US President Donald Trump's decision to abruptly pause all foreign aid has forced Cambodia to scale back its lifesaving campaign to clear the unexploded military ordnance left behind by decades of civil strife and American bombing during the Vietnam War.
Cambodia’s decades-long effort to clear unexploded munitions has had to partially suspend operations after the United States suddenly halted funding, a Cambodian minister said on Friday (Jan 31), calling on Washington to reverse the order.
Large swaths of land in Southeast Asia are littered with unexploded bombs dropped by American forces during the Vietnam War.
Cruising Southeast Asia’s longest river aboard an expedition ship offers a taste of luxury and (gentle) adventure
Under draft legislation announced last week, anyone denying “the truth of the bitter past” could be imprisoned for up to five years.
Several states were planning yesterday to file suit to block President Trump’s order to freeze trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans. The move, part of an effort to remake the government in his image, followed cuts to international aid introduced last week.
The Apple TV+ docuseries doesn't feature pundits or historians as talking heads, focusing instead on the people on the ground, from soldiers to nurses to Vietnamese civilians.
An pilot’s memoir of high-risk reconnaissance and aerial intelligence-gathering in Vietnam.
But all is not well between China and Cambodia these days. China made no new loans to Cambodia last year. It has been especially reluctant to invest in the government’s flagship project, a canal which would connect the Mekong river to the sea.
The governments of Rwanda and South Africa must do everything possible to prevent any further escalation. Talks of war should never be visited. In war, there’s no winner, writes .
GFDI, and investment fraud became some of the hottest keywords trending on social media in Vietnam in 2024 - the year that witnessed an unprecedented surge in the exposure of investment scams, with figures so staggering that they could shock anyone.
With the fall of Saigon’s 50th anniversary looming in April, the new Apple TV+ docuseries “Vietnam: The War That Changed America” tries to do something a little different from other shows about our most divisive foreign conflict.