Thursday, August 26, 2010

Chinese Principles, But Also Personal Relationships [-Who said Sihanouk is not involved in Khmer politics?]

我爱你到死
Chinese President Jiang Zemin, right, embraces former King Norodom Sihanouk as they meet for talks in Kunming, southwestern Yunnan province, China, in 1999. (Photo: AP)

Men Kimseng, VOA Khmer
Washington, DC Wednesday, 25 August 2010

"While the Chinese government has cultivated a relationship with the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party, the former king has never been far from the picture."
Although China maintains certain principles in its foreign policy, in the case of Cambodia it has also used inter-personal relationships.

Despite sweeping political changes in Cambodia over the past 50 years, the Chinese government has continued to focus its relationship on former king Norodom Sihanouk, according to author Sophie Richardson, who recently released a new book called “China, Cambodia, and the Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence.”

While the Chinese government has cultivated a relationship with the government of Prime Minister Hun Sen and his Cambodian People’s Party, the former king has never been far from the picture, Richardson writes.

Chinese leaders have often “referred to Sihanouk, their fellow traveler of four decades, as a positive model for the CPP,” she writes.

In meetings in 1998 and 1999 between Chinese leaders and Hun Sen, China wanted strengthened unity and cooperation under Norodom Sihanouk’s leadership and a coalition government, Richardson says.

“In the case of Cambodia it was not simply a relationship of a state to a state that had to be maintained in its continuity, but also very much of a person and people,” Brantly Womack, a political professor, said at the recent launch of Richardson’s book in Washington. “Prince Sihanouk and his continuity in Cambodian politics was an essential factor in the story that Sophie tells, and it's not just that China felt that Sihanouk was a reliable partner in a sense of being a client, it was that Sihanouk was a respected partner.”

Norodom Sihanouk was involved in Cambodian politics for more than half a century, honored, exiled, under house arrest and finally re-emergent as a political force, before he abdicated in 2004. Through it all, he maintained his relationship with China.

More broadly, Richardson concludes that China’s foreign policy principles here have been highly successful, even as “domestic policy choices…have helped China develop.”

China has now emerged as a major donor and investor in Cambodia. Hun Sen’s government has kept with the one-China policy espoused by Norodom Sihanouk, especially concerning Taiwan, which China considers a rogue province.

We adhere to a one-China policy,” Hun Sen told a gathering of provincial governors in early August. “Taiwan is just a province of the People's Republic of China. This is our position.”

However, some scholars see geopolitics and China’s long-term interests at work with its Cambodia development policies.

“I think it's pretty obvious that [the Chinese] expect a certain amount of respect for those gifts, and they don't want to have some of their policies exposed or opposed,” historian David Chandler told VOA Khmer.

Such policies could include China’s expansion into Southeast Asia or its support of the Khmer Rouge, he said. “They don’t want that brought out into the open.”

Scholar John Ciaorciary sees Cambodia’s position on the other side of Vietnam as attractive to Beijing, which has not always had a healthy relationship with Hanoi.

China has also exhibited a strategy of supporting whomever is in power, including Pol Pot, he said.

“I don't think it's because of any ideological affinity or inter-personal or cultural affinity,” he told VOA Khmer. “I think primarily because Cambodia provides a useful strategic and increasingly economic partner for China.”

Whatever its reasons, China is now playing a significant role in the region, both economically and politically.

Kurt Campbell, the US State Department’s of top official for East Asia, said the US welcomes China’s role as a large neighbor to many countries in Southeast Asia.

And while it’s “natural” for Cambodia to want a good relationship for China, he said, “we also believe that most Southeast Asian countries also want a good relationship with the United States. And we want to facilitate that.”

11 comments:

Anonymous said...

OH my godddddddddddd. My beloved King Father got a bear hug. This is so unholyyyyyyyy. Oh my god I am going to run naked in my room right now. Oh my goddddddddd. This is so unholy. King Father is a King for Christ Sake. Nobody should ever be allowed to touch his person's body at all. Only gestures from afar are allowed. Oh my god......Now I am going to faint because of the picture of King Father getting a bear hug from a mere mortal is simply going to huant me for the rest of my life. Oh my godddddddd. Is King Father no longer a Khmer royal????? Oh my freaking God. This pic is going to freak me out for the rest of the eternity. Lesson to learn: NO BEAR HUG for the King. However, a bear hug can be given to the ugly Hun Sen anytime. Lol.

Anonymous said...

Being friend with Chinese doesn't mean bad.
Being friend with American doesn't mean good.
When your friend drops you down when you need him, he's not a good friend.

Anonymous said...

We, Chinese loves to sell Khmer pussies in the market and house maid

Anonymous said...

Ah 3:19, stop talking about your crazy family members, fool. Lol. In addition, learn to write English while you are commenting. Lol. In addition, there are more Chinese pussies and maids in the entire world than the number of Khmer people alive on the entire earth. So get your fact right. Remember the Chinese culture of the SLAVE-WIVES vs the Khmer culture of the Mother-Wives. So get your stinky ugly looking hairy Chinese pussies and Chinese slave wives out of KI Media forum, fool. Lol.

Anonymous said...

Westerner tourists come in Cambodia to visit Angkorwat.
Westerner tourists come in Thailand to have sex with Thai children.

Anonymous said...

3:15you DOOOOOM mon!!!!!

A Cheak Ma Tieng said...

The chinese people are loyal people and we see all successive governments of China still recognize the King of Cambodia for the friendship they have during the time nobody in the world want to talk to China . During the difficult time that all oriental and western countries trash China like a dirty clothe, the king of Cambodia support the policies of the five (5) principles of China on the international stage.

Anonymous said...

We love to fuck your mom, Cambodians. Ye, fuck it, fuck it

Anonymous said...

Former Chinese President Jiang Zemin is the Chinese "Jay-Z... Hahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Smokin that Lalalalalalala!!!!!!!!

Anonymous said...

Gotta give my daddy a big hug.