Cambodia’s Hun Sen paints a bull’s-eye on his own back
Asia Times | 29 july 2016
By supporting Beijing on South
China Sea matters at the recent ASEAN meeting in Laos and allegedly
assassinating a harsh critic of his regime Kem Ley, it looks like Cambodian
Prime Minister Hun Sen painted a bull’s eye on his own back. But it will
take a year or two to find out if his opponents can hit the mark.
At the ASEAN Foreign Ministers’
Conference in Laos on July 24, Cambodia’s intransigence on behalf of the PRC
(China) in matters South China Sea was not as big an issue as it usually is.

Cambodia’s Prime Minister Hun Sen gestures as he arrives for a family photo with other leaders during the Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) summit just outside Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, July 16, 2016. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj
The Philippine delegation of
the new Duterte administration was apparently not very interested in provoking
the PRC ahead of the upcoming bilateral discussions on the South China Sea, so
the group eventually came together around a toothless communiquethat
failed to invoke the UNCLOS arbitration ruling, thereby pleasing the PRC and
advocates of ASEAN consensus, while evoking the scorn of China hawks in the
region and around the world.
I think the US is reasonably
satisfied with the current state of play regarding the South China Sea and is
in a holding pattern until Hillary Clinton and her team of China hawks enter
the White House in February 2017.
Nevertheless, impatience with
Cambodia is getting pretty pronounced, especially in pivot strongholds
Australia and Japan.
Prime Minister Abe went in
strong on Cambodia to support The Hague ruling and the Japanese
press chose to play Hun Sen’s irritated refusal as an unexpected rebuff.
I suspect that nobody seriously expected Hun Sen to ditch the PRC for Japan,
and Abe’s intention was to show Vietnam that Japan was firmly in its corner to
the point that it would happily and openly provoke Cambodia.
In Australia, China hawks point
to Cambodia as the epitome of ASEAN dysfunction, and evidence for the need to
switch to a “coalition of the willing” led by the US, Japan, and Australia to
shape the response to the PRC in the South China Sea.
To deal with the Cambodia
issue, the idea of discarding the consensus formula or watering it down with an
“ASEAN X” formula—by which various ASEAN states could, according to their
individual enthusiasm, craft their own responses while remaining, at least
nominally, under the ASEAN aegis — has been bruited.
There is another solution that
would resolve the conundrum to the satisfaction of the anti-PRC forces: regime
change in Cambodia that would place a democratic, West-friendly, more China
averse administration committed to ASEAN unity and “centrality”— the buzzword
of the moment — in power.
Regime change is in the back of
everybody’s mind, especially Hun Sen’s. Hun Sen is the world’s
longest-reigning strongman, who has employed skullduggery and violence to keep
himself on top of Cambodia’s political and economic pile for three decades, and has
vowed to remain there at least for another decade.
Disenchantment with his regime
is growing — Hun’s party was able to maintain its parliamentary majority in the
legislature in 2013 thanks only to pervasive thuggery — and he has apparently
thrown himself into the arms of the PRC in return for the uncritical financial
and political backing that a strongman with fading support craves.
Think of Cambodia as another
Myanmar: a corrupted Chinese satellite whose vulnerabilities make it a tempting
target for Western rollback against the PRC.
Problem is, there is a distinct
shortage of attractive opposition horses to back for foreign governments.
The main opposition party, the
CNRP, is a throwback émigré-backed outfit that has planted its flag on overt
anti-Vietnamese chauvinism. Led by Sam Rainsy, the CNRP was
midwifed by the International Republican Institute (funded by the NED) and
supported by US Republicans when anti-Vietnam strategizing was the name of the
game in Washington.
Today, the linchpin for US and
Japanese agendas in Southeast Asia is Vietnam; and enabling a new Cambodian
government founded on anti-Vietnamese zealotry is not, I expect, at the top of
everybody’s priorities.
Therefore, consigning Hun Sen
to the dustbin of history may not become a US priority until a more attractive
opposition force comes along.
Preferably something
indigenous, pro-democracy, pro-human rights and less big-money boss-man — like
the movement that Kem Ley was fostering before his assassination in Phnom Penh
on July 10.
For China watchers, Ley looks
something like Ilham Tothi, the jailed Uyghur activist from Xinjiang.
Tothi tried to color revolution
between the lines, working the limited space allowed by the PRC authorities to
advance Uyghur cohesion, identity, and activism while not running afoul of PRC
law. His success alarmed the PRC to the point where he was imprisoned by
the PRC on trumped-up charges and his network of followers harassed and
suppressed.

