-
Advertisement
Cambodia
This Week in AsiaPolitics

Will US warship visit calm fears of ‘intelligence outpost’ at Cambodian naval base?

The USS Cincinnati is the first US warship to dock at Ream Naval Base since its China-funded expansion was completed in April last year

Reading Time:4 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
1
USS Cincinnati docks at Ream Naval Base’s pier in Sihanoukville on Saturday. Photo: AP
Maria Siow
A visit by a United States warship to a Cambodian port built with major Chinese backing has underscored Phnom Penh’s superpower balancing act, but observers say American concerns will linger over the facility’s usage being dominated by Beijing.

The USS Cincinnati arrived on Saturday at Ream Naval Base as part of a mission to strengthen cooperation between Cambodian-US forces and departed from the Preah Sihanouk location on Wednesday, local media reported.

The littoral combat ship is the first American warship to dock at the base since its expansion was completed in April last year, and the first US vessel to visit the kingdom since the USS Savannah stopped at Sihanoukville Autonomous Port in December 2024.

Advertisement

Heavily funded and expanded on by Beijing since 2022, Ream has been transformed to host larger, modern warships with key upgrades including a 300-metre (980-foot) deepwater pier, 5,000-tonne (5,500-ton) dry dock and joint logistics and training centre.

The upgrades have fuelled concerns that Ream is becoming a permanent outpost for the Chinese People’s Liberation Army, similar to its base in Djibouti. Chinese naval vessels, specifically corvettes, have maintained a near-constant rotating presence at the base since December 2023.
Ream Naval Base Deputy Commander in Sokhemra (centre) welcomes USS Cincinnati captain Andrew Recame on Saturday. Photo: AP
Ream Naval Base Deputy Commander in Sokhemra (centre) welcomes USS Cincinnati captain Andrew Recame on Saturday. Photo: AP

While acknowledging Chinese funding for upgrades, Phnom Penh has stated that the base is open to vessels from all nations. Apart from the USS Cincinnati’s five-day visit, two Japanese Maritime Self-Defence Force vessels, the Bungo and Etazima, visited Ream last April, followed by a Vietnamese People’s Navy vessel shortly after.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x