CAMBODIA National Rescue Party deputy leader Kem Sokha pledged
his party’s foreign policy allegiance to the United States over China in
no uncertain terms to top officials in Washington, last week, according
to a summary of his meetings posted online.A document released by the US-based Cambodia National Rescue
Foundation over the weekend gives a rundown of Sokha’s meetings with US
State Department and Pentagon officials.CNRP public affairs head Mu Sochua said last night that the document could be regarded as “legitimate”.
In a meeting on April 15 with the general principal director for
South and Southeast Asia at the Pentagon, who is not named, Sokha
“stressed that Cambodia [had suffered] enough with the communist”, the
document says.“So we don’t want to be ally with the communist like Red China. We want to be a USA ally,” he reportedly said.
In response, the US Department of Defense official said, according to
the document: “This is what we want to hear and we will pass the
message to our chain of command.”
In January, CNRP leader Sam Rainsy publicly said his party supported China in maritime disputes in the South China Sea.
Though China is engaged in maritime disputes with numerous countries,
Rainsy focused on Vietnam, which he accused of land grabbing, according
to media reports.US officials recently have more aggressively opposed China’s actions
in the South China Sea and particularly its unilaterally declared air
defence identification zone, accusing it of fomenting instability in the
region.
Cambodia has long been regarded as one of China’s top regional
allies, benefiting from huge loans, grants and investment projects.According to the document, Sokha also met with Daniel Russell, US
assistant secretary of state, on April 16, with Russell saying he was
pleased the CNRP had held out on cutting a deal with the ruling
Cambodian People’s Party to end the political deadlock until serious
reforms were promised.“I am delighted to see that you did not make the deal just for the
sake of a deal. All the deals have to benefit Cambodia in [the] long
run,” Russell said.
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