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CINBAX-II 2026: India-Cambodia Military Exercise | Chapter VII UN Framework

India and Cambodia conduct CINBAX-II 2026 (4–17 May) at Camp Basil, Kampong Speu. Know the UN Chapter VII framework, Maratha Light Infantry, and Act East Policy links for UPSC & SSC.

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📅 May 2026
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“CINBAX-II strengthens India-Cambodia defence ties under the UN peacekeeping framework — building interoperability for the world’s most demanding peace operations.” — Indian Army

The Indian Army contingent departed on 3 May 2026 for Cambodia to participate in the second edition of the India-Cambodia Bilateral Military Exercise, CINBAX-II 2026. The exercise runs from 4 to 17 May 2026 at the Techo Sen Phnom Thom Mreas Provincial Royal Cambodian Air Force Training Centre — also known as Camp Basil — in Kampong Speu Province, Kingdom of Cambodia.

CINBAX stands for Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise. Conducted under the framework of Chapter VII of the UN Mandate, it focuses on company-level joint training for operations in sub-conventional and semi-urban environments. The Indian contingent of 120 personnel is drawn primarily from the Maratha Light Infantry Regiment; the Cambodian contingent comprises 160 personnel from the Royal Cambodian Army.

120 Indian Personnel
160 Cambodian Personnel
5,901 India’s UN Peacekeepers (Dec 2023)
$131 B India-ASEAN Trade (2023)
📊 Quick Reference
Exercise Name CINBAX-II 2026
Dates 4–17 May 2026
Location Camp Basil, Kampong Speu, Cambodia
Indian Regiment Maratha Light Infantry
UN Framework Chapter VII (Articles 39–51)
First Edition CINBAX-I, Pune, December 2024

📜 From CINBAX-I to CINBAX-II: How the Exercise Began

The first edition of CINBAX was held in Pune, India, in December 2024 — one of the inaugural bilateral military mechanisms between the two nations. The rotation to Cambodia for the second edition follows India’s standard alternating-host format used across most of its bilateral military exercises, ensuring both armies practise operating on unfamiliar terrain.

CINBAX-I showcased Indian defence equipment — including NEGEV light machine guns and mortar systems — to the Cambodian military, reflecting India’s strategy of linking defence diplomacy with defence exports. India also has plans to appoint a dedicated Defence Attaché in Phnom Penh in 2026, which would further institutionalise the bilateral relationship.

The CINBAX series fits within India’s broader pattern of institutionalising defence ties with Southeast Asian nations — from Garud Shakti with Indonesia (November 2024) to Harimau Shakti with Malaysia (December 2024).

🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of CINBAX like a joint training camp where Indian and Cambodian soldiers practise the same drills side-by-side — so that when both countries send troops to a UN peacekeeping mission in, say, Congo or South Sudan, they already know how each other operates. The “alternating host” rule means this year India goes to Cambodia, and next time Cambodia comes to India.

1952
India and Cambodia establish diplomatic relations
1992–93
India deploys 1,373 peacekeepers to UNTAC (UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia) — a landmark in shared history
2014
India launches Act East Policy — successor to Look East Policy (1992), driving systematic defence engagement with Southeast Asia
Dec 2024
CINBAX-I held in Pune, India — inaugural edition of the bilateral exercise
4–17 May 2026
CINBAX-II held at Camp Basil, Kampong Speu Province, Cambodia

⚖️ What is Chapter VII of the UN Mandate?

Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter (Articles 39–51) empowers the UN Security Council to authorise enforcement actions — including the use of armed force — to maintain or restore international peace and security. Unlike Chapter VI (pacific settlement of disputes, which relies on consent and non-coercion), Chapter VII missions are authorised to use “all necessary means” including coercive military action against armed groups.

Most modern UN peacekeeping missions operate under Chapter VII mandates: MONUSCO (DR Congo), UNMISS (South Sudan), and MINUSMA (Mali) are key examples. These missions require troops capable of robust combat operations — counter-terrorism, counter-insurgency, and protection of civilians in hostile environments. Training under a Chapter VII framework, as CINBAX does, prepares forces for the demanding operational reality of contemporary UN deployments — far beyond traditional ceasefire-observation roles.

