Thailand sees US offering ‘very good' trade deal after ceasefire
BANGKOK - Thailand expects the Trump administration to offer it a 'very good' trade deal after
agreeing to end an armed border conflict with Cambodia under a US-backed peace initiative, its Acting Prime Minister Phumtham Wechayachai said.
Mr Phumtham spoke to President Donald Trump hours after Thailand and Cambodia jointly announced an 'immediate and unconditional' ceasefire. The US president lauded Thailand for agreeing to end the five-day old conflict, Mr Phumtham told reporters late on July 28.
The truce was reached after Mr Trump threatened to block trade deals with both the South-east Asian countries unless the violence stopped. Mr Phumtham and Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Manet met for talks hosted by Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim in his capacity as the chair of the Association of South-east Asian Nations.
Mr Trump told Mr Phumtham that 'there will be tariff negotiations, which will be beneficial and we will get something very good out of it. He will do his best to give us as much as he can', the Thai leader said.
On his part, Mr Trump posted on Truth Social that 'I have instructed my Trade Team to restart negotiations on Trade'.
With the Aug 1 tariff deadline nearing, export-reliant Thailand appeared eager to avoid provoking the US president as it worked to reduce a planned 36 per cent levy on its exports. Mr Trump has credited his use of trade pressure with helping stop border clashes between India and Pakistan earlier this year – a claim welcomed by Pakistan but consistently denied by India.
Thailand's trade talks with the US have included offering expanded access for American goods to narrow a US$46 billion (S$59 billion) trade surplus. Neighboring Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam have already secured trade deals with the US in recent weeks.
Top stories
Swipe. Select. Stay informed.
World Trump says many are starving in Gaza, vows to set up food centres
Asia Cambodia, Thailand agree to 'immediate and unconditional ceasefire' to de-escalate border row
World US, China hold new talks on tariff truce, easing path for Trump-Xi meeting
Asia Giant algal bloom off South Australia devastates marine life, threatens seafood exports
Singapore Tanjong Katong sinkhole: Road recovery works progressing steadily, tests under way
Singapore ST Explains: What we know about the Tanjong Katong sinkhole so far
Sport Gan Ching Hwee breaks 2 national records, qualifies for World Aquatics C'ships 1,500m final
Asia Gunman kills 5 near Bangkok's Chatuchak market before taking own life
Mr Phumtham said though border fighting continued ahead of the midnight ceasefire, it will end very well as the international community supports the truce. The Malaysia talks didn't cover disputed maps and border checkpoint measures.
The Thai-Cambodia conflict traces its roots to long-standing disputes stemming from colonial-era maps and treaties that defined the two countries' boundaries. Relations had remained relatively stable since a 2011 clash that left dozens dead, but renewed tensions have triggered fears of escalated fighting. BLOOMBERG
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Straits Times
15 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Malaysia King will make state visit to Russia for Putin meeting
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Malaysia's king, Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, will attend a state banquet hosted Russian President Vladimir Putin during a state visit to Russia from Aug 5 to 10. Malaysia's king, Sultan Ibrahim Iskandar, will make the first state visit of a monarch from the country to Russia, in a trip at the invitation of President Vladimir Putin that runs from Aug 5 to 10, the palace said on Aug 2. 'This visit also reflects the important role of the Malaysian monarchy in driving the nation's diplomacy,' according to a statement from the palace. The visit will strengthen ties and enhance cooperation in sectors including trade, education and technology, it said. Sultan Ibrahim will attend a state banquet hosted by Mr Putin, and visit an automotive technology development company as well as the Tochka Kipeniya Technology and Innovation Hub, the statement said. After concluding the Moscow visit, the king travels to Kazan on Aug 8, where he will tour a helicopter manufacturing facility. The visit follows Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim's trip to Moscow in May , where talks covered areas including education, agriculture, food security, energy and defence. During the meeting, Mr Putin had criticised a UN probe that found his country responsible for the downing of a Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, which killed all 298 passengers and crew in 2014. BLOOMBERG

Straits Times
15 minutes ago
- Straits Times
Appeals court allows Trump order that ends union protections for federal workers
Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox A ruling by a federal appeals court on Aug 1 authorises a component of US President Donald Trump's sweeping effort to assert more control over the federal workforce to move forward. WASHINGTON – A federal appeals court on Aug 1 allowed US President Donald Trump to move forward with an order instructing a broad swath of government agencies to end collective bargaining with federal unions. The ruling authorises a component of Mr Trump's sweeping effort to assert more control over the federal workforce to move forward, for now, while the case plays out in court. It is unclear what immediate effect the ruling will have: the appeals court noted that the affected agencies had been directed to refrain from ending any collective bargaining agreement until 'litigation has concluded', but also noted that Mr Trump was now free to follow through with the order at his discretion. Mr Trump had framed his order stripping workers of labour protections as critical to protect national security. But the plaintiffs – a group of affected unions representing over 1 million federal workers – argued in a lawsuit that the order was a form of retaliation against those unions that have participated in a barrage of lawsuits opposing Mr Trump's policies. The unions pointed to statements from the White House justifying the order that said 'certain federal unions have declared war on President Trump's agenda' and that the President 'will not tolerate mass obstruction that jeopardizes his ability to manage agencies with vital national security missions.' But a three-judge panel of the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, a famously liberal jurisdiction, ruled in Mr Trump's favour, writing that 'the government has shown that the president would have taken the same action even in the absence' of the union lawsuits. Even if some of the White House's statements 'reflect a degree of retaliatory animus', they wrote, those statements, taken as a whole, also demonstrate 'the President's focus on national security'. The unions had also argued that the order broadly targeted agencies across the government, some of which had no obvious national security portfolio – including the Department of Health and Human Services and the Environmental Protection Agency – using national security as a pretext to strip the unions of their power. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore 60 years of building Singapore World Trump deploys nuclear submarines in row with Russia Singapore Sheng Siong to open first store in Orchard by end August Asia 'This isn't some concubine selection': Why matchmaking events for rich Chinese have drawn flak Life Tastemakers: Burnt-out serial entrepreneur cooks up $16m success with Lau Wang Claypot Delights Sport Spurs captain Son Heung-min says he is leaving the English Premier League club Life The story of you: What might Singapore look like for those born today? Singapore Man in army uniform allegedly vaping on bus released from SAF custody; investigations ongoing The panel sidestepped that claim, writing in the 15-page ruling that 'we question whether we can take up such arguments, which invite us to assess whether the President's stated reasons for exercising national security authority – clearly conferred to him by statute – were pretextual'. The order, they continued, 'conveys the President's determination that the excluded agencies have primary functions implicating national security'. NYTIMES


AsiaOne
an hour ago
- AsiaOne
Cambodia to nominate Donald Trump for Nobel Peace Prize, says deputy PM, Asia News
PHNOM PENH - Cambodia will nominate US President Donald Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize, its deputy prime minister said on Friday (Aug 1), following his direct intervention in halting the Southeast Asian country's recent border conflict with Thailand. Asked via text message to confirm Cambodia's plan to nominate Trump for the prize, Chanthol responded, "yes." Speaking to reporters earlier in the capital, Phnom Penh, Chanthol thanked Trump for bringing peace and said he deserved to be nominated for the prize, the highest-profile international award given to an individual or organisation deemed to have done the most to "advance fellowship between nations". Pakistan said in June that it would recommend Trump for the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in helping to resolve a conflict with India, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said last month he had nominated Trump for the award. It was a call by Trump last week that broke a deadlock in efforts to end the heaviest fighting between Thailand and Cambodia in over a decade, leading to a ceasefire negotiated in Malaysia on Monday, Reuters has reported. Following the truce announcement, White House spokeswoman Karoline Leavitt said in a post on X that Trump made it happen. "Give him the Nobel Peace Prize!," she said. At least 43 people have been killed in the intense clashes, which lasted five days and displaced more than 300,000 people on both sides of the border. "We acknowledge his great efforts for peace," said Chanthol, also Cambodia's top trade negotiator, adding that his country was also grateful for a reduced tariff rate of 19 per cent. Washington had initially threatened a tariff of 49 per cent, later reducing it to 36 per cent, a level that would have decimated Cambodia's vital garment and footwear sector, Chanthol told Reuters in an interview earlier on Friday. [[nid:719959]]