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From Battlefields to Border Crisis: Samdech Techo’s Life Story Drives Cambodia’s Call for Unity

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PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (Dec. 22, 2025) — As Cambodia faces renewed external threats along its border with Thailand, senior officials are invoking the wartime sacrifices of Senate President Samdech Techo Hun Sen, casting his life story as a symbol of resilience and national survival.

Senate spokesperson Chea Thyrith said Samdech Techo Hun Sen has “risked his life as capital” and devoted decades to securing peace — a commitment he continues today by advising military commanders confronting what officials describe as Thai aggression.

Samdech Techo’s biography is being framed as a blueprint for crisis leadership. Officials say he fought in 105 battlefields, survived five serious war injuries, and repeatedly placed national reconciliation above personal safety. On June 20, 1977, he joined the struggle to liberate Cambodia from the Khmer Rouge. Nearly two decades later, on Oct. 22, 1996, he entered Khmer Rouge–controlled territory in pursuit of peace, a gamble that culminated in the end of Cambodia’s civil war on Dec. 29, 1998.

“These were not symbolic gestures,” Thyrith said. “They were life-and-death decisions made when the country’s future hung in the balance.”

Officials credit Samdech Techo Hun Sen’s leadership with transforming Cambodia from a post-conflict state into one of Southeast Asia’s fastest-growing economies, citing average annual growth of around seven percent for more than two decades before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Now, amid escalating border tensions, Samdech Techo is again positioned as a stabilizing force. Senate officials say he continues to share battlefield lessons and strategic insight, reminding commanders of both the human cost of war and the value of restraint.

“Whenever the nation and its people face hardship, he is always present,” Thyrith said. “His life belongs to the Khmer nation.”

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