*Challenged at home, Cambodia realigns its foreign relations*
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/opinion/Challenged-at-home-Cambodia-realigns-its-foreign-r-30226137.html

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*Subject:* *Challenged at home, Cambodia realigns its foreign relations*

*Challenged at home, Cambodia realigns its foreign relations*

Murray Hiebert, Phuong Nguyen
YaleGlobal
Washington February 6, 2014

*Facing political opposition and diminished Chinese support, the Hun Sen
government seeks greater regional integration*

Cambodia's foreign relations map has undergone dramatic shifts in the past
six months. In the aftermath of Cambodia's elections last July, Beijing
promptly recognised the results and congratulated Prime Minister Hun Sen
and his ruling Cambodian People's Party for their victory. However, as
anti-government protests led by the opposition Cambodia National Rescue
Party grew in the weeks that followed, with protesters condemning the
elections as fraudulent and calling on Hun Sen to step down, China has
since largely remained silent and kept the prime minister at arm's length.

At the same time, the Cambodian government in the past few months has moved
to consolidate its relations with Vietnam following several years of
deteriorating ties between the two neighbours. Phnom Penh made this move
despite the anti-Vietnamese sentiment in Cambodia fed by opposition leader
Sam Rainsy that has gained traction since the elections.

An ongoing political crisis and China's apparent hedging on Hun Sen are
behind this emerging geostrategic realignment.

Hun Sen is struggling to deal with growing opposition to his rule and
grievances from the public on labour rights and governance at a time when
Cambodia is at a critical political and economic crossroads. The country is
seeking to become more integrated with the rest of Southeast Asia and the
world in the years ahead. Cambodia's youth is increasingly more educated
and exposed to democratic norms and the outside world.

Hun Sen, whose strong-arm tactics largely worked in the past, now faces
what is perhaps the most serious challenge to his rule in decades and is
seeking outside recognition to boost his domestic legitimacy. The truth is,
even if his party manages to win the next elections, Hun Sen must continue
to deal with growing demands for greater transparency, better rule of law
and more democracy.

China, until recently Cambodia's most important patron, has not been
willing to offer Hun Sen much political backing. While the two governments
continue to maintain high-level meetings and exchanges, there has been a
shift in Beijing's policy toward Cambodia. Shortly after Hun Sen announced
he would not step down in the face of opposition-led protests, an article
in China's state-controlled Xinhua in late December quoted Khmer analysts
calling for national referendum on whether to organise new elections.
Chinese leaders probably will not give Hun Sen the cold shoulder anytime
soon, but they seem to be charting a middle course and slowly moving away
from their past policy of wholeheartedly endorsing his government.

The social and political changes taking place in Cambodia have not been
lost on Beijing. Chinese leaders could be hedging their bets on Cambodia's
political future to avoid the kind of strategic blunders they made in
Myanmar in recent years. Beijing long threw its support to Myanmar's
military regime and was taken unaware by the sweeping reforms President
Thein Sein launched in 2011. Chinese leaders did not begin to face up to
the new political reality in Myanmar until Thein Sein suspended
construction of the multibillion-dollar Chinese-backed Myitsone dam.

As part of its new policy, China is engaging different actors in Myanmar's
emerging political scene, from parliamentary speaker Shwe Mann and army
chief Min Aung Hlaing to opposition leader Aung San Suu
Kyi<http://www.nationmultimedia.com/search/?keyword=+Suu+Kyi>.
Chinese leaders who have largely given Thein Sein the cold shoulder are now
considering an official invitation for Aung San Suu
Kyi<http://www.nationmultimedia.com/search/?keyword=+Suu+Kyi>to visit
China. Neither President Xi Jinping nor Premier Li Keqiang made a
stop in Myanmar during their diplomatic blitz across Southeast Asia in
2013. Interestingly, Cambodia was not included in that itinerary either,
despite being a staunch ally and a popular investment destination for
Chinese businesses.

Meanwhile, relations between Vietnam and Cambodia have blossomed during the
past few months. Hanoi has provided Hun Sen with much needed outside
recognition and a boost to his legitimacy. In late December, Hun Sen
visited Vietnam ahead of the 35th anniversary of the ouster of the Khmer
Rouge by Hanoi's troops, and Vietnamese leaders lavishly congratulated him
for his role in rebuilding Cambodia.

Two weeks after Hun Sen's trip, Vietnam's Prime Minister Nguyen Tan Dung
visited Cambodia, where the two leaders co-chaired a bilateral trade and
investment conference - the largest since 2009 - and pledged to boost
economic ties in banking, finance, agribusiness, tourism and
telecommunications. At the end of 2012, Vietnamese businesses had invested
around $3 billion in nearly 130 projects in Cambodia, making Vietnam one of
the country's top foreign investors. China, in comparison, invested a total
of $9.17 billion in the country between 1994 and 2012.

Hanoi is closely watching the political turmoil in Cambodia, but still
jumped at the chance to patch up ties with Phnom Penh following several
years of irritation over border demarcation and Cambodia's siding with
China over the South China Sea disputes. In the foreseeable future, Hanoi
still has an interest in sustaining regime stability in Cambodia and the
ruling party's grip on power given how overtly anti-Vietnamese Sam Rainsy
has shown himself to be. For instance, Rainsy has recently declared that
Vietnam is encroaching on Chinese territory in the South China Sea, in the
same fashion that he alleges the nation is grabbing Cambodian territory.

Offering Hun Sen political support when he most needed it, as well as
strengthening bilateral economic ties, seemed like a logical choice for
Vietnamese leaders. Hanoi is also concerned about the increasingly
anti-Vietnamese rhetoric among the Cambodian population. Launching the new
Cho Ray Phnom Penh Hospital, a joint venture between Vietnam's Saigon
Medical Investment and Cambodia's Sokimex, was perhaps an effort to soften
anti-Vietnamese sentiment through joint cooperation in the health sector.

But realistically, Hanoi's support alone is insufficient to assure
Cambodia's and Hun Sen's autonomy among foreign powers. Beijing's
noncommittal stance in recent months might also have prompted Hun Sen to
look for support beyond his traditional patrons. For instance, he shrewdly
used Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's visit to Cambodia in November
2013 to boost his domestic legitimacy - by asking Abe for advice on
electoral reforms - and his position vis-à-vis China.

Hun Sen and Abe issued an unusual statement on bilateral maritime security
cooperation, underscoring the need to settle disputes peacefully and
according to international law. The two countries agreed to boost military
ties, with Japanese experts, including those from Japan's Self-Defence
Forces, expected to provide training to Cambodian military personnel for
future United Nations peacekeeping operations. And in stark contrast to
what happened at the Asean
<http://www.nationmultimedia.com/search/?keyword=+Asean+>Regional Forum in
Phnom Penh in 2011, Cambodia did not object to tabling a discussion on
China's Air Defence Identification Zone over the East China Sea during the
Japan-Asean summit in Tokyo in December, 2013.

Cambodia is evolving quickly, both politically and economically, and it
remains to be seen whether Hun Sen can retain power for several more
election cycles. Beijing's new strategic calculus in Cambodia has suddenly
left Hun Sen feeling vulnerable, at least for the moment. This has prompted
Hun Sen to work to boost his standing among other regional actors,
particularly Japan, Vietnam and Asean, by offering them his support on
issues of contention with China such as territorial disputes in the East
and South China seas.



*Murray Hiebert is senior fellow and deputy director of the Sumitro Chair
for Southeast Asia Studies at the Centre for Strategic and International
Studies (CSIS) in Washington. Phuong Nguyen is a research associate with
the CSIS Sumitro Chair.*

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