Strategy Page: http://www.strategypage.com/htmw/htatrit/articles/20110730.aspx






Cambodia Cleans Out The Pretenders




July 30, 2011: The Cambodian Army has been conducting a vigorous recruiting 
drive recently. The goal is 3,000 fit and intelligent young men. The new 
recruits are to replace several thousand older soldiers who were recently 
retired. Like many nations, Cambodia has long used the army as a jobs program. 
The emphasis was on keeping the 124,000 military personnel employed, not ready 
for war.






Cambodia found that there were serious shortcomings with this approach when, 
three years ago, a border dispute with Thailand turned into a military 
conflict. Nothing major. The action has been mostly assault rifles, 
machine-guns, artillery and mortars. There have been hundreds of casualties. 
What shocked Cambodian commanders and political leaders was how unprepared 
their army was for even a minor conflict like this. This led to a 
revitalization plan for the army, which the current recruiting drive is part of.






The border war was unexpected, even though Cambodia and Thailand have long 
argued over who owns how much of an ancient temple site. In 1962, an 
international court declared the temple Cambodian, but Thailand continued to 
claim adjacent areas that the Cambodians insist are part of the temple complex.






Currently, each side has about 3,000 troops near the temple site, and there 
have been a few shooting incidents since 2008, but nothing serious. The two 
countries have been negotiating the withdrawal of troops. Fighting earlier this 
year damaged portions of the temple (which Cambodians occupy) and caused over 
20,000 local civilians to flee.






This dispute is but one of many similar ones. The basic problem is that the 
current 730 kilometer long border was defined in 1907 by the placement of only 
73 border markers. This has left the exact location of the border open to 
interpretation. Occasionally these interpretations clash, as is happening now. 
Neither side wants a full scale war, even though Thailand has a larger and 
better equipped military. In the last few years, Cambodia doubled its annual 
military budget to $500 million. Thailand spends more than six times that, and 
has done so for decades. Thailand has 300,000 troops, Cambodia only 124,000.






Cambodia is very poor, and has been helped by China. which recently donated 
50,000 field uniforms (including hats and boots). Last year, China donated 257 
military trucks, and also supplied weapons. The infantry weapons tend to be 
older models. That's because China is introducing a new and improved model of 
their QBZ-95 assault rifle (also called the Type 95) to their own troops. The 
QBZ-95 is a distinctive bullpup design (the magazine is behind the trigger) 
that China has been issuing to its troops for over a decade now. That means 
China has plenty of surplus Type 81 (improved AK-47) rifles (which the QBZ-95 
replaced) to either put into storage, or distribute to allies. Cambodia has 
bought some Type 95s, for elite units. But most everyone else has the second 
hand Type 81. AK-47s have been widely used in Burma nearly half a century.






Cambodia has never really recovered from its disastrous experiment in communist 
government (the Khmer Rouge) in the 1970s. That killed off 15 percent of the 
population (including nearly all the ethnic Chinese community) and trashed the 
economy. China supported the Khmer Rouge (as fellow communists), but Khmer 
Rouge aggression against Vietnam resulted in Vietnam invading in 1979 and 
deposing the Khmer Rouge. But as the decades went by, former Khmer Rouge 
officials got back in power, and China made nice.








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