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In bid to ‘split ASEAN,’ China pours money, arms into Cambodian military

Tresbon

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A Chinese military adviser puts rank on Cambodian Army graduates during a graduation ceremony at Army Institute in Cambodia's Kampong Speu province on March 12.


by Aubrey Belford and Prak Chan Thul

THLOK, TASEK CAMBODIA – When Defense Minister Tea Banh addressed graduates last month at Cambodia’s prestigious Army Institute, he directed his thanks to the guests who made it all possible: a group of crisply dressed officers from China’s People’s Liberation Army.

The institute, established in 1999 around 80 km from Phnom Penh, is part of China’s rising military aid to Cambodia. Interviews with serving officers and a senior Cambodian government official shed light on how far the school’s influence has grown in recent years.

Military aid, alongside arms sales and billions of dollars of investment, have strengthened China’s ties with Cambodia, and analysts see it as part of a push to extend regional influence, including in the disputed South China Sea.

During his speech at the institute in Kampong Speu province, Tea lavished praise on the “luxurious” facilities, a rarity for Cambodia’s often ramshackle armed forces.

Addressing the Chinese, he added, “We are grateful to them for understanding our difficulties.”

Since 2009, roughly 200 cadets have been admitted annually to four-year courses devised by Beijing’s Defense Ministry and Chinese advisers who oversee a local teaching staff, three officers said.

This includes compulsory six-month stints at military academies in China. The 190 students who graduated in March were the third such cohort from the school. The school also admits about 200 students a year for a shorter six-month course.

“Graduates have already been put into influential positions, including the head of army brigades,” said the senior government official, who did not want to be named because of the sensitivity of the subject. “They’re in fighting forces in positions where they can make decisions.”

The official said China paid for the majority of the institute’s construction and covers most of the operating costs.

About half of all Cambodia’s officer trainees now come through the institute, according to an officer with close knowledge of the school, who also declined to be named.

The institute appears to be China’s first attempt to build a large-scale facility of this kind in Southeast Asia, said Carl Thayer, a security expert on the region at the Australian Defence Force Academy.

“For China, it’s the beginning of a long-term strategy of winning influence in the Cambodian military by cultivating these people. And China keeps very, very deep intelligence files on everybody,” he said.

“Nowhere in Southeast Asia is the Chinese influence as great as what you’re talking about.”

The growth of the school comes amid a significant rise in Chinese arms sales and military aid to Cambodia. China also invests billions into the country’s economy.

In 2013, Cambodia took delivery of 12 Harbin Z-9 helicopters using a $195 million Chinese loan. The next year, it received a donation of 26 Chinese trucks and 30,000 military uniforms.

Chinese-funded construction at the school has proceeded apace. Since an infusion of funds in 2002, more than 70 buildings have been erected on the roughly 148 hectare site, according to an institute document seen by Reuters.

China’s Defense Ministry said in a statement responding to questions from Reuters that it would “continue to increase its level of support for the institute, to help the Cambodian side raise its teaching abilities and level of personnel training. . . . This aid has no political conditions attached, and will not harm the interests of any third party.”

Officials at Cambodia’s Defense Ministry did not respond to requests for comment for this article.

According to Lao Mong Hay, an analyst and adviser to Cambodia’s opposition, China’s military largesse contributed to Cambodia, as chair of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2012, playing spoiler in efforts by Southeast Asian states to create a maritime “code of conduct” with China.

“The strategic interest of China is also to split ASEAN, and Cambodia is used for this purpose,” he said.

Military aid also counterbalances the influence of Vietnam, according to Lao.

Vietnam, embroiled in a row with China last year over an oil rig Beijing parked in disputed waters, has long provided training to Cambodian soldiers and police, as well as military equipment. The neighbors’ navies conduct regular joint patrols.

Chinese aid dwarfs that of the United States, which canceled delivery of 200 surplus military vehicles in 2010 after Cambodia deported a group of Uighur asylum-seekers to China in late 2009. Two days after that deportation, China and Cambodia signed deals worth an estimated $850 million.

In 2013, Cambodia announced the suspension of some military cooperation with the United States after criticism by American lawmakers of Cambodia’s elections.

Washington made available around $1 million for military financing and training in Cambodia in 2014, according to the State Department, and 12 Cambodian military personnel received training in the United States on human rights and “maritime capacity building.”

Meanwhile, graduates of the Chinese-funded Army Institute are moving up the ranks. “They want us to see China as a superpower that helps Cambodia in times of crisis,” said an officer graduate, posted on Cambodia’s volatile border with Thailand.
 
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I've been to Cambodia, massive construction every where. I saw a promising future for our partner!
 
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The second most boring thread on this forum. The most goes to chinese propaganda aiib and silkroad. I wonder why the Mods here don't step in.
Why are u changing to another person?(you are perhaps the only Vietnamese member here I respect) Full of sarcasm and vaingloriousness?
AIIB? Vietnam and Germany not in?
Is there something wrong with das(dem) Leben in Deutschland?
 
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Two generals, two pilots die as helicopter crashes in Cambodia

30123d5c7f51383c35a34c5eab216b72.jpg


Two generals who led the helicopter unit of Cambodia's air force were killed in a crash yesterday, along with two pilots, police said.

Defence Minister Tea Banh, who rushed to the crash site in a muddy pond south of the capital, said a fifth person on the chopper was seriously injured.

General Um Phy, deputy chief of staff of Cambodia's air force, said the aircraft was a Chinese-made Z-9 helicopter.

