Cambodia suspends military cooperation with US, other nations amid election standoff
Cambodia suspends military cooperation
with US, other nations amid election standoff
The Washington Post-13-08-2013: Cambodia has suspended international military
cooperation programs with the United States and others following that country’s
recent, disputed election, the State Department said Monday.
The reason for Cambodia’s action was not immediately clear. State Department
spokeswoman Marie Harf told reporters that Cambodia’s Defense Ministry has
postponed or canceled a number of programs. She provided no details.
It could be a pre-emptive move after U.S. lawmakers called for cuts in
direct aid to Cambodia’s government if the vote was not free and fair. But Harf
said the U.S. does not regard this as a suspension of overall military ties.
“We haven’t indicated that’s something we want,” Harf said. “We are going to
keep watching the process as it unfolds and see where it goes from here.”
Longtime Prime Minister Hun Sen’s party won the July 28 vote, but with a
sharply reduced majority, according to unratified results announced Monday that
are contested by the opposition. It has threatened mass protests unless there’s
an independent investigation of the election process.
The State Department has expressed concerns about reported election
irregularities and has called for them to be investigated fully and
transparently.
The Cambodian government has deployed extra troops and armored vehicles in
the capital, Phnom Penh, because of the opposition’s warning it could take to
the streets. The tough reputation of Hun Sen, who has ruled for 28 years, has
raised concerns he might use force against protesters.
Navuth Koeut, the defense attache at Cambodia’s embassy in Washington, said
he could not comment about any suspension in military cooperation programs as
he has not received information from Phnom Penh about it.
U.S. military assistance on maritime security, counterterrorism and
humanitarian operations makes up a small portion of the more than $70 million
in annual American aid to Cambodia but reflects Washington’s attempts to build
bridges with a Southeast Asian government which counts China as its main
benefactor.
Military cooperation has been on the uptick since 2006 and includes training
for Cambodian officers and periodic military exercises. One of Hun Sen’s sons
was trained at West Point.
Human Rights Watch has been pushing for the U.S. to sever military ties,
arguing that Cambodia’s armed forces are corrupt, politicized and implicated in
rights abuses.
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