*Hun Sen Mocks Obama Over Airstrikes in Iraq*

*http://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/hun-sen-mocks-obama-over-airstrikes-in-iraq-66251/
<http://www.cambodiadaily.com/news/hun-sen-mocks-obama-over-airstrikes-in-iraq-66251/>*

BY HUL REAKSMEY <http://www.cambodiadaily.com/author/hul-reaksmey/> |
AUGUST 12, 2014* The Cambodia Daily*

[image:
http://www.iol.co.za/polopoly_fs/iol-pic-nov20-cambodia-obama-hun-sen-1.1426559!/image/4237070427.jpg_gen/derivatives/box_300/4237070427.jpg]

Prime Minister Hun Sen on Monday ridiculed U.S. President Barack Obama for
his decision on Thursday to authorize airstrikes against Islamic militants
in Iraq, recalling the failure of such tactics by the U.S. in Cambodia
during the 1960s and 1970s.

Mr. Hun Sen, who as a Khmer Rouge Eastern Zone soldier was a target of
similar U.S. airstrikes along the Vietnamese border before the fall of
Phnom Penh in April 1975, said that such bombardments have little impact on
dedicated infantry.

“Iraq has welcomed Obama commanding these airstrikes,” Mr. Hun Sen told the
crowd at a graduation ceremony for students from Phnom Penh’s Norton
University.

“I don’t want to say something to Obama, but your excellency…these
airstrikes were used a lot in the Indochina Wars, but in the end, Lon Nol’s
soldiers still collapsed, and U.S. soldiers were withdrawn, while the
ambassadors ran away from the Khmer, Vietnamese and Laotians,” Mr. Hun Sen
said.

Mr. Obama on Thursday authorized airstrikes in Iraq for the first time
since the U.S. withdrew combat troops from the country in 2011. The strikes
are intended to prevent the fall of U.S.-friendly Iraqi Kurdistan to
Islamic State militants.

Mr. Hun Sen belittled the value of air-to-ground strikes.

“If airstrikes could curb everything, we wouldn’t have to form infantries,”
said Mr. Hun Sen, continuing his broadside on the U.S. reliance on aerial
bombardments.

“Let’s remember, those who command infantry will be strong. For airstrikes,
their heads aren’t fastened to the sky and feet aren’t on the ground,” he
said. “If they stay too low, you will be shot, and you can’t do anything if
you stay too high.”

“It’s impossible to use airstrikes to support infantry.”

During the Second Indochina War—called the Vietnam War in the U.S. and the
American War in Vietnam—U.S. B-52 bombers carrying out covert operations
dropped almost 2.7 million tons of ordnance on Cambodia in an attempt to
flush out communist insurgents as they moved toward Phnom Penh and Saigon.

The campaign failed to stop the Cambodian and Vietnamese communists from
seizing power, with both storming to victory in April 1975, forcing the
U.S. out of Indochina.

By January 1979, the Vietnamese communists had overthrown their Cambodian
counterparts—the Khmer Rouge—in a swift military invasion and installed a
new regime. Mr. Hun Sen, who had fled to Vietnam in 1977 to escape purges
within the Khmer Rouge, was named foreign minister.

Mr. Hun Sen on Monday called on the international community to move away
from its habit of turning to military intervention when faced with problems
or instability.

“We must find reforms for the next generation to avoid problems. I don’t
agree with foreign intervention,” Mr. Hun Sen told the students, before
making an apparent reference to the political deal he cut last month with
the opposition CNRP.

“I need to negotiate between Khmer and Khmer, and I need the Khmer King
because the person who stamps the stamp and is the biggest person is not
the U.N. secretary general, the foreign embassies, foreign presidents, but
the King,” he said.

Mr. Hun Sen, who next year celebrates 30 years as prime minister, last week
counseled a different group of university students to take note of what has
happened to Libya and Iraq since former leaders Muammar el-Qaddafi and
Saddam Hussein were deposed, noting that both countries have since fallen
into chaos.

Mr. Hun Sen concluded his speech Monday by again asking students to pay
close attention to international events, even if acts of foreign
intervention were misguided.

“Some issues are for other countries, but they are also lessons for us,”
the prime minister said. “We must learn from our past.”


Kerry hails Vietnam relations ahead of US, Asia security talks

AFP August 9, 2014 1:06 PM

[image:
http://l1.yimg.com/bt/api/res/1.2/mER4ev326n5KDp96yDeAMw--/YXBwaWQ9eW5ld3M7Zmk9ZmlsbDtoPTYyODtweW9mZj0wO3E9NzU7dz05NjA-/http:/media.zenfs.com/en_us/News/afp.com/55a38c91d936093417f71c990f9f49a7f2887e3e.jpg]

US Secretary of State John Kerry (R) meets with Vietnam's Deputy Prime
Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Pham Binh Minh, in Naypyidaw,
Myanmar, on August 9, 2014 (AFP Photo/Nicolas Asfouri)

Kerry met his Vietnamese counterpart Pham Binh Minh in the Myanmar capital
Naypyidaw, in his first of a series of discussions with Asian nations as
the US looks to reinvigorate alliances in the Asia-Pacific region.

The top US diplomat, who fought in the Vietnam War, hailed "progress" in
the "partnership" between the two nations in comments ahead of the meeting.

He added that more contentious issues such as communist Vietnam's rights
record would continue to be discussed as part of efforts "to really bring
this relationship to its full blossom".

But he welcomed positive steps "on civil nuclear cooperation, on
non-proliferation" and "approaches to the South China Sea".

Territorial disputes over the South China Sea are likely to dominate
weekend discussions with members of the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) and other key regional and global players including China.

Washington has called for an end to "provocative" acts in the contested
waters, following a spike in tensions between Vietnam and neighbouring
China after Beijing in May moved an oil rig into an area near the Paracel
Islands, which are claimed by both countries.

The placement of the rig, which has since been removed, triggered deadly
anti-China riots in Vietnam.

The US normalised diplomatic relations with Vietnam in 1995 and has since
seen trade flourish with its wartime foe.

But Washington has been outspoken in calls for improvements in the
authoritarian nation's record on human rights and religious freedom.

Kerry hailed the restoration of relations between the two countries in
December when he returned to Vietnam's Mekong Delta, which he navigated as
a wartime gunboat skipper, to highlight its vulnerability to climate change.

The one-time presidential hopeful served with the US Navy from 1966 to 1970
as a naval lieutenant.

Fellow veteran Senator John McCain on Friday called for the US to "begin
easing our lethal arms embargo on Vietnam", in comments during a visit to
Hanoi.

Cambodian parliament chief to visit Vietnam next week

English.news.cn <http://www.xinhuanet.com/english2010/>   2014-08-12
17:18:29

PHNOM PENH, Aug. 12 (Xinhua) -- Heng Samrin, president of the National
Assembly of Cambodia, will make a 3-day official visit to Vietnam from Aug.
18 to 20 in order to further enhance bilateral ties and cooperation, the
legislative body said in a statement Tuesday.

During the visit, he will hold bilateral talks with his Vietnamese
counterpart Nguyen Sinh Hung, the statement said.

Besides, Heng Samrin is scheduled to pay courtesy calls on Nguyen Phu
Trong, general secretary of the Communist Party of Vietnam, Vietnamese
State President Truong Tan Sang, and Vietnamese Prime Minister Nguyen Tan
Dung.

In addition, he will visit historical sites in Hanoi.

Editor: Fu Peng
--

Best Regards,

*Khmer Forum*
*A place for sharing community events and public news.*

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