Why Additional Strikes Did Not Qualify
The Attacks Didn't Have Confirmation Time
Spy summarized his position: that the alleged qualifying strike occurred before the market was created, that media reporting primarily relied on Cambodian statements, and that there was no confirmed timing for the additional attack.



Dropper said the Thai government acknowledged deploying jets but didn't confirm strikes.

The Attacks Weren't Airstrikes
Spy argued that the reported use of cluster munitions did not qualify, since they were artillery weapons, not airstrikes.

Tyler and VLDNVSTK concurred, stating that small arms fire and ground-launched artillery did not meet the definition of a qualifying airstrike.


Summary
In response to claims about additional airstrikes, several users dismissed them on the grounds that they lacked confirmed timing, did not involve qualifying airstrike methods, and relied on vague or secondhand sources. Others argued that the weapons used, such as ground-launched artillery, did not meet the resolution criteria defined by the market.
Coming Up
Next, we turn to the conflicting claims between the Cambodian and Thai governments, and how those shaped perceptions of what actually happened.
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