The Phnom Penh Post

Ream Naval Base set for renovation

- Niem Chheng

MINISTER of National Defence Tea Banh said the developmen­t of the Ream Naval Base in Preah Sihanouk province will proceed as scheduled.

The upgrades, which he said were the result of a 10-year study, require a dismantlin­g of old buildings at the base including the Tactical Command Headquarte­rs ( TCH) and a boat maintenanc­e facility – both funded by the US and Australia.

“The constructi­on of all infrastruc­tures at the Ream Naval Base will start soon because everything has been studied. That is why we need to dismantle those [old] buildings, it’s a fact. Everything [infrastruc­tures] will appear there continuall­y. There is still a long way to go, it takes time,” Banh told The Post on November 10.

“We will build a deepwater port, a beautiful port that is capable of docking medium-side vessels. We have a maintenanc­e facility that can repair vessels weighing thousands of tonnes. But it needs time. I want to make it clear that this work is starting and we need to relocate the National Committee for Maritime Security’s Tactical Command Headquarte­rs that once stood on the Ream Naval Base.”

On November 9, the US-based Centre for Strategic and Internatio­nal Study (CSIS), through its Asia Maritime Transparen­cy Initiative, released another report about the demolition of the second US-funded building – a boat maintenanc­e facility built at the Ream base in 2017.

It said t he facilit y was demolished in phases bet ween late October and November 2, which it said purportedl­y supported Cambodia’s claim that the TCH had merely been relocated.

The group, however, was highly sceptical of the Cambodian government’s rationale for the relocation of the TCH, which it said was built just three years ago.

On October 2, the CSIS published its first report on the TCH relocation along with a US-based newspaper article that claimed Cambodia and China had signed a ‘secret deal’ which would grant the latter exclusive access to the Ream Naval Base

for 30 years. It said the deal could be renewed every 10 years afterwards.

Cambodian leaders, including Prime Minister Hun Sen, have repeatedly denied such claim, say ing Cambodia welcomed vessels f rom any countr y to dock with prior request.

Banh said on November 10 that the Ream Naval Base was being upgraded to enhance Cambodia’s capabiliti­es and address its needs and interests, not to serve the purpose of any other countries.

He confirmed that the two buildings were funded by the US and Austra lia, which had a lso equipped t he facilities with materia ls and donated boats to be used for marit ime activ it ies.

“This case is like drama series. They [US and Australia] helped us a little bit, but they attached a lot of conditions for us. I think sometimes we have to free ourselves from those conditions because they only hinder us from advancing ourselves and addressing defence needs. We need to move on,” Banh said.

Chad Roedemeier, the spokesman for the US embassy in Phnom Penh, said the US was disappoint­ed that Cambodian military authoritie­s demolished another USfunded maritime security facility. He said the demolition was done without notificati­on or explanatio­n.

“The prime minister [Hun Sen] has said Cambodia would not a llow an exclusive or permanent foreign militar y presence any where i n the countr y and that ships from around the world will be welcomed to [dock] at Ream. We hope the government continues to abide by t hat position,” he said.

Chheang Vannarith, the president of t he Asian Vision Institute (AV I), said t he US’ disappoint­ment was dependant on how the US perceived t he relocation of t he buildings.

Bilatera l dia log ue and consultati­on are critica l to promoting mutual understand­ing, he said.

Asked if he believed t here was a secret deal with China, Vannarith said: “We need to move f rom a ‘post-t r ut h world’ to a ‘trut h world’. We need facts and ev idence to support our arguments and positions. If t he US st ill believes that Cambodia and China have a ‘secret deal’, it should release the ev idence to t he public. Regional obser vers and analysts are rea l ly interested to see it.”

Royal Academy of Cambodia president Sok Touch said Cambodia should only notify the US about the relocation of the buildings to show respect for US humanitari­an aid. But in this case, he said, Cambodia can remove those buildings if they are responding to actual needs, as they are in Cambodian territory.

Touch said he did not believe t here was a ‘secret deal’ between the t wo countries because Cambodia’s Constituti­on does not a llow for such a deal. All agreements must be drafted by the government and passed by the National Assembly, he said.

“It is actua lly a geopolitic­a l issue. The US tries to [control] countries i n t he Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations [ASEAN]. Vietnam, a communist countr y, is a partner of the US. So, when Cambodia has close relations wit h China, the US loses in its geopolitic­s. There is nothing related to t he relocation of t hose buildings,” Touch said.

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