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Cambodia Wants China as Its Neighborhood Bully
Phnom Penh's pivot toward Beijing has less to do with the United States than hatred for Vietnam [no, Tanner Greer, it's "follow the money"; the strength of the CPP regime and Hun Sen's relationship
with Vietnam stands, with China's increasing interference re Vietnam , re the
US, re Asean -- hitting 3 birds with one Cambodia stone].
In the closing months of 2016, all of Southeast Asia seemed to be pivoting toward China. Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak was hailed as a “visionary leader” by fellow
Malaysian politicians for “tilting to China.” Thailand agreed to build
an arms-maintenance and production center for China’s People’s
Liberation Army, and the president of the Philippines declared in a speech delivered in Beijing’s Great Hall of the People: “In this venue I announce my separation from the United States.”
Americans have been left to ask: What did we do wrong? What has
caused the leaders of Southeast Asia to turn away from Washington and
toward Beijing? It is tempting to look for the answer to these questions
in the policies of the Obama or Xi administrations, or blame it on
shifting fortunes in the balance of power. But focusing on the spectacle
of Sino-American rivalry masks the dozens of smaller dramas and power
plays that usually escape the attention of Western observers. Often it
is these smaller conflicts of interest that drive lesser powers into the
arms of the great ones.
There is no better example of this than Cambodia, one of the
first countries in the region to openly align itself with China.
Cambodia’s position became clear in 2012, when it prevented ASEAN from issuing a joint communiqué that mentioned the South China Sea. Long-standing Cambodian dictator Hun Sen has reaped many rewards for this decision: In October, China granted Cambodia $237 million in direct aid, $90 million in canceled debt, and an additional $15 million in military support.
Yet there is more behind Cambodian support for China than the size of
Beijing’s pocketbook. In the minds of many Cambodians, the most
difficult geopolitical challenge facing their country is not balancing
the demands of the United States and China, but managing its
relationship with Vietnam, an undertaking that cannot be successful
without Chinese cooperation.
Ethnic disharmony is not hard to spot in Southeast Asia, but few of its prejudices — outside of the Myanmese
hatred toward the Rohingya, at least — can match the distrust and
disgust the average Khmer feels toward the Vietnamese. Recall how
conservative Americans talked about the Soviet Union at the height of
communist power, add the way their counterparts in modern Europe discuss
Arab immigration now, and then throw in a dash of the humiliation that
marked Germany in interwar years, and then you might come close to
getting a fair idea of how wild and vitriolic a force anti-Vietnamese
rhetoric is in Cambodian politics.
Cambodians have not forgotten the centuries of warfare that led Vietnamese armies to pillage the Khmer heartland and strip away more than half of its territory. Cambodian nationalists still pine for Khmer krom (“Lower Khmer”), a term used to describe both the ethnic Khmer living outside Cambodia and the lands they inhabit.
Without the intervention of the French in the 1860s, which
transformed Cambodia into a French protectorate and southern Vietnam
into a French colony, Cambodia would have been totally swallowed by the
Vietnamese maw. French imperialism brought peace, but not harmony:
Relations between the two groups only worsened under colonial control,
as the French gave the Vietnamese a privileged status, and imperial
policy supported Vietnamese migration to the Cambodian heartland. The
subsequent governments that came to power in post-colonial times — the
Sisowath, Lol Non, and Khmer Rouge regimes — relied on anti-Vietnamese
rhetoric to legitimize their rule to the Cambodian people.
Historically informed Cambodians are quick to point out that the Khmer Rouge was a creation of the Viet Cong; the more conspiratorial of their countrymen insist that the Khmer Rouge’s massacres were directed by them as well. Conspiratorial or not, Cambodians remember that 150,000 Vietnamese soldiers invaded Cambodia in 1978 and then occupied their country as foreign conquerors
for the next 10 years. Though that decade-long war was not entirely the
fault of the Vietnamese (China, Thailand, and the United States would
support their own armed proxies), the violence of Vietnam’s
counterinsurgency operations slowly eroded what goodwill they had earned
by removing the Khmer Rouge from power.
During this time the spigot of Vietnamese migrants moving into
Cambodia was opened once again, sharpening fears that Vietnam sought to
permanently subvert Khmer autonomy. Although both Vietnamese immigration
and government influence has waned since Hanoi ordered its troops to
withdraw from Cambodian territory, distrust of Vietnam’s government and
disgust toward Cambodia’s Vietnamese minority remain. You can see this
even in the Khmer communities of the United States.
To walk the streets of an American Cambodiatown is to see a half-dozen posters warning of Vietnamese aggression, or (if you speak Khmer) be pressed to attend activist get-togethers or donate to help fight Vietnamese imperialism.To walk the streets of an American Cambodiatown is to see a half-dozen posters warning of Vietnamese aggression, or (if you speak Khmer) be pressed to attend activist get-togethers or donate to help fight Vietnamese imperialism.
Many of these donations go straight into the coffers of the Cambodia
National Rescue Party (CNRP), the opposition to Hun Sen’s ruling regime.
The CNRP faces a stacked deck when squaring off against hostile
authorities, but anti-Vietnamese agitation is a game they can’t lose.
