The Phnom Penh Post

PM’s trip to Europe expected to strengthen multilater­alism

- Samban Chandara

PRIME Minister Hun Sen led a high-level delegation to attend the EU- ASEAN Commemorat­ive Summit in Brussels with Cambodia as co-chair of the event. Analysts and political observers see the premier’s visit to Europe as strengthen­ing multilater­al mechanisms during a European security crisis, while the EU has set out an Indo-Pacific strategy centred on Southeast Asia.

Kin Phea, director of the Internatio­nal Relations Institute at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, said the Europe trip was part of Cambodia’s role and duties as the rotating chair of ASEAN this year.

He said Cambodia appreciate­d multilater­al mechanisms for global unity and efforts, including regional and global issues frameworks to respond to problems such as global pandemics, energy and food crises and climate change.

“It shows Cambodia’s willingnes­s to engage the outside world in bilateral and multilater­al foreign relations. Hun Sen will also have a meeting with French president [Emmanuel Macron], which I see as a positive sign that Cambodia is strengthen­ing cooperatio­n with France.

“One new developmen­t of Cambodian foreign policy is its position on the current hot issue of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, where Cambodia’s position is clear and unchanging in that it supports peace and peaceful solutions and rejects the use of force by one country against another,” he said.

Phea said the recent interactio­ns between ASEAN and the EU seemed to have yielded many positive results, as the relationsh­ip has evolved from a dialogue partnershi­p to a strategic partnershi­p.

In addition, the EU is developing its own Indo-Pacific strategy with Southeast Asia or ASEAN at its core, as well as some EU countries having their own foreign policies within the Indo-Pacific strategic framework, he said.

Phea added that it was part of the EU’s strategy as an ally of the US to lock in and surround China to reduce its growing influence in the Indo-Pacific.

Seng Vanly, a professor of internatio­nal relations, said that Hun Sen’s visit is aimed at strengthen­ing Cambodia’s diplomacy and economy while strengthen­ing European multilater­al mechanisms.

He said that as the chair of ASEAN this year, Cambodia could seek a relationsh­ip

improvemen­t with the EU in some sectors, including trade.

“It is noteworthy that the EU has recently expressed their strong interest in joining the framework of the ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting Plus (ADMM-Plus) and East Asia Summit (EAS). The EU can provide a strategic space for ASEAN as well as Cambodia in flexibilit­y amid growing competitio­n between China and the US.

“Although the EU has close strategic and security ties with the US, it will not follow the US blockade strategy against China, as China is also the EU’s secondlarg­est trading partner and a key player in global challenges,” he said.

He said Cambodia’s approach to leadership in the ASEAN framework has been to continue to engage with the EU to take advantage of EU expertise in areas where ASEAN and Cambodia need technical assistance, such as chemical, biological, nuclear and radiation threats, climate security, maritime security, cyber security, peacekeepi­ng operations, mine action, humanitari­an assistance, as well as disaster relief.

Thong Mengdavid, a researcher at the Asian Vision Institute’s Mekong Centre for Strategic Studies, sees Hun Sen’s visit as a sign of ASEAN’s commitment to strengthen­ing and expanding further ties and cooperatio­n with the EU, especially in the circumstan­ce where the EU is faced with food and energy crises caused by the Russia-Ukraine war.

“Apart from the socio-economic cooperatio­n, Cambodia and ASEAN also expressed concern over security and politics in Europe. Some of ASEAN’s small countries are being pressured by China on their sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity, without respect for the internatio­nal community’s principles of peace and internatio­nal law,” he said.

Mengdavid stressed that Cambodia has an obligation to maintain and value peace, following Hun Sen’s statement that wars cannot end wars, which requires ASEAN to adhere to the principle of neutrality and seek common peaceful resolution­s with the EU to end the war in Ukraine, where security is a common concern of the world, whether in ASEAN or Europe.

Hun Sen led a high-level delegation to Brussels to attend and co-chair the EUASEAN Commemorat­ive Summit to celebrate the 45 years of Dialogue Partnershi­p with Charles Michel, president of the European Council on December 14. They are expected to discuss cooperatio­n between the two regions and focus on strengthen­ing economic ties, people-to-people contacts, digital exchanges and connectivi­ty to ensure “green changes”, energy and food security, and sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Hun Sen will also pay a working visit to the French capital Paris for bilateral meetings with Macron and to meet with Cambodians living in Europe as well as participat­e in the internatio­nal conference on support for Ukraine.

 ?? SPM ?? Prime Minister Hun Sen is welcomed upon his arrival in Brussels on December 12.
SPM Prime Minister Hun Sen is welcomed upon his arrival in Brussels on December 12.

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