Feature Chapter VI (Pacific Settlement) Chapter VII (Enforcement Action)
Consent of host state Required Not required
Use of force Self-defence only “All necessary means” authorised
Mandate type Observation, mediation, monitoring Combat, counter-terrorism, protection of civilians
Example missions UNTSO (Middle East), UNMOGIP (India-Pakistan) MONUSCO (Congo), UNMISS (S. Sudan)
⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse Chapter VI and Chapter VII: Chapter VI = pacific settlement (no force). Chapter VII = enforcement action (force authorised). Most current peacekeeping missions run under Chapter VII — not Chapter VI. Also: CINBAX full form is Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise — the “C” comes first even though the exercise is called “India-Cambodia” in common usage.

✨ Key Training Components of CINBAX-II

CINBAX-II is structured around practical exercises building operational skills relevant to contemporary UN peacekeeping and counter-terrorism mandates:

  • Tactical Drills: Tabletop discussions on counter-insurgency and counter-terrorism scenarios followed by live drills — cordon and search, raid operations, and ambush drills.
  • Drone Operations: Both contingents practise drones for reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition — reflecting the shift toward unmanned systems in modern warfare.
  • Mortar and Sniper Training: Indirect fire and precision-shooting skills practised jointly, building standardised technical proficiency for combined operations.
  • Semi-Urban Warfare (OBUA): Operations in built-up areas — clearing structures, managing civilian presence, and executing precision actions in dense environments — the dominant scenario in active UN peacekeeping theatres.
  • Validation Exercise: A comprehensive joint validation exercise culminates the training, testing combined operational efficiency under simulated mission conditions.
✓ Quick Recall

CINBAX-II Training — “T-D-M-S-V”: Tactical drills · Drone operations · Mortar & sniper training · Semi-urban warfare (OBUA) · Validation exercise. These 5 components cover the full spectrum of sub-conventional and peacekeeping operations.

👤 The Maratha Light Infantry: India’s Representative Regiment

The Indian contingent for CINBAX-II is drawn from a battalion of the Maratha Light Infantry (MLI) Regiment — the most senior light infantry regiment of the Indian Army, tracing its lineage to the Bombay Sepoys raised in 1768. The regiment draws recruits predominantly from Maharashtra and Marathi-speaking areas of Karnataka, with its tactical ethos rooted in the guerrilla warfare traditions of Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj.

The regiment has extensive operational experience in counter-insurgency in Jammu & Kashmir and the Northeast, high-altitude deployments on the Siachen Glacier, and UN peacekeeping missions — including MONUSCO in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Its Regimental Centre is at Belgaum (Belagavi), Karnataka. The selection of MLI for CINBAX-II reflects the Indian Army’s practice of deploying units with direct field experience in the sub-conventional operations the exercise simulates.

🌍 India-Cambodia Relations & Act East Policy

India and Cambodia established diplomatic relations in 1952. The relationship has strategic significance under India’s Act East Policy — announced in 2014 as a successor to the Look East Policy (1992) — which drives systematic expansion of economic, strategic, and cultural ties with the Asia-Pacific region.

Cambodia is part of Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC), a sub-regional framework linking India with Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam. India implements Quick Impact Projects (QIPs) in Cambodia in education, health, and water resources, and trains Cambodian diplomats at the Sushma Swaraj Institute of Foreign Service (SSIFS) in New Delhi.

Strategically, China’s deep entrenchment as Cambodia’s primary defence partner — including Chinese-built naval infrastructure in Cambodia — makes India’s growing military engagement with Phnom Penh significant. Building an independent defence relationship aligns with India’s objective of maintaining a diverse network of Indo-Pacific partnerships.

India’s bilateral trade with ASEAN grew from $65 billion (2015) to $131 billion (2023); ASEAN accounts for 11% of India’s global trade.

💭 Think About This

Cambodia is deeply aligned with China — it hosts Chinese-built naval bases and often blocks ASEAN consensus on South China Sea issues. Yet India is building a structured military relationship with Phnom Penh through CINBAX. Is this a case of India “hedging” through Cambodia, or can military exercises genuinely shift a country’s strategic orientation over time?

📌 India’s Bilateral Exercise Network in Southeast Asia

CINBAX sits within a dense web of India’s bilateral and multilateral military exercises in Southeast Asia. Key bilateral exercises include:

  • Garuda Shakti — India-Indonesia (since 2012)
  • Harimau Shakti — India-Malaysia (December 2024)
  • Sampriti — India-Bangladesh
  • Bold Kurukshetra (armoured), Agni Warrior (artillery), SINDEX (naval) — India-Singapore
  • CINBAX — India-Cambodia (since December 2024)

At the multilateral level, the ADMM Plus (ASEAN Defence Ministers’ Meeting Plus) framework involves India in exercises on counter-terrorism, humanitarian assistance, and cybersecurity with all 10 ASEAN members plus Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, New Zealand, Russia, and the USA.