When the Vietnamese overthrew the Khmer Rouge, the man they chose to
head their new puppet regime
was none other than Hun Sen. The party he now heads is a direct
descendant of the party the Vietnamese created to rule Cambodia. While
Westerners sometimes call Hun Sen a Chinese puppet, his domestic enemies
are far more likely to attack him as a Vietnamese figurehead.
His regime’s abuses are regularly blamed on Vietnamese designs — I have friends who insist that the soldiers who broke up the January 2014 election protests
were all Viet — and everything from the prime minister’s fluency in
Vietnamese to his refusal to deport all ethnic Vietnamese from Cambodia
is used as irrefutable proof of his traitorous intent.
There is a kernel of truth behind these accusations. Hun Sen has
worked hard to nip anti-Vietnamese sentiment before it grows to
explosive (or violent) levels, and he has proven extremely hesitant to
rock the boat with his old — and far more powerful — patrons in Hanoi.
Hun Sen no longer tolerates organized attempts to use anti-Vietnamese
rhetoric against him. Last month, in response to a 2016 CNRP media
campaign designed to expose Vietnamese incursions into Cambodian
territory, Sam Rainsy, former head of the CNRP, and Sok Hor, a CNRP
senator, were sentenced to five and seven years in jail, respectively. Likewise, Hanoi still has a powerful voice in Cambodian affairs. The Vietnamese state-owned enterprise Viettel operates the only Cambodian telecom company whose coverage reaches across the entire country, Phnom Penh constantly needles away at boosting cross-border trade and investment with Vietnam, illegal Vietnamese logging and smuggling operations are tacitly sanctioned by the government, and with the occasional diplomatic warning aside,
the government turns a blind eye to Vietnamese construction near the
areas where the two countries’ border has not been clearly demarcated.
However, Viet-Cambodian relations are no longer what journalist Sebastian Strangio labeled
the “quasi-colonial relationship” of Hun Sen’s early years. Hun Sen is
no longer accompanied by Vietnamese minders while on government
business, nor must he report his decisions to Vietnamese commanders. It
is within this context that Sino-Cambodian relations must be understood.
In geopolitical terms, Beijing’s flowering relationship with Phnom Penh
is a powerful check on Cambodia’s neighbors.
The United States, a longtime ally of the Thais and newfound courter
of Vietnamese affection, could not be trusted to put Cambodian interests
above the other powers in the region. In Beijing, the Cambodians see a
more reliable great power — an ally that not only has a fractious
relationship with Cambodia’s traditional enemy, but one that has
demonstrated a willingness to go to war with that country to preserve a
favorable balance of power in Southeast Asia. Indeed, the last war China
waged was not only against the Vietnamese, it was against them in
defense of Cambodia. Beijing’s decision to send troops across Vietnam’s
northern border as the bulk of the Vietnamese army was fighting an
insurgency in Cambodia, and then to keep a threatening military presence on that border through the next decade,
badly hampered the Vietnamese push to become the premier armed power in
Southeast Asia. For Cambodia, the strategic benefits of friendship with
China could not be clearer. Playing spoiler in ASEAN meetings is a
small price to pay to guarantee this friendship.
In Cambodian terms, Hun Sen’s decision to tilt Cambodian foreign
policy toward Beijing is quite moderate. Other voices in Cambodian
politics advocate even closer ties to China in hopes of generating more
leverage vis-à-vis the Vietnamese. Rainsy declared in 2014 to a group of CNRP party supporters
that his party is “on the side of China, and we support China in
fighting against Vietnam over the South China Sea issue. … The islands
belong to China, but the Viets are trying to occupy them, because the
Viets are very bad.” He would later defend these comments in a post on his Facebook page,
arguing, “when it comes to ensuring the survival of Cambodia as an
independent nation, there is a saying as old as the world: the enemy of
my enemy is my friend.”
The CNRP, acutely aware of its image in Western circles, has since distanced itself
from Rainsy’s comments, but his logic is solid. If Vietnam truly does
threaten the sovereignty of Cambodia, closer relations with China is a
geopolitical imperative. Cambodia’s politicians have depended, since
French colonialism if not earlier, on foreign sponsors. But being tarred
as a friend of the Vietnamese is the most toxic slur in Cambodian
politics. For Hun Sen or Rainsy, leaning toward China doesn’t send a
message of dependence on Beijing, but of hostility toward Hanoi.
Even radical changes in Cambodia’s internal politics are unlikely to
produce a revolution in Cambodia’s foreign relations. Hun Sen’s
patronage machine requires huge influxes of money to maintain. China
provides that. It does so without asking Hun Sen to protect the
liberties of average Cambodians in return. But even if the machine were
to fall apart and the opposition were to rise to power, Cambodia’s new
leaders would face strong political pressure to give Beijing pride of
place.
Cambodia is a small country tucked between its
historical enemies. The grip anti-Vietnamese sentiment has on the
Cambodian masses only strengthens this geopolitical anxiety. As long as
Cambodian nationalism defines itself in opposition to the Vietnamese,
Cambodian politicians will never stop searching for a great power that
can stand as a bulwark against Vietnam. For the foreseeable future, that
country will be China. Next to this, the perceived balance of power
between China and the United States will never be anything more than a
sideshow.
USA will soon expel a lot more ungrateful and treacherous Cambodians for being pro-China, the arch-rival to America.
ReplyDeleteEventually by teaming up with China, Cambodia will hit expansionist
ReplyDeleteVietnam where it hurts.