http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html

 

 




Thailand, Cambodia edge toward war 
By Richard Ehrlich 

 <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> BANGKOK - Thailand 
and Cambodia fortified their border positions on Tuesday after four days of 
artillery and mortar battles killed seven Cambodian soldiers and five Thai 
troops, while both sides tried to dominate nearby ancient Hindu temple ruins. 
No deaths were reported during Monday's clashes. 

Thai troops with scant  
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> medical equipment 
used stretchers and open pickup trucks to transport some injured soldiers from 
border fights to hospitalization during the weekend. Thailand moved tanks and 
armored personnel carriers along the mountainous jungle frontier about 560 
kilometers northeast of Bangkok. 

Cambodia installed more multiple-rocket launchers and other
heavy weaponry to bolster its side. Phnom Penh said on Monday that shelling and 
rifle fire by Thai forces during the weekend damaged the crumbling stone ruins 
of two small 1,000-year-old Hindu temples, Ta Krabey and Ta Moan. The extent of 
the damage was unclear. 

The ruins are in a disputed border area where most of the four straight days of 
clashes have occurred. Both Buddhist-majority countries again used artillery, 
mortars and rifles on Monday night near Ta Krabey, according to Thai and 
Cambodian military spokesmen. 

"The Cambodian acts of aggression left Thailand with no choice but to defend 
its sovereignty and territorial integrity by using proportionate means with 
necessity, under international law, and strictly directed at only military 
targets," the Thai Foreign Ministry said on Sunday. 

About 20,000 villagers on each side of the frontier have fled to makeshift 
shelters, while camouflaged Thai and Cambodian troops continue to patrol the 
jungle. The clashes were not expected to escalate immediately into full-scale 
war between Thailand and Cambodia, but the fighting has shut cross-border trade 
and caused jitters in both Southeast Asian capitals. 

United Nations secretary general Ban Ki-moon and the 10-member Association of 
Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) - of which both Thailand and Cambodia are 
members - have called on the countries to arrange a ceasefire, but the Thai 
military said it was fighting to stop Cambodia's attempt to seize the Ta Krabey 
and Ta Moan temple ruins. 

Cambodia wants to expand upon its 1962 success when the International Court of 
Justice in the Hague awarded Cambodia ownership over larger stone temple ruins 
at Preah Vihear, about 201 kilometers to the east of the current fighting, the 
Thai army said. 

"There must not be Cambodian soldiers around Preah Vihear, other temples, and 
communities," Thai army commander General Prayuth Chan-ocha said on Monday. 

"Cambodia would have seized the area, as they did in the areas near Preah 
Vihear temple," Thai army spokesman Sansern Kaewkamnerd said on Sunday. "So 
letting problems occur today is better than seeing it turn chronic in the 
future," he said, explaining why Thai forces were defending the two smaller 
temples and nearby disputed territory. 

Both sides have repeatedly blamed the other for being the aggressor and firing 
first. In February, four days of fighting near Preah Vihear killed a total of 
10 soldiers on both sides before hostilities quieted. 

Cambodia wants to internationalize the problem and called on the United Nations 
and  <http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> Indonesia to 
mediate. Thailand has said it prefers to negotiate through bilateral rather 
than multilateral means. 

Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, in his role as current chair of 
ASEAN, postponed his scheduled  
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> trip on Monday to 
Cambodia and Thailand after Bangkok tried to limit Indonesia's efforts to send 
military observers to the disputed border where recent fighting occurred. 

During the weekend, Cambodia said Thai forces fired 75mm and 105mm shells 
"loaded with poison gas", but no evidence was provided and Bangkok denied the 
allegation. In February, Bangkok denied using cluster bombs but later 
reluctantly admitted to firing several cluster-loaded bombs at Cambodia. 
Thailand has in return accused Cambodia of moving civilians as human shields 
into militarized areas. 

The United States has good relations with both countries' armed forces and has 
refrained from openly intervening in the conflict. Thailand is a non-North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization military ally of the United States and is bigger, 
wealthier and better armed than Cambodia, but Cambodian soldiers are considered 
tougher fighters on the ground. 

Cambodia's military leaders include Hun Manet, who received his diploma in 1999 
from the US Military Academy at West Point. Two-star Lieutenant General Hun 
Manet is deputy commander of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces infantry and 
director of the Defense Ministry's US-backed counter-terrorism department. 

He is the eldest son of Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, who was a Khmer Rouge 
guerrilla regiment commander under Pol Pot when they successfully fought 
against the US-backed Cambodian General Lon Nol's regime in the early 1970s 
during the US's regional Vietnam War. 

Thailand is peeved by Cambodia's plan to bring  
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> tourists to the 
scenic stone ruins of Preah Vihear's cliff-top, the 11th century Hindu temple 
on the disputed border. Preah Vihear was part of a network of ancient temple 
sites linked to Cambodia's nearby slave-built Angkor Wat complex. 

In 2008, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural 
Organization-endorsed Cambodia's bid to grant the temple World Heritage status. 
That could turn Preah Vihear into a money-making  
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> tourist attraction 
for Cambodia, especially when the Cambodians modernize a path up their steep 
cliff as an alternative entrance to the temple, which currently has its main 
access across flatter disputed territory. 

The fresh clashes meanwhile coincide with fears expressed by Thailand's media 
and opposition politicians that Bangkok's coup-minded military is preparing a 
putsch to install a puppet regime because the generals fear a possible return 
of former prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was ousted Thaksin in a 
bloodless 2006 coup. 

Thaksin has based himself mostly in  
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> Dubai in the United 
Arab Emirates to avoid a two-year jail sentence for corruption during his 
five-year elected administration. Diplomatic feathers were ruffled when Hun Sen 
appointed him as a special economic advisor, a position Thaksin later dropped. 

One year ago, tens of thousands of Thaksin's "red-shirt" supporters staged a 
nine-week insurrection in Bangkok by barricading streets in the heart of the 
capital, while demanding immediate elections to bring back Thaksin. 

After devastating urban battles, the red shirts were crushed by the army, 
resulting in 91 deaths, most of them civilians. Several red shirt leaders, 
including those who face potential terrorism charges, fled to Cambodia. 

Abhisit, who took office in a parliamentary vote in December 2008, has enjoyed 
strong military support while allowing the generals to arrange costly and 
controversial large-scale weapons purchases, including a dozen Swedish Gripen 
warplanes, six used German submarines, Ukrainian armored personnel carriers, 
and other weaponry. 

Abhisit has said he hopes to stage nationwide elections in June or July, but it 
is not clear to many analysts whether the military agrees with the plan due to 
its concerns that a pro-Thaksin 
<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/MD27Ae01.html> government could be 
elected. 

Richard S Ehrlich is a Bangkok-based journalist from San Francisco, California. 
He has reported news from Asia since 1978 and is co-author of the non-fiction 
book of investigative journalism, Hello My Big Big Honey! Love Letters to 
Bangkok Bar Girls and Their Revealing Interviews. His website is 
www.asia-correspondent.110mb.com 

(Copyright 2011 Richard S Ehrlich

 



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