🧠 Memory Tricks
CINBAX Full Form — “C then I”:
Cambodia-India (not India-Cambodia) Bilateral Army Exercise — the C comes first in the acronym. Location for CINBAX-II: Camp Basil, Kampong Speu, Cambodia. First edition: Pune, India (Dec 2024).
India’s UN Peacekeeping Legacy in Cambodia:
“1992-93, 1,373 peacekeepers, UNTAC” — India’s historical contribution to Cambodia’s peace is the symbolic backdrop for CINBAX. UNTAC = UN Transitional Authority in Cambodia.
Chapter VI vs Chapter VII — “6 = Softer, 7 = Stronger”:
Chapter 6 = six letters = SOFTER = pacific settlement (no force). Chapter 7 = seven = STRONGER = enforcement (force authorised). CINBAX trains under Chapter VII — the tougher mandate.
Maratha Light Infantry — “1768, Oldest Light Infantry”:
Raised as Bombay Sepoys in 1768 = most senior light infantry regiment of the Indian Army. Regimental Centre: Belgaum (Belagavi), Karnataka. Battle cry: “Bol Shri Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj ki Jai!”
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What does CINBAX stand for, and where is CINBAX-II being held?
Click to flip
Answer
CINBAX = Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise. CINBAX-II 2026 is held at Camp Basil, Kampong Speu Province, Cambodia, from 4 to 17 May 2026.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

🌏
India is the world’s largest UN troop-contributing country. Does this give India strategic leverage in global affairs, or does it primarily serve the UN’s interests at India’s expense?
Consider: India’s UNSC permanent membership aspirations; whether peacekeeping contributions translate to political influence; the cost in lives and resources; how China and the US approach peacekeeping differently; and whether exercises like CINBAX build genuine interoperability or are primarily symbolic.
⚖️
Cambodia is China’s closest ally in ASEAN. Can India’s Act East Policy meaningfully diversify Cambodia’s strategic partnerships through defence engagement — or are military exercises insufficient to shift deep geopolitical alignments?
Think about: China’s $600M+ investment in Cambodian infrastructure; the Ream Naval Base controversy; Cambodia’s role in blocking ASEAN consensus on South China Sea; how India’s defence diplomacy compares to China’s economic leverage; and what additional tools India would need beyond exercises.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
What does the acronym CINBAX stand for?
A) Counter-Intelligence and Bilateral Army Exercise
B) China-India Bilateral Army Exercise
C) Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise
D) Combined Infantry and Naval Battalion Exercise
Explanation

CINBAX stands for Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise. The C (Cambodia) comes first in the acronym, even though it is commonly referred to as “India-Cambodia” in descriptive usage.

Question 2 of 5
Where was the first edition of CINBAX (CINBAX-I) held, and when?
A) Pune, India — December 2024
B) Phnom Penh, Cambodia — January 2025
C) New Delhi, India — March 2024
D) Kampong Speu, Cambodia — May 2025
Explanation

CINBAX-I, the first edition, was held in Pune, India in December 2024. CINBAX-II 2026 rotates to Cambodia, following India’s standard alternating-host format for bilateral military exercises.

Question 3 of 5
Under which framework of the UN Charter is CINBAX-II conducted, and what does it authorise?
A) Chapter VI — Pacific settlement of disputes without force
B) Chapter V — Security Council composition and voting
C) Chapter IV — General Assembly functions
D) Chapter VII — Enforcement action, authorising use of force for peace and security
Explanation

Chapter VII (Articles 39–51) authorises use of force including “all necessary means” to maintain international peace and security. CINBAX trains under Chapter VII because most active UN peacekeeping missions (MONUSCO, UNMISS) operate under this mandate.

Question 4 of 5
As of December 2023, what is India’s rank among troop-contributing countries to UN peacekeeping operations?
A) 3rd largest
B) Largest (1st)
C) 5th largest
D) 2nd largest
Explanation

India is the world’s largest troop-contributing country to UN peacekeeping operations, with 5,901 military personnel deployed across 12 UN missions as of December 2023, per SIPRI data.

