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Cambodia’s renovated naval base welcomes 2 Japanese warships despite US concerns

The Japanese embassy in Phnom Penh said that the visit is ‘a historically significant event’ that would ‘enhance trust and confidence’

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Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force (JMSDF) and Royal Cambodian Navy personnel posing for a group photo following the arrival of the JMSDF mine countermeasures vessel JS Bungo and the Awaji-class minesweeper JS Etajima at the Ream Naval Base, located off Cambodia’s southern coast in Preah Sihanouk province, on Saturday. Photo: AFP

Two Japanese warships made a port call at Cambodia’s Chinese-renovated naval base on Saturday, the Japanese embassy said, the first vessels to dock at the site that has raised concerns in Washington.

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The United States has said the Ream Naval Base, located off Cambodia’s southern coast, could give China a key strategic position in the Gulf of Thailand near the disputed South China Sea, which Beijing claims almost in its entirety.

Cambodian senior officials have repeatedly denied that the base is for use by any single foreign power, following US media reports in 2022 saying the new facilities at Ream base – originally built partly with US funds – would be exclusively for the Chinese navy.

Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet and a delegation from China’s People’s Liberation Army inaugurated the base early this month.

Hun Manet said during the opening that the base had “nothing to hide” and denied the new and improved facility would be for Beijing’s “exclusive” use, saying ships from other countries would be allowed to dock.

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Media access to the base was restricted on Saturday when the Japanese vessels Bungo and Etajima from the Japanese Maritime Self Defense Force (JMSDF) made a port call.

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