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Chinese FM Winds Up Southeast Asia Trip With Stops in Cambodia, Singapore

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ASEAN Beat | Diplomacy | Southeast Asia

Chinese FM Winds Up Southeast Asia Trip With Stops in Cambodia, Singapore

The trip followed a number of regional tours by high-ranking U.S. officials, including Vice President Kamala Harris.

Chinese FM Winds Up Southeast Asia Trip With Stops in Cambodia, Singapore

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen (right) and Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi pose ahead of their meeting in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, on September 13, 2021.

Credit: Facebook/Samdech Hun Sen, Cambodian Prime Minister

China’s Foreign Minister Wang Yi today concluded a three-nation tour of Southeast Asia with stops in Singapore and Cambodia that were aimed at shoring up Beijing’s diplomatic engagement with the region following a number of visits by high-ranking U.S. officials.

Prior to his departure for South Korea today, Wang paid a two-day visit to Singapore, where he met with Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and reaffirmed the importance of trade and diplomatic ties between the two countries.

In a Facebook post yesterday, Lee said he had a “productive and candid discussion on international and regional developments,” and pledged to continue “working closely” to combat the COVID-19 pandemic. “Singapore welcomes China’s continued contribution in our part of the world, and will continue working with China to build a more harmonious and peaceful world,” Lee wrote. Meanwhile, Chinese state media featured a characteristically vague and sunny assessment of Wang’s visit, hailing the “mutual understanding and mutual trust” that has grown up between the two nations.

Wang’s stop, which follows his visits to all 10 Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) states over the past year, came after U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin wrapped up recent Southeast Asian trips that included stops in Singapore.

During their visits, both spoke out strongly against Chinese actions in the disputed South China Sea. While in Singapore last month, Harris said that the U.S. would “stand with our allies and our partners” in the face of Chinese assertiveness.

The Southeast Asian city-state has long positioned itself deftly between China and the U.S., welcoming stronger defense ties with Washington while position itself to benefit from China’s meteoric economic growth.

As such, it made for a considerable contrast to Wang’s previous stop, Cambodia, which over the past two decades has developed an increasingly lopsided dependence on China and its largess, largely as a shield against Western pressures to cease its unrelenting assault against its opponents. During the Chinese foreign minister’s visit on Monday, the two nations signed six bilateral agreements, including a Chines pledge of $272 million in grant aid, a handover of equipment to fight the COVID-19 pandemic, and other support for demining, according to Cambodian state media.

Wang also officially handed over a new, $160 million Chinese-funded stadium on the outskirts of the capital Phnom Penh, an occasion at which Prime Minister Hun Sen rhapsodized the benefits of Chinese support for his government. In a speech at the handover of the 60,000-seat Morodok Techo Stadium – its name means “inheritance of Techo,” an honorific for Hun Sen – the Cambodian leader described it as “the fruit of the ironclad Cambodian-Chinese friendship.”

“Before, we could not imagine that Cambodia would have such a large stadium here, but China helps make it happen for us,” Hun Sen said. Chinese support has also been crucial in Cambodia achieving the second-highest COVID-19 vaccination rate in Southeast Asia, something that Hun Sen emphasized in his speech.

At the same time, Cambodia’s tilt toward China has coincided with the erosion of Cambodian democracy, a rash of disruptive investments (many involving casinos and online gambling), and the proliferation of Chinese organized crime activity, particularly in the seaside city of Sihanoukville. Indeed, these problems have become so pronounced that they threaten to undermine the two nations’ relations.

According to a report in Chinese state media, Wang told Cambodian Foreign Minister Prak Sokhonn that he hopes Cambodian law enforcement agencies will completely put an end to online gambling and “avoid affecting the practical cooperation between the two countries.”

In all, Wang’s tour of Southeast Asia achieved its main aim, which was to check-in with important Chinese partners and reinforce Beijing’s main message to the region: the importance of China to the region’s economic recovery from COVID-19. The Chinese foreign minister’s busy Southeast Asian agenda over the past year suggests that further visits will likely be on the horizon.