Question 5 of 5
What was India’s role in UNTAC, and what does this historical connection mean for CINBAX?
A) India provided financial aid to UNTAC, not troops
B) India chaired the UNTAC Security Council committee
C) India deployed 1,373 peacekeepers to UNTAC (1992–93) to oversee Cambodia’s ceasefire and elections
D) India led the UNTAC observer mission from New Delhi
Explanation

India deployed 1,373 peacekeepers to UNTAC (United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia) from 1992 to 1993, to oversee a ceasefire, disarm combatants, and monitor elections — giving CINBAX a deeper historical resonance beyond just a new bilateral exercise.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
Exercise Basics: CINBAX-II 2026 (Cambodia-India Bilateral Army Exercise) held 4–17 May 2026 at Camp Basil, Kampong Speu, Cambodia. Indian contingent: 120 personnel (Maratha Light Infantry); Cambodian: 160 personnel (Royal Cambodian Army).
2
UN Framework: Conducted under Chapter VII of the UN Mandate (Articles 39–51) — authorises use of force for peace and security. Trains forces for robust peacekeeping: counter-terrorism, OBUA (semi-urban warfare), drone ops, mortar and sniper skills.
3
History: CINBAX-I was held in Pune, India (December 2024) — the inaugural edition. India and Cambodia have shared UN history: India deployed 1,373 peacekeepers to UNTAC (1992–93) for Cambodia’s post-conflict stabilisation.
4
Maratha Light Infantry: Most senior light infantry regiment of the Indian Army; raised as Bombay Sepoys in 1768; Regimental Centre at Belgaum (Belagavi), Karnataka; extensive COIN and UN peacekeeping experience.
5
India’s UN Role: India is the world’s largest UN troop-contributing country — 5,901 personnel across 12 missions (Dec 2023, SIPRI). CINBAX builds interoperability for these demanding deployments.
6
Strategic Context: Act East Policy (2014); Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (6-nation sub-regional framework); India-ASEAN trade: $131 billion (2023); Cambodia’s China alignment makes India’s defence engagement strategically significant.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is the significance of CINBAX being conducted under Chapter VII of the UN Mandate?
Chapter VII mandates authorise the use of “all necessary means” — including armed force — to maintain peace, unlike Chapter VI’s peaceful-settlement-only framework. Training under Chapter VII means both armies practise for real-world UN deployments in active conflict zones like DR Congo (MONUSCO) and South Sudan (UNMISS), not just ceasefire observation. This reflects the demanding nature of modern peacekeeping, which often requires combat-level skills.
Why does India use an alternating-host format for bilateral exercises?
The alternating-host format ensures both armies gain experience operating in unfamiliar terrain, institutional environments, and logistical conditions — a core objective of interoperability training. It also signals equality in the bilateral relationship. CINBAX-I was in India (Pune, Dec 2024); CINBAX-II rotates to Cambodia. Most of India’s bilateral exercises follow this pattern, including Harimau Shakti (India-Malaysia) and Garuda Shakti (India-Indonesia).
What is the Mekong-Ganga Cooperation (MGC)?
The Mekong-Ganga Cooperation is a sub-regional framework established in 2000, linking India with Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam — six countries connected by the Mekong and Ganga river systems. It focuses on tourism, culture, education, and transport-connectivity cooperation. Cambodia’s membership makes it a natural partner in India’s continental Southeast Asia engagement under the Act East Policy.
What other bilateral military exercises does India conduct in Southeast Asia?
India conducts several bilateral exercises in the region: Garuda Shakti (India-Indonesia, since 2012), Harimau Shakti (India-Malaysia), Sampriti (India-Bangladesh), and with Singapore — Bold Kurukshetra (armoured), Agni Warrior (artillery), and SINDEX (naval). At the multilateral level, India participates in ADMM Plus exercises with all 10 ASEAN members plus 8 dialogue partners.
Why is Cambodia strategically important despite being closely aligned with China?
Cambodia hosts Chinese-built naval infrastructure and often aligns with Beijing in ASEAN forums — including historically blocking consensus on South China Sea issues. This makes India’s independent military relationship with Phnom Penh strategically significant: it builds a direct India-Cambodia channel that exists regardless of China’s influence. It also demonstrates India’s Act East Policy in action — converting diplomatic goodwill into structured, recurring military cooperation without positioning India as explicitly anti-China.
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