Japanese, Chinese Navies to Visit Cambodia Days Apart
Cambodia Daily | 12 February 2016
The final two weeks of February will feature visits to Sihanoukville
from both the Japanese and Chinese navies to conduct goodwill and
training exercises, as the two powers vie for influence and allies in
Southeast Asia amid increasing Asian nautical tensions.
Meas Thang, spokesman for the Cambodian navy, said the Japanese visit
would focus on providing medical care and building houses in seaside
communities alongside Cambodian navy personnel.
He said a Chinese navy delegation would visit Cambodia shortly afterward, marking the first such visit.
“After we finish with Japan, the Chinese navy will visit us for
training on how to rescue people from natural disasters at sea,” he
said. “This training will come at the end of this month and will involve
many Chinese experts.”
Carlyle Thayer, emeritus professor at the Australian Defense Forces
Academy, said that in light of tensions between Japan and China over a
disputed chain of islands in the East China Sea, in addition to ongoing
maritime disputes between China and several Southeast Asian nations, it
was natural to see both countries seek to “woo” Cambodia.
He said the first step in any naval relationship was simple
non-combat training exercises such as those planned for this month,
which provide a framework for more complex joint naval exercises in the
future.
“It’s a standard part of engagement, a courtship,” Mr. Thayer explained. “You start with a walk on the beach, holding hands.”
In addition to the two East Asian powers, the Indian navy conducted
search and rescue training exercises here in June, and the U.S.
conducted its sixth joint naval exercises with Cambodia in November.
“We are seeing an increase in major power rivalry in the region,” Mr. Thayer said.
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