Prime Minister Hun Sen attends the opening of a mosque yesterday in Tbong Khmum, where he lashed out at foreign interlopers he accuses of seeking to topple his government. Facebook |
Hun Sen hits at US foreign policy
Phnom Penh Post | 5 September 2017
Prime Minister Hun Sen intensified his attacks on the US yesterday,
lambasting its failed attempts at regime change across the world, with
one observer noting the recent, and fervent, anti-US nationalism could
see relations with the superpower deteriorate to the point of provoking
congressional action.
While Hun Sen has long been known to deploy anti-US rhetoric, in
recent days it has appeared to reach a climax, with the premier
levelling direct accusations that the United States conspired with the
opposition to topple his government.
The surprise midnight arrest of Cambodia National Rescue Party President Kem Sokha
on Sunday for alleged treason was predicated on a 2013 video in which
he spoke of getting US assistance to plan his political career. The
re-emergence of the video came after unsubstantiated conspiracy theories
began appearing on an anonymous Facebook page – and soon after,
government mouthpiece Fresh News – accusing Sokha, his family, freelance
journalists, foreign NGOs, the CIA and the “extremist” ruling party of
Taiwan of orchestrating regime change in Cambodia.
Following Sokha’s arrest, Hun Sen quickly jumped to accuse the US of
plotting a coup, evoking the US-backed Lon Nol regime that ousted
then-King Norodom Sihanouk in 1970. Yesterday, he continued the attack,
questioning the US’s foreign policy initiatives in Syria, Libya and
Iraq, where US-supported movements to remove authoritarian governments
ended up leaving those countries worse off, and specifically calling out
the US for its backing of rebel groups in Syria. “The damage there has
led to a situation where three groups – the government, groups supported
by the US and ISIS – now control the country.”
He went on to say any statements in support of Sokha were an attempt
to protect the “puppet”, and that the government would look into groups
that assisted the opposition leader. “We are still looking for them, and
to eliminate the groups who damage the nation and happiness of the
people,” he said.
The prime minister was backed up by an Interior Ministry official,
speaking on the condition of anonymity, who said the ministry would
continue to investigate other opposition lawmakers who were “close to
the US”.
The recent targeting of the US comes in the wake of what is widely
characterised as Cambodia’s ever-growing bonhomie with Asian powerhouse
China.
In a press conference yesterday, Chinese Foreign Ministry
spokesperson Geng Shuang responded to questions about Sokha’s arrest by
saying China “has always supported Cambodia in following the development
path suited to its national conditions and the Cambodian government’s
effort to uphold national security and stability”.
However, international condemnation of Sokha’s arrest continued to
flow in yesterday, with the EU calling it a breach of his parliamentary
immunity and – along with a clampdown on NGOs and independent media – a
“further effort to restrict the democratic space in Cambodia”.
Statements were also released by the Cambodian Australian Association,
the Australian Embassy in Cambodia and the UK’s Minister for Asia Mark
Fields, all denouncing the arrest.
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, said he
was “seriously concerned” at Sokha’s arrest, and criticised statements
by Hun Sen and senior government officials for presuming guilt.
Though the US appears to increasingly preoccupy Hun Sen, Carl Thayer,
of the University of New South Wales, said Cambodia was no longer on
the US’s radar, with the premier clearly casting “his die in favour of
China”. And while the local US Embassy has been pushing back, he added,
there wasn’t much coming out of the undermanned US State Department.
Following the expulsion of pro-democracy NGO National Democratic
Institute last month, the US Embassy in Phnom Penh questioned the
government’s commitment to democracy and called out the Foreign
Ministry’s tardiness in responding to the group’s NGO application. NDI’s
alleged delinquency was used as justification for its ouster.
Thayer contended that if the government persisted with its recent
repressive ways there was a possibility of a strong reaction from the US
Congress. “Cambodia has a special deal to export garments and textiles
to the United States. This is Hun Sen’s Achilles heel. Cambodia can’t
sell these exports to China,” he said.
Paul Chambers, lecturer at Naresuan University in Thailand, said the
use of anti-US nationalism was with an eye to easing the ruling party’s
anxieties over next year’s crucial elections, and demonstrated the
government was unconcerned about upsetting the Trump administration.
But even as attacks on the US, and even the European Union, escalate,
Chambers said the pivot to China could be a mistake in the long run.
“Pivoting completely toward China might be foolhardy unless the
Cambodian government wants to descend into complete economic dependency
on Beijing,” he said.
Sebastian Strangio, author of Hun Sen’s Cambodia, said with the
government’s shedding of any semblance of democracy and the
fear-mongering about US interference, the country was heading into
“uncharted territory now”. “This has the flavor of a night of long
knives, with the CPP settling accounts with a wide variety of ‘enemies’
whose legitimacy and existence it has never accepted.”
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