It was not clear what caused the accident, which police said was a training mission for new pilots.

Two of the dead men were a major general and a brigadier general, Phnom Penh deputy police chief Chuon Narin said. The generals were the head and deputy head of the helicopter unit, and the other two were pilots.

The chopper went down about 10km south of Phnom Penh, sinking in a rain-filled excavated rice field surrounded by rural land.

Defence Ministry Secretary of State Moeung Samphan said 300 military personnel were sent to take part in the recovery operation. By evening, all four bodies had been recovered, said Um Phy.

The main part of the helicopter's fuselage, whose cabin was badly mangled, was retrieved and taken to air force headquarters for inspection, he said.

Cambodia last year took delivery of 12 of the Z-9 helicopters, a licensed version of France's Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin which can carry nine passengers in addition to a pilot. The aircraft were purchased with a US$195 million loan made to Cambodia in 2011 by China, the closest ally of the Southeast Asian nation.

The choppers were meant to replace a small fleet of ageing Soviet-made transport helicopters. The deal with China was made as Cambodia was engaged in intermittent border warfare with neighbouring Thailand, but it was unclear if any were fitted as attack helicopters, which would be the first ever in Cambodia's arsenal.
A witness said she saw helicopters flying the same route almost every day, but the doomed flight seemed to be flying lower than usual, almost hitting her house.

Ath Neang, 48, who lives about 15 metres from the pond, said that as one of the craft's rotor blades hit the bank of the pond, one man jumped out into the water. She then heard what sounded like an explosion from the aircraft, which then sank.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as 2 generals, 2 pilots die as helicopter crashes


This was recent? Very unfortunate to hear of their demise.
 
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yes, its this. I think there is helicopter made in China. brain new product.


Hmm. Well, clearly the pilots were still getting used to the controls , and thus shouldn't have invited the Generals in 'test driving' the choppers. From my readings, the etiology of the crash was human error, particularly pilot error, not mechanical.

Chinese shouldn't be blamed for local human error.
 
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Hmm. Well, clearly the pilots were still getting used to the controls , and thus shouldn't have invited the Generals in 'test driving' the choppers. From my readings, the etiology of the crash was human error, particularly pilot error, not mechanical.

Chinese shouldn't be blamed for local human error.

He wishes to emphasize made in China stuff as unreliable or why else post this news which happened a year ago?
 
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may be there is a lack of training. but I don't think so. There were two general on board. The pilot must be the best trained personal staff.


The Cambodians don't necessarily have the 'best' air force, and they need to increase their capabilities. Hopefully with these new equipment , and longer flight hours of training, accidents such as these become less frequent.
 
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The whole Southeast Asia hate Vietnam.

VN is the gateway between East Asia & South East Asia. When China wants to enter SEA, Vietnam blocks the door preventing further influence in the region.


Two generals, two pilots die as helicopter crashes in Cambodia

30123d5c7f51383c35a34c5eab216b72.jpg


Two generals who led the helicopter unit of Cambodia's air force were killed in a crash yesterday, along with two pilots, police said.

Defence Minister Tea Banh, who rushed to the crash site in a muddy pond south of the capital, said a fifth person on the chopper was seriously injured.

General Um Phy, deputy chief of staff of Cambodia's air force, said the aircraft was a Chinese-made Z-9 helicopter.

It was not clear what caused the accident, which police said was a training mission for new pilots.

Two of the dead men were a major general and a brigadier general, Phnom Penh deputy police chief Chuon Narin said. The generals were the head and deputy head of the helicopter unit, and the other two were pilots.

The chopper went down about 10km south of Phnom Penh, sinking in a rain-filled excavated rice field surrounded by rural land.

Defence Ministry Secretary of State Moeung Samphan said 300 military personnel were sent to take part in the recovery operation. By evening, all four bodies had been recovered, said Um Phy.

The main part of the helicopter's fuselage, whose cabin was badly mangled, was retrieved and taken to air force headquarters for inspection, he said.

Cambodia last year took delivery of 12 of the Z-9 helicopters, a licensed version of France's Eurocopter AS365 Dauphin which can carry nine passengers in addition to a pilot. The aircraft were purchased with a US$195 million loan made to Cambodia in 2011 by China, the closest ally of the Southeast Asian nation.

The choppers were meant to replace a small fleet of ageing Soviet-made transport helicopters. The deal with China was made as Cambodia was engaged in intermittent border warfare with neighbouring Thailand, but it was unclear if any were fitted as attack helicopters, which would be the first ever in Cambodia's arsenal.
A witness said she saw helicopters flying the same route almost every day, but the doomed flight seemed to be flying lower than usual, almost hitting her house.

Ath Neang, 48, who lives about 15 metres from the pond, said that as one of the craft's rotor blades hit the bank of the pond, one man jumped out into the water. She then heard what sounded like an explosion from the aircraft, which then sank.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as 2 generals, 2 pilots die as helicopter crashes
Its very unfortunate indeed this is what you get for purchasing Chinese made products. China is using Cambodia to do their dirty work for them.
 
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VN is the gateway between East Asia & South East Asia. When China wants to enter SEA, Vietnam blocks the door preventing further influence in the region.



Its very unfortunate indeed this is what you get for purchasing Chinese made products. China is using Cambodia to do their dirty work for them.

The crashed is due to pilot error, does it sadden you that superior Chinese product works?

Didn't you vietnamese import large quantity of Chinese product and every year it's increasing. That must make you sad too, right? :lol:
 
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