Overview
- Thailand confirmed retaliatory strikes at about 5:50 a.m. local Saturday after days of heavy exchanges along the border.
- President Trump said he spoke with Thai and Cambodian leaders and that both agreed to stop all firing and return to a previous peace agreement.
- Anutin earlier told Trump there was no ceasefire and later said operations would continue, urging Cambodian troop withdrawals and mine removal.
- Official tallies from both countries report at least 20 dead, more than 260 injured, and roughly 500,000 people displaced this week.
- The clashes arise from a long-running border dispute dating to a 1907 French demarcation, with an expanded ceasefire signed in Kuala Lumpur in October under U.S. and Malaysian mediation.