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US helped broker ceasefire arrangement between Cambodia and Thailand, says Marco Rubio

Updated on: 08 August,2025 09:59 AM IST  |  Washington DC
ANI |

Earlier last week, Thailand released two injured Cambodian soldiers captured following recent border clashes, even as both countries prepare for talks aimed at maintaining a fragile truce next week

US helped broker ceasefire arrangement between Cambodia and Thailand, says Marco Rubio

Marco Rubio. Pic/AFP

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US helped broker ceasefire arrangement between Cambodia and Thailand, says Marco Rubio
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The United States has helped broker a ceasefire arrangement between Cambodia and Thailand, US Secretary Marco Rubio announced on Thursday.

In a post on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter), Secretary Rubio thanked Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim for hosting the peace process.


He wrote, "Thanks to @POTUS's leadership, the United States has helped broker a ceasefire arrangement between Cambodia and Thailand. We are grateful to Malaysian PM @anwaribrahim for his leadership and for hosting the ceasefire process. We look forward to supporting Malaysia, ASEAN, and both countries as this process moves forward."



US Ambassador to Malaysia, Edgard D Kagan, also shared a message on X, expressing strong US support for the peace deal.

"@POTUS and @SecRubio have been crystal clear: we want this ceasefire to hold. We want a durable peace between Thailand and Cambodia. Today's General Border Committee in Kuala Lumpur was another step in the right direction," he posted.

Earlier last week, Thailand released two injured Cambodian soldiers captured following recent border clashes, even as both countries prepare for talks aimed at maintaining a fragile truce next week, Al Jazeera reported.

Malaysia had earlier mediated a truce on July 28, following five days of intense border clashes that began on July 24. According to Al Jazeera, the violence started after Cambodian troops allegedly fired artillery and rockets into civilian areas in Thailand, prompting Thai airstrikes in response. While the ceasefire has held so far, both countries have accused each other of violating the terms.

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