The Phnom Penh Post

War of words escalates

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completely dealt with”, Hun Sen said. “[They] attacked us and [then] demand money from us,” he added, declaring the irony “delicious”.

“And this group is the one who destroys, is the initiator, who is the mastermind, and its puppet is in Cambodia.”

Hun Sen also took umbrage with former US Ambassador William Todd’s flashing a peace sign – which was interprete­d as a confusing cultural faux pas – after a meeting of lawmakers with King Norodom Sihamoni in 2013. Mimicking the gesture yesterday, Hun Sen called Todd a “gangster”, and took a swipe at the embassy’s attempts to be a “parent” to Cambodia.

“We cannot accept such a diplomatic attitude. And I hope that such things won’t happen in the attitudes of other diplomats,” he said, speaking at a graduation ceremony for medical students.

Meanwhile, the US Embassy on Friday launched the hashtag “#RedHerring­sKH”, using a term for misleading informatio­n designed to distract people from relevant issues – an apparent reference to the ongoing furore surroundin­g its purported collusion with Sokha.

It has since published three Facebook posts with the hashtag, all titled “What does the United States do in #Cambodia?” The three posts described the embassy’s efforts to protect 2.6 million hectares of forest, preserve temples and improve reading levels among primary school students.

“What does the United States do in Cambodia? We save temples!” one post reads, ending with an admonition to “Watch out for #RedHerring­sKH”.

The campaign seemed to have caught the attention of Hun Sen, who asked, “Why is your Facebook posting a fish and interpreti­ng [the situation] differentl­y?”

The embassy said it had no comment yesterday.

Ou Virak, founder of local think tank Future Forum, said while past attacks on the US had been mostly sporadic, the recent push to link the country to an anti-government conspiracy was “overboard”, and could provoke pushback. “They [the US] are sending a subtle message. They want the government to understand the message.”

Human Rights Watch’s Phil Robertson said the attacks on the US would falter, no matter “how loudly or strongly Typhoon Hun Sen howls”, and “the Cambodian people will end up picking up the mess and paying the bills, just like [they] always have to do”.

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