Thai Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul confirmed on Friday that there was no ceasefire yet with Cambodia and said he had spoken by telephone with US President Donald Trump and told him Bangkok was not the aggressor in the conflict with its neighbour.
Anutin said Trump told him he wanted the two countries to return to a ceasefire first agreed on in July. He added that the US president had not indicated that trade tariffs would be used as part of his efforts to end the fighting.
Anutin’s remarks came as heavy border clashes between the two countries continued for a fifth day.
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“[Trump] wanted a ceasefire. I told him to ask our friends – don’t just say a ceasefire but to tell the world that Cambodia will cease fire, withdraw its troops, remove all mines it has planted, and show them that they must stop everything first,” Anutin told reporters.
“Right now, there is no ceasefire yet, the fighting is still ongoing,” he said.
Thailand and Cambodia have been exchanging rockets and artillery at multiple locations along their disputed 817km (508-mile) frontier in some of the most intense clashes since a five-day battle in July, which Trump stopped with calls to both leaders to halt their worst conflict in recent history.

