So far, Japan, Iran, South Korea, Uzbekistan, Australia, and Jordan qualified for the 2026 World Cup.
So far, Japan, Iran, South Korea, Uzbekistan, Australia, and Jordan qualified for the 2026 World Cup.
Wooooo!!!
Also on the news: South Korea's new president is silent on North Korea's Nuclear Wastewater Discharge Suspicion,
but it's not being mentioned on most of the news outlets yet.
EDIT: They're starting to report it:
It was first talked about on the non-mainstream media channels such as this one:
Last edited by Shaka_Khan; 07-06-2025 at 03:41.
Wooooo!!!
Any thoughts on Thailand v Cambodia. Seems like the scale of the fighting is so far larger than the last escalation many years ago. Wonder if both sides are just trying to take advantage of the lack of US leadership to 'fix' the border without the risk of upsetting the US.
I imagine the PRC will insert itself on Cambodia's behalf (diplomatically not militarily) as Thailand is too close to the US to allow it to get a one up on Cambodia.
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"Am I not destroying my enemies when I make friends of them?"
-Abraham Lincoln
Four stage strategy from Yes, Minister:
Stage one we say nothing is going to happen.
Stage two, we say something may be about to happen, but we should do nothing about it.
Stage three, we say that maybe we should do something about it, but there's nothing we can do.
Stage four, we say maybe there was something we could have done, but it's too late now.
I know very little about Indochina geopolitics, but AFAICT it's another case of a dictator (Hun Sen) flexing his consolidated grip over his country to advance a revision of the regional order. But I have no idea what his aims are or what his actual negotiating position for this round is, with Cambodia escalating the Preah Vihear and related issues more than ever. It can't just for the sake of squeezing out slightly expanded access to the temple complex. Regardless, by all appearances neither side appears to want a war, and Thailand itself has responded with a lot of the typical posturing. But I could be missing key factions in either country who do want war, so we'll have to watch the development of the border clashes carefully (on the grounds that it's difficult for both countries to somehow make a mistake that instigates unwanted war). As always, it is important to keep in mind the facts on the ground: neither country has the equipment available for significant combined arms operations, and Cambodia has no air force to speak of, inherently limiting the scope of any bilateral conflict.
Vitiate Man.
History repeats the old conceits
The glib replies, the same defeats
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
A-a-a-nd it's over. I wonder if either side had any clear notion of what was going on, or if it really is just a process of managing internal politics (as Communists have always affirmed), where the sacrifice of a handful of soldiers is cheap fodder. Been reading in the meanwhile about the potent character of Thai and Cambodian nationalist construction of historical memory, the more important territorial contestation of the Gulf of Thailand and its resources, and moreover, the close and strange interpersonal relationships between the ruling classes of the two countries (which of course go beyond the Huns and the Shinawatras). It's not so much a question of any factions wanting war, but whether certain such factions will have enough significance to push both countries into a bilateral deadlock on co-interests, and therefore promote a more belligerent posture within this frustrated relationship.
Sample analysis of the factors peripheral to the territorial claims, which does align with my original impressions of the situation:
Complicating the puzzle further is the fact that while appealing to international law and calling for the intercession of the ICJ and the U.N. Security Council, Phnom Penh has arguably played a disproportionate role in escalating the conflict.
...
A number of plausible theories for Hun Sen’s behavior, including the leak, have been floated. One is that Hun Sen wished to bring down the Pheu Thai government in order either to scuttle its casino legalization bill, which threatened to reduce the profits of Cambodia’s own gaming sector, and/or to forestall its crackdown on Cambodia-based cybercrime operations upon which his government’s patronage networks allegedly rely. (Thailand’s decision to go after Kok An, an important ally of Hun Sen, may well have been a red line.) Another theory holds that Hun Sen fomented the crisis in order to burnish his son’s nationalist credentials, although this has been undermined somewhat by the fact that it is Hun Sen, rather than Hun Manet, who has been depicted as leading the country through the crisis.
The one clear thing is the unanimity of public sentiment that the conflict has created within Cambodia. The government’s position – that Cambodia is a victim of premeditated Thai aggression – has reflexively been adopted by most of Cambodian public opinion, from social media users to journalists, civil society leaders, and exiled opposition figures living in exile. At the very least, anyone opposing the current course of events is loath to say so publicly.
This may point to the real reason why Cambodia’s leaders have encouraged the conflict. Since a contested election in 2013 in which opposition forces came close to victory, the CPP government, backed increasingly by China, has eliminated most sources of opposition and reverted to ruling more openly by force. In this context, stoking nationalism may be a good way of rallying the nation around the flag and compensating for the government’s dearth of democratic legitimacy. It may also serve to distract attention from more pressing concerns, including the stagnating economy, which is threatened by U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariff war, and the crime and reputational impacts stemming from Chinese-run scam operations. Robust Chinese support has also arguably made the Cambodian government more confident in asserting its interests vis-à-vis its two larger neighbors. This is even the case with Vietnam, as the recent frictions over Cambodia’s planned Funan Techo Canal have shown. However, as in 2003 and 2008, Thailand remains a safer and more manipulable target of nationalist brinkmanship.
How far things will go remains unclear – but if elements in both Thailand and Cambodia have had a political interest in pushing the dispute to the point of conflict, neither government has much interest in a full-scale war.All this suggests that the two nations will sooner or later find a face-saving way to pull back from the precipice... But a comprehensive solution, which would require both nations to make concessions on issues that touch on keen nationalist sensitivities, would require more political capital than either government currently possesses.
If the history of the past century is any indication, the border issue will then return to a state of dormancy. Like a landmine in the underbrush, it will remain concealed, awaiting the next incautious political footfall.
Last edited by Montmorency; 07-28-2025 at 13:35.
Vitiate Man.
History repeats the old conceits
The glib replies, the same defeats
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
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