Cambodia, Thailand and Donald Trump
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Fighting between Thailand and Cambodia entered its fourth day on Thursday as both sides waited for a promised telephone call from U.S. President Donald Trump, who says he believes he can again end the conflict between the two Southeast Asian nations.
Bangkok, Dec 12 (EFE). Thailand’s foreign office said Friday that it “is coordinating” a phone call with United States President Donald Trump to address the renewed border clashes with Cambodia, after the US leader said he would speak with the heads ...
Armed clashes between Thailand and Cambodia entered a second day on Tuesday, both sides said, in defiance of calls from the United States to stop fighting and adhere to a months-old Trump-brokered peace deal that now looks on the brink of complete collapse.
Two peace agreements that President Donald Trump took credit for brokering are under severe strain. Violent clashes have intensified on the Thailand-Cambodia border and between Democratic Republic of Congo and the Rwanda-backed M23 militia.
Fighting raged Thursday along the border of Cambodia and Thailand, with explosions heard near centuries-old temples ahead of US President Donald Trump's planned phone call to the leaders of both nations.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the U.S. is “concerned” about a war that his boss claimed to have ended weeks ago. The Cambodia-Thailand conflict is one of several global conflicts President Trump has repeatedly claimed he ended in his second presidency,
Thailand has launched air strikes along its disputed border with Cambodia, its military said, after both countries accused each other of breaching a ceasefire brokered by U.S. President Donald Trump.