Cambodia scholar Milton Osbourne weighs in on Cambodia-Thai relations and the Preah Vihear issue. It’s a complex relationship that defies easy summary. In addition to dense international law and fickle domestic politics, a troubled history between the two countries makes trust an uneasy gamble.

However, it is fair to say that legal considerations are not always at the heart of Thai thinking on relations with Cambodia. From the time of Cambodia’s gaining independence in 1953 until the onset of the Cambodian civil war in 1970, relations between Thailand and Cambodia were marked by almost continuous difficulty. While there were brief periods when relations were “correct”, in others diplomatic relations were suspended. Throughout these years Thai security services worked to undermine the government in Phnom Penh.

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Nevertheless, discussion of the issue of Preah Vihear within Thailand does represent yet another instance of a readiness of some Thais, whether politicians or ordinary citizens, to adopt and advance positions that seek to undermine what they see as irrelevant and irksome Cambodian interests. The readiness of some observers to resort to describing the situation as an expression of big brother-little brother rivalry is too simple, but it would be equally wrong to dismiss this aspect of Thai and Cambodian thinking about the relationship between the two countries.

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