200 or more people, although most have now been freed, including Yingluck, Suthep and leaders of pro-Thaksin "red shirt" activists.
Those released have to tell the military of their whereabouts and travel plans and have promised not to organise demonstrations, a military spokesman said.
Despite martial law and a ban on gatherings, small protests against the military takeover have been held daily in Bangkok. They have been rowdy at times but there has been no serious violence.
Soldiers blocked off roads to central Bangkok's Victory Monument protest site on Thursday, preventing a gathering although media said soldiers took away a foreign man who held a T-shirt bearing the message "peace please".
Several dozen students briefly rallied against the coup at Thammasat University, according to social media posts. Some people have staged silent protests by reading in public George Orwell's "Nineteen Eighty-Four", a novel about living under totalitarianism.
The military has warned about the spread of what it calls provocative information on social media and on Wednesday Thai Facebook users were shocked when the site went down.
The Information Communications Technology Ministry said it had blocked access at the request of the military to halt online criticism. But the site quickly came back up and a military spokeswoman blamed the interruption on a gateway glitch.
Thailand will send officials to Singapore and Japan in coming days to seek tighter censorship of social media from Facebook, Google Inc and instant messenger service Line, a government spokesman said.
(Writing by Robert Birsel; Editing by Alan Raybould, Alex Richardson and Nick Macfie)
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