Japan mum as Cambodia invites China warships for drill on heels of MSDF port call
Reuters / Japan Times | 18 February 2016
PHNOM PENH – China will hold its
first-ever exercise with Cambodia’s navy next week, in swift succession
to a visit by the military vessels of Beijing’s old enemy Japan, the
latest sign of China’s growing presence in a region where maritime
tension is rising.
Three warships carrying 737 Chinese sailors will dock on Monday at a
port in Preah Sihanouk province, just over a day after the scheduled
departure of three vessels of the Maritime Self-Defense Force now
holding cultural exchanges with Cambodian navy personnel.
While attention focuses on China’s activities in the East and South
China Seas, Beijing has been busy strengthening defense and economic
ties with Cambodia, from which it is increasing receiving political
support, particularly within the Association of South East Asian Nations
(ASEAN) grouping.
The visit by the warships comes amid regional jitters over China’s
deployment of surface-to-air missiles to a disputed South China Sea
island it controls, which Beijing said on Wednesday were “necessary
self-defense facilities.The Chinese navy will conduct a rescue exercise
for just a few hours, close to where the Japanese are now docked.
“This will be a big cooperation and joint exercise training in rescue operations,” Cambodia’s deputy navy chief, Vice Adm. Vann Bunneang, told Reuters. “This is to boost readiness for when boats sink and natural disasters occur.”
China jointly runs a military academy in Cambodia and has been
supplying its armed forces with helicopters, shoulder-fired rockets and
vehicles, while sending cadets to China for training.
Analysts say the United States is concerned about Cambodia becoming a
vassal state that could do Beijing’s regional bidding in the
consensus-led ASEAN, a notion Phnom Penh rejects.
Washington has sought to keep Cambodia onside with its own military
exercises, despite friction over the country’s poor human rights record.
In November it held a sixth search and rescue drill involving 200 U.S.
and 300 Cambodian sailors.
Asked about China’s exercises, the Japanese Embassy in Cambodia said
in a statement it would not comment on the activities of a third
country.
Visits by Japanese and Chinese ships showed competition for influence
and Cambodia should be cautious in managing its future ties, said Ou
Virak of the Future Forum think tank.
“The question is actually how to deal with this when Japan wants a
piece of influence, while China tries to do as much as they can, both
financially and militarily,” he said.
“We need to be very careful, we need to balance relationships with all of them and eventually, we need to be self-reliant.”
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