Tens of thousands of people attend a funeral procession to carry the body of Kem Ley, an anti-government figure and the head of a grassroots advocacy group, “Khmer for Khmer” who was shot dead on July 10, to his hometown, in Phnom Penh, Cambodia July 24, 2016. REUTERS/Samrang Pring
Ley had considerably more space
to work in, since Cambodia is a democracy of a certain kind. He had
midwifed the creation of a new grassroots political party and then stepped away
from it, ostensibly to concentrate on his research and analytic work but also,
possibly, to insulate himself from political exposure so he’d be able to stay
out of jail and continue to work and write even if the government cracked down
on the party.
Whatever his considerations, he
was gunned down in what was asserted to be a dispute over an uncollected debt
but is widely considered to be an assassination. Associates reported he told them he was being
tracked, and he pointed out men with walkie-talkies monitoring his meetings.
As to why Ley was killed, all
the accounts contain a rather hanging reference to the release three days prior
of a Global Witness report, Hostile Takeover: the
corporate empire of Cambodia’s ruling family.
Journalistic omerta seems to inhibit the
dot-connecting one would expect in this story.
The Global Witness report was
clearly intended to embarrass Hun Sen before the Cambodian people, weaken him
politically, and also provide a basis for limiting foreign aid and governmental
investment to the Cambodian government. It employed “data journalism,”
combing corporate records for damning links, similar to the exercise exposing
Xi Jinping’s finances that was spiked at PRC insistence, causing a major
meltdown at Bloomberg.
Global Witness’s organizational
mission is to protect victimized citizens of resource-rich countries from
exploitation of their national wealth by corrupt governments either working
directly or in cahoots with multinational corporations.
Specifically targeting a
politically corrupt elite represents something of an expansion of its brief,
though Global Witness did provide a similar indictment of the Burmese junta;
and Cambodia has historically been one of the focuses of its work.
Global Witness was founded by
George Soros, so the color revolution narrative works itself into the Kem Ley
story, along with the inference that the authors of the report seriously
underestimated the backlash a regime change hit piece might provoke from its
targets.
Ley had been on VOA Khmer for
an English-language interview and had carefully distanced
himself from Global Witness while endorsing the report and its value as a tool
for transparency and reform (as in, “I’m not sure what the objective or direction
of the Global Witness report’s author…”).
If this was meant to place a
safe distance between Ley and the London authors of the report — while
permitting him to praise and use its data and conclusions — perhaps it didn’t
work and Hun Sen lashed out at the nearest and most vulnerable target for his
wrath.
It’s also possible, by the way,
that some other furious branch of the Hun family had Ley killed without Hun
Sen’s prior knowledge and approval.
Global Witness dipped its toe
into allegations of criminality, stating in the report it had obtained
information from “confidential sources” (footnote 247) concerning holdings by
Hun Sen nephew Hun To, who has been linked to big-time drug dealing allegations
in the Australian media. In retrospect, advertising that Global Witness
was collecting tittle-tattle from informants about a drug dealer connected to
the ruling family may not have been some of its best work.
In any case, if Hun Sen ordered
the assassination of Kem Ley, it wasn’t some of his best work, either. Hundreds
of thousands if not millions of grieving and indignant Cambodians lined the
roads to witness Ley’s 70-kilometer funeral procession, and the cause of an
indigenous, localized anti-Hun Sen political movement was probably advanced far
more by his death than by the Global Witness report.
Tom Malinowski, the U.S. State
Department’s Assistant Secretary for Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor, went
to Cambodia and delivered condolences to Ley’s wife (who is now seeking asylum
in Australia).
At a press conference, he was
asked about the PRC grant of $600 million to support the upcoming elections
among other things, which is unsurprisingly viewed as a cash grant to assist
Hun Sen in buying the elections.
Malinowski replied:
More and more Cambodians are getting their
information from media that nobody can control – from media that they control…
… I hope that it is the government’s intention
to have a free and fair election in 2017 and 2018. I think that if anyone has
contrary intentions, there are certainly things that they can do that would be
unfortunate but I think that they will find that, as we have seen in Burma and
as we have seen in Sri Lanka and many countries over the last few years, it is
very hard to deny people their voice and their choice.
By siding with the PRC and by
allegedly assassinating Kem Ley, it looks like Hun Sen painted a bull’s eye on
his own back. But it will take a year or two to find out if his opponents
can hit the mark.
Peter Lee runs the China Matters blog. He writes on
the intersection of US policy with Asian and world affairs.
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