Summit to Skip Sea Dispute, But Tension Lingers
Cambodia Daily | 7 September 2916
As Asean leaders gather in Laos this
week, reports suggest Cambodia may be spared its now customary role as
Beijing’s South China Sea spoiler.
But
even if the topic is sidelined at this year’s Asean Summit in
Vientiane, Prime Minister Hun Sen will continue to face accusations that
Cambodia’s loyalty to China has been purchased—charges that analysts
warn threaten unity within the regional bloc as some members continue to
compete with Beijing over rival claims to swaths of the sea.
Meeting
ahead of the three-day summit, which began on Tuesday, Philippine
President Rodrigo Duterte told Singaporean Prime Minister Lee Hsien
Loong that he would not ask members to rally around a U.N.-backed
tribunal verdict that invalidated China’s maritime claims on the back of
a complaint made by Manila, government spokesman Phay Siphan said on
Tuesday.
Reuters
reported on Monday that a draft version of a joint statement to be
released at the summit mentions the sea, but not The Hague’s July ruling
in favor of the Philippines.
Analysts
have suggested that Cambodia is doing the bidding of Beijing by
repeatedly blocking past joint statements cheering the verdict.
Mr.
Hun Sen’s decision to align with China has “fractured Asean’s thin
veneer of solidarity on the South China Sea,” said Lee Jones, an
associate professor of politics and international relations at Queen
Mary University of London.
Although
Mr. Jones contends that Cambodia’s “ruling regime has left the Cold War
behind entirely [Huh!, right!] in its quest for power and self-enrichment,” his
research into the history of Asean suggests that the organisation has
not always acted in the best interests of Mr. Hun Sen or Cambodia.
Founded
in 1967 by Indonesia, Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia and the
Philippines, the group, nominally bound by a policy of non-interference
in each other’s affairs, actually staked common ground against
Chinese-funded communist insurgents in their own countries, according to
Mr. Jones.
“ASEAN was
developed to buy time for its elites to impose conservative, capitalist
order on their highly disparate polities” amid waning Western influence
in the region, he wrote in a 2009 paper on the topic.
That
position effectively meant that “Asean elites were actually deeply
implicated in U.S. intervention in Indochina” by sending arms and aid to
anti-communist governments, including Lon Nol’s Khmer Republic.
U.S.
intervention came at a steep cost for Cambodia. American bombs killed
tens of thousands of people and galvanized support for the Khmer Rouge,
which rose to power in 1975.
Vietnam routed Khmer Rouge forces in 1979 and installed a government led by Mr. Hun Sen and other defectors.
Thailand, fearful of the Vietnamese at its doorstep, “corralled Asean into opposing Vietnam’s invasion,” according to Mr. Jones.
Thailand,
now cooperating with Beijing, helped rebuild Khmer Rouge forces from
2,000 stragglers to a 40,000-person force and funneled hundreds of
millions of dollars to the group.
“ASEAN
diplomacy, threats and promises of aid were instrumental in corralling
the Khmer Rouge and non-communist resistance groups together into the
so-called Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea (CGDK) in 1982,”
Mr. Jones writes, with the goal of displacing Mr. Hun Sen’s government
through a political settlement.
Asean’s
Cold War interventions in Cambodia “had the effect of isolating the
country…from foreign aid and prolonging destabilising and debilitating
armed conflict,” Mr. Jones concludes.
Asean
was eager [??? hardly] to have Cambodia join its ranks after it helped coordinate
the departure of Vietnamese forces from Cambodia in 1989, which made way
for the 1991 Paris Peace Agreements and 1993 national election,
according to a 1998 paper by Sorpong Peou, now a politics professor at
Ryerson University in Toronto.
The
bloc was given pause as the political feud between Mr. Hun Sen and his
co-prime minister, Prince Norodom Ranariddh, escalated into factional
fighting in 1997, and was won by Mr. Hun Sen.
When
a group of three Asean diplomats met with Mr. Hun Sen in 1998 to help
resolve the dispute, the prime minister demanded that Asean either
“admit ‘his’ country by July 23 or ‘forget it for the next 5 or 20
years,’” according to Mr. Peou.
Asean
admitted Cambodia after the country’s 1998 national election under the
theory that “flawed elections were better than none at all” and faith
that Mr. Hun Sen could bring stability to the nation, he writes.
Once
Cambodia was admitted, “the past was laid to rest,” Mr. Jones said on
Tuesday. “I am actually surprised by how much all the Indochinese states
have moved on, given how viciously their non-communist Asean neighbors
behaved toward them.”
“What
matters to Hun Sen now is what can help him and the Cambodian People’s
Party stay in power and fill their boots,” he added.
Mr.
Hun Sen’s positions have still led to occasional clashes with Asean
over the years. During a 2011 summit in Jakarta, the prime minister
broke protocol and the listed agenda to voice frustrations with Thailand
over a border dispute centered around Preah Vihear Temple, which The
Hague ruled to be a part of Cambodia in 1962.
Carl
Thayer, an emeritus professor at the Australian Defense Force Academy
in Canberra, said that there was irony in Cambodia defending the 1962
verdict, given that it is now refusing to accept the decision against
Beijing.
“Somehow these judges are acceptable, but all the judges on behalf of the Philippines are corrupt,” he said on Tuesday.
“I
can see him being unsatisfied that the world didn’t come to his aid” in
the Preah Vihear case, Mr. Thayer said, adding that Mr. Hun Sen’s
allies in China also appeared to have little appetite for backing
Cambodia when their interests were not at stake.
“Let’s ask the real question,” he said of international disputes not involving Beijing. “What would China do?”
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