Trump calls Thailand, Cambodia after new clashes

Trump calls Thailand, Cambodia after new clashes
A Cambodian soldier walks past a building, damaged by an artillery, during a visit of delegation of foreign diplomats to inspect a damaged area along the Thailand-Cambodia’s border in Oddar Meanchey, Cambodia on Aug. 1, 2025. (Reuters)
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Trump calls Thailand, Cambodia after new clashes

Trump calls Thailand, Cambodia after new clashes
  • US leader co-signed a truce between the two countries on October 26 during a tour of Asia
  • But Thailand suspended the deal on Monday after an alleged land mine blast

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump said he called Thailand and Cambodia on Friday to bolster the peace deal he helped broker, after fresh clashes erupted between the Southeast Asian neighbors.
Trump co-signed a truce between the two countries on October 26 during a tour of Asia, touting it as one of several peace deals around the world that he believes should win him the Nobel Peace Prize.
But Thailand suspended the deal on Monday after an alleged land mine blast, and the two sides traded accusations of new clashes on Wednesday in which Phnom Penh said a civilian was killed.
Addressing reporters on Air Force One as he flew to Florida, Trump said he spoke to the leaders of both countries.
“I stopped a war just today through the use of tariffs, the threat of tariffs,” Trump said after a journalist asked whether he was referring to Thailand and Cambodia.
“They’re doing great. I think they’re gonna be fine,” he added.
The White House said he also engaged with Malaysia, which has been acting as a broker in ending the conflict. Trump co-signed the deal in Kuala Lumpur.
Five days of combat erupted between Thailand and Cambodia this summer, killing 43 people and displacing around 300,000 before the truce took effect.
The dispute between Thailand and Cambodia centers on a century-old disagreement over borders mapped during France’s colonial rule in the region, with both sides claiming a smattering of boundary temples.


UN Security Council to vote Monday on Trump Gaza plan

Updated 32 sec ago

UN Security Council to vote Monday on Trump Gaza plan

UN Security Council to vote Monday on Trump Gaza plan
UNITED NATIONS/UNITED STATES: The UN Security Council will vote Monday on a resolution endorsing US President Donald Trump’s Gaza peace plan, diplomats said.
Last week the Americans officially launched negotiations within the 15-member Security Council on a text that would follow up on a ceasefire in the two-year war between Israel and Hamas and endorse Trump’s plan.
A draft of the resolution seen Thursday by AFP “welcomes the establishment of the Board of Peace,” a transitional governing body for Gaza — that Trump would theoretically chair — with a mandate running until the end of 2027.
It would authorize member states to form a “temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF)” that would work with Israel and Egypt and newly trained Palestinian police to help secure border areas and demilitarize the Gaza Strip.
Unlike previous drafts, the latest mentions a possible future Palestinian state.
The United States and several Arab and Muslim-majority nations including Egypt, and Turkiye called Friday for the UN Security Council to quickly adopt the resolution.
“The United States, Qatar, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, the Kingdom of , Indonesia, Pakistan, Jordan, and Türkiye express our joint support for the Security Council Resolution currently under consideration,” the countries said in a joint statement, adding they were seeking the measure’s “swift adoption.”
Friday’s joint statement comes as Russia circulated a competing draft resolution to Council members that does not authorize the creation of a board of peace or the immediate deployment of an international force in Gaza, according to the text seen Friday by AFP.
The Russian version welcomes “the initiative that led to the ceasefire” but does not name Trump.
It also only calls on the UN secretary-general to submit a report that addresses the possibilities of deploying an international stabilization force in war-ravaged Gaza.
The United States has called the ceasefire “fragile,” and warned Friday of the risks of not adopting its draft.
“Any refusal to back this resolution is a vote either for the continued reign of Hamas terrorists or for the return to war with Israel, condemning the region and its people to perpetual conflict,” the US ambassador to the United Nations, Mike Waltz, wrote in The Washington Post.
“Every departure from this path, be it by those who wish to play political games or to relitigate the past, will come with a real human cost.”
While it seemed until now that Council members supported principles of the peace plan, diplomatic sources noted there were questions about the US text, particularly regarding the absence of a monitoring mechanism by the Council, the role of the Palestinian Authority, and details of the ISF’s mandate.
The Russian UN mission said in a statement that its alternative proposal differed by recognizing the principle of a “two-State solution for the Israeli-Palestinian settlement.”
“Unfortunately, these provisions were not given due regard in the US draft,” it said.