The Phnom Penh Post

Trump eyeing Hun Sen critic for cabinet?

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pair “a match made in twisted-politics heaven” due to their fondness for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Trump’s own fondness for Putin led Hun Sen to endorse him before last week’s election, saying he could help avoid war. Yet the premier has had less love for Rohrabache­r, a longtime opposition ally who after the 2013 election called on him to stand down.

However, Cambodian People’s Party spokesman Sok Eysan said the government would have no issue if Rohrabache­r was appointed secretary of state because he would have to put the Trump administra­tion’s foreign policies ahead of his own interests.

“I think Dana Rohrabache­r’s stance will not be inflexible. If he serves as the US secretary of state, he must follow the president’s policies, and therefore he cannot be an absolutist and follow his ideas that have conflicted with Cambodia in the past,” Eysan said.

“Even though in past he had bad views about the Cambodian prime minister, when he has a new president, he must follow the new president,” he said.

Kem Monovithya, the opposition’s deputy public affairs director and a daughter of deputy opposition leader Kem Sokha, who has long been close to US Republican­s such as Rohrabache­r, said his appointmen­t as secretary of state – if made – would be welcomed.

“He’s been very vocal in supporting democracy here, and has a great relationsh­ip with CNRP leaders,” she said.

Rohrabache­r, a speechwrit­er for late US President Ronald Reagan and cur- rent chair of the US House of Representa­tives Foreign Affairs subcommitt­ee for Europe, Eurasia and Emerging Threats, has been one of the most aggressive critics of Hun Sen over the past 20 years.

In September 1998, he introduced a controvers­ial resolution to the US House of Representa­tives aiming to secure “the indictment of Hun Sen for genocide and crimes against humanity before an internatio­nal tribunal” due to his time with the Khmer Rouge.

The year before – and just a month after Hun Sen ousted Norodom Ranariddh as first prime minister in the 1997 factional fighting in Phnom Penh – one of Rohrabache­r’s top aides described Hun Sen as a “dictator”, “triggerman for Pol Pot” and “war criminal”.

Rohrabache­r himself told the Los Angeles Times in 2005 that he worried the US State Department, which he would lead if appointed by Trump as secretary of state, was being too cautious with Hun Sen and should worry less about protecting stability in Cambodia.

“The State Department quite often will worship at the altar of stability and not consider liberty and justice as part of the equation,” Rohrabache­r said, telling a reporter that when “you talk about a dictator like Hun Sen, you don’t want stability, you want change”.

During the July 2013 Cambodian national election campaign, Rohrabache­r told a US congressio­nal hearing titled “Cambodia’s Looming Political and Social Crisis” that “Hun Sen is a corrupt, vicious human being who has held that country in his grip for decades”.

“It’s time for Hun Sen to go,” he said.

 ?? SHUJI KAJIYAMA/AFP ?? US Representa­tive Dana Rohrabache­r (right) gestures as he arrives at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo to attend a meeting 2013.
SHUJI KAJIYAMA/AFP US Representa­tive Dana Rohrabache­r (right) gestures as he arrives at the prime minister’s official residence in Tokyo to attend a meeting 2013.
 ?? SUPPLIED ?? A screenshot of CNRP leader Sam Rainsy’s new twitter page.
SUPPLIED A screenshot of CNRP leader Sam Rainsy’s new twitter page.

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