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Updated August 4, 2022

Cambodia

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U.S. relations with the Kingdom of Cambodia have become
strained over the past decade, particularly as Cambodia's
relationship with the People's Republic of China (PRC) has
grown closer and after Prime Minister Hun Sen banned the
main opposition party in 2017. The U.S. government has
sought to remain engaged in Cambodia while calling on
Hun Sen to restore political rights and resist PRC influence.
The U.S. government has provided support to Cambodian
civil society and has imposed restrictions on foreign
assistance and sanctions on some Cambodian officials.
In 2017, the Cambodian government suspended Angkor
Sentinel, an annual exercise between U.S. Army Pacific and
the Royal Cambodian Army that was first held in 2010,
saying that security forces were needed for other purposes.
In 2018, the U.S. government suspended military assistance
to Cambodia in response to the government's suppression
of the political opposition. The two sides continue to
cooperate on activities aimed at accounting for U.S.
Prisoners of War and Missing in Action from the Vietnam
War era. Two bills introduced in the 117th Congress, S.
3052 and H.R. 4686, would impose sanctions on senior
Cambodian officials the President has determined have
directly and substantially undermined democracy or
engaged in serious human rights abuses.
Politics and Human Rights
Hun Sen has been the nation's head of government for 37
years, including as premier of the Vietnam-backed Republic
of Kampuchea between 1985 and 1993. Since 1993, he has
headed the Cambodian People's Party (CPP) and served as
prime minister of Cambodia, including as co-premier
between 1993 and 1997. In 2021, the CPP reportedly
endorsed the eldest son of Hun Sen, West Point graduate
Hun Manet, as his successor. The king of Cambodia and
head of state, a largely symbolic figure, is Norodom
Sihamoni, who succeeded his father, Norodom Sihanouk, in
2004.
Between 1993, when the United Nations administered
Cambodia's first national elections following the 1991 Paris
Agreements, and 2017, democratic institutions and
practices had gradually evolved to allow widespread civic
and political participation. During this period, Cambodia
developed a vibrant civil society and a relatively free print
media. The Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP)-a
union of two opposition parties led by Sam Rainsy, a long-
time opposition leader, and politician and human rights
activist Kem Sokha-made significant gains in the 2013
parliamentary election and 2017 local elections. In
November 2017, the Supreme Court of Cambodia,
allegedly at the behest of the government, issued a ruling
that dissolved the CNRP for conspiring with the United
States to overthrow the government.

After banning the CNRP, the government charged Kem
Sokha with collaborating with the United States to foment a
popular overthrow of the CPP. Sam Rainsy, facing
numerous charges and convictions that many observers
view as politically motivated, lives in self-imposed exile in
France. Since 2021, Cambodian courts have convicted
nearly 90 former CNRP politicians and opposition activists
of crimes against the state. Facing a significantly hindered
opposition, the CPP won 80% of commune council seats in
the June 2022 local elections. The Candlelight Party, a
recently revived opposition party that has attracted former
CNRP members, won 18%. The Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights reported
pre-election threats, intimidation, and obstruction. The next
parliamentary election is scheduled for July 2023.
Figure I. Cambodia at a Glance

Source: Map: CRS; other information: Central Intelligence Agency,
The World Factbook, 2022.
Hun Sen also has clamped down on civil society and the
media in recent years. In 2017, the Cambodian Foreign
Ministry applied a restrictive new law on non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to expel the U.S. government-funded
National Democratic Institute, which was engaged in
democracy promotion programs in Cambodia, on the
grounds that it was not registered with the government.
Roughly 25 human rights NGOs still operate in Cambodia,
according to the Department of State, although they face
increasing repression.
Human rights groups report that the Cambodian
government restricts freedom of expression and the press in
various ways, including through defamation lawsuits,
criminal prosecutions, tax penalties, approval of permits
and licenses, and occasional violent attacks on journalists
by unidentified perpetrators. In 2017, the government
closed more than one dozen radio stations that sold airtime
to U.S. government-funded Voice of America and Radio
Free Asia, which, facing political and economic pressure
from the Cambodian government, closed its Phnom Penh
office. Authorities also ordered the English-language
Cambodia Daily, considered an opposition newspaper, to

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