Tuesday, October 10, 2006

Black gold cures all illnesses

Offshore oil rig
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Cambodia's black gold

Toledo Blade (Toledo, Ohio, USA)


U.S. RELATIONS with Cambodia, distorted for decades by the Vietnam war and its aftermath, seem on the verge of a startling improvement. Oil will do that.

The southeast Asian country of 14 million, formerly part of French Indochina, has discovered that it has initial reserves of 700 million barrels of offshore oil. The American giant Chevron-Texaco has the concession for the main bloc in the Gulf of Thailand, where the company has already drilled exploratory wells. More may be found.

One astonishing aspect of the development is that Chevron-Texaco appears to have stolen the initiative from the oil-hungry Chinese, the strongest economic power in the region. The corporation's mastery of the complex technology needed for this sort of field three to five years ago gave it a leg up on competitors.

Cambodia may also have onshore oil. Some other offshore deposits it claims near its 265-mile coast are disputed by Thailand.

U.S. relations with Cambodia almost fell apart in 1973, when the North Vietnamese use of Cambodia as a transit route for military supplies to the Viet Cong in South Vietnam led the United States to drop more than 100,000 tons of bombs on the country. It took Congress to call a halt to the assault.

The chaos and political disorder that ensued in Cambodia led directly to a takeover in 1975 by the murderous Khmer Rouge. That group's brutal rule resulted in the death of some 2 million Cambodians, which many Americans became aware of through the film, The Killing Fields.

Most Cambodians, 95 percent of whom are Buddhist, never held America's bombing or its support of the Khmer Rouge against the United States. America, China, and Thailand continued to tolerate the Khmer Rouge because the Vietnamese opposed them, a truly appalling U.S. policy example of "The enemy of my enemy is my friend."

In recent years, the United States has bought 90 percent of Cambodia's principal export, clothing, which represents 85 percent of its export revenue, although that relationship risks being torpedoed in 2008 when U.S. quotas on competing Chinese apparel exports are scheduled to end.

Oil should save Cambodia's economy however, supplementing its earnings from clothing exports and from growing tourism. Cambodia offers Angkor Wat, a spectacular 12th century temple, and other charms. If its oil turns out to be as considerable as it appears, Cambodia's gross domestic product of $4.8 billion should grow by another $1 billion within three to four years.

The new oil wealth will create problems of its own, but they will be the kind of problems Cambodians need and deserve after nearly four decades of extreme hardship.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Would this put a gage on the current US ambassador on corrruption, land grab, and human riths?

SiS

Anonymous said...

Black gold or no Black Gold, native Khmer people will be still suffering to no end. This Hanoi satellite government in P. Penh and that of many more generations to come are for and only for The Vietnamized-khmer/Viet people in annexed Cambodia with NAM VANG as capital city! Ah Viet dog HUN SEN is a Viet that is doing nothing more than just carrying out HANOI's blueprints to vietnamize CAMBODIA. From the bottom up (village chief)to the top, the HANOI governmental infrastructure in Cambodia has been impenetrable by SAM RAINGSY or any other known opposition political party there.
This is enough to make one's hair stands on its end up: THE KHMER EMBASSY ON 16TH ST IN WASHINGTON D.C. CANNOT EVEN MOVE A MUSCLE WITHOUT PRIOR CONSENT AND/OR APPROVAL OF THE ONE ON "R" STREET!

10/10/06
AKnijaKhmer

Anonymous said...

To AknijaKhmer

Your statement is very very true indeed. They cann't leave us alone. Can they?

In 1989 was supposed to be the year that those Viet were supposed to leave our country and never to come back and never to interfer with us again.

It seemed so forgetful and so shameful that us Khmers fought so hard to get them out and only to realise that not even 20 years later, those Viet are back all over again. It just deosn't seem right.

Anonymous said...

Stop blaming your neighbours. We have to be united and be strong to compete with our neighbours ecomomically. Vietnam is moving very fast with its economy. They export billions of dollars worth of products such fish, clothings, and more to the United States. The Hanoi government even purchased airplanes from Boeing. This means American companies are interested doing business with Vietnam. I am glad when they struck oil in Cambodia. At least, the government will have some money to build the country even though they are corrupted. Almost all the countries in the world are corrupted. Cambodia should learn from Brunei. If I am a prime minister, I will provide free education from kindergarten to PhD and free medicare to all citizens---only if we get oil revenue. One wife only. But many women as long as you don't bring one home. Don't be like Sdach Krom Preth. Pray everynight: Buddha, Dharma, sangha.