HOW WAS FORMER KING SIHANOUK  DUPED BY THE VIETNAMESE INVADERS AND THE SOVIET 
UNION.
IN 
The Sihanouk-Hun Sen Meeting April 1987 allowed Vietnam occupation to continue 
1979-2009.
The Sihanouk-Hun Sen Meeting





 
Hun Sen's April 1987 proposal for a talk with Sihanouk was resurrected in 
August when the prince sent a message to Hun Sen through the Palestine 
Liberation Organization's ambassador in Pyongyang. 

 

Sihanouk was hopeful that his encounter with Hun Sen would lead to another 
UN-sponsored Geneva conference on Indochina, which, he believed, would assure a 
political settlement that would allow Vietnam and the Soviet Union to save 
face. Such a conference, Sihanouk maintained, should include the UN secretary 
general, representatives of the five permanent members of the UN Security 
Council, Laos, Vietnam, and the four Cambodian factions. 

 

He also suggested the inclusion of ASEAN countries, members of the defunct 
International Control Commission (India, Canada, and Poland), and other 
concerned parties. 

The Heng Samrin regime had apparently envisioned a meeting between Sihanouk and 
Hun Sen when it announced on August 27 a "policy on national reconciliation." 

 

While artfully avoiding the mention of Vietnam, the policy statement called for 
talks with the three resistance leaders but not with "Pol Pot and his close 
associates." 

 

An appeal to overseas Cambodians to support Phnom Penh's economic and national 
defense efforts and assurances that Cambodians who had served the insurgent 
factions would be welcomed home and would be assisted in resuming a normal life 
and in participating in the political process were key features of the policy. 
The regime also expressed for the first time its readiness to negotiate the 
issue of Cambodian refugees in Thailand. 

 

The offer to negotiate undercut the resistance factions, which, Phnom Penh 
contended, were exploiting displaced Cambodians by using them against the Heng 
Samrin regime for military and political purposes. 

Resistance leaders questioned Phnom Penh's sincerity in promulgating its policy 
of reconciliation and were uncertain how to respond. 

At their annual consultation in Beijing, they and their Chinese hosts 
predictably called for a Vietnamese pullout as a precondition to a negotiated 
settlement. Sihanouk, however, launching a gambit of his own through Cambodian 
emigres in Paris, called for reconciliation émigrés among all Khmer factions. 
The initiative met with a favorable, but qualified, response from PRK Prime 
Minister Hun Sen and, in early October, the Phnom Penh government unveiled its 
own five-point plan for a political settlement. 

 

The PRK proposals envisioned peace talks between the rival Cambodian camps and 
"a high position [for Sihanouk] in the leading state organ" of the PRK, 
Vietnamese withdrawal in conjunction with the cutoff of outside aid to the 
resistance, general elections (organized by the Heng Samrin regime) held after 
the Vietnamese withdrawal, and the formation of a new four-party coalition. 

The October 8 plan also proposed negotiations with Thailand for the creation of 
a zone of peace and friendship along the Cambodian-Thai border, for discussions 
on an "orderly repatriation" of Cambodian refugees from Thailand, and for the 
convening of an international conference. 

The conference was to be attended by the rival Cambodian camps, the Indochinese 
states, the ASEAN states, the Soviet Union, China, India, France, Britain, the 
United States, and other interested countries. The CGDK, however, rejected the 
plan as an attempt to control the dynamics of national reconciliation while 
Cambodia was still occupied by Vietnam. 

Sihanouk and the PRK continued their exploratory moves. On October 19, Hun Sen 
agreed to meet with Sihanouk, even though Sihanouk had cancelled similar 
meetings scheduled for late 1984 and for June 1987. At the end of October, Hun 
Sen flew to Moscow for diplomatic coordination. The CGDK announced on October 
31 that a "clarification on national reconciliation policy" had been signed by 
all three resistance leaders. It was likely that the two main goals of the 
clarification, which was dated October 1, were to restate the CGDK's position 
on peace talks and to underline the unity among the resistance leaders. The 
statement said that "the first phase" of Vietnamese withdrawal must be 
completed before a four-party coalition government could be set up, not within 
the framework of the PRK but under the premises of a "neutral and noncommunist" 
Cambodia. 

Sihanouk was clearly in the spotlight at this point. It was possible that his 
personal diplomacy would stir suspicion among his coalition partners, as well 
as among Chinese and ASEAN leaders. It was also possible that he might strike a 
deal with Phnom Penh and Hanoi and exclude the Khmer Rouge faction and its 
patron, China. Mindful of such potential misgivings, Sihanouk went to great 
lengths to clarify his own stand. He said that he would not accept any "high 
position" in the illegal PRK regime, that he would disclose fully the minutes 
of his talks with Hun Sen, and that he would not waver from his commitment to a 
"neutral and noncommunist" Cambodia free of Vietnamese troops. 

Sihanouk and Hun Sen met at Fère-en-Tardenois, a village northeast of Paris, 
from December 2 to December 4, 1987. The communiqué they issued at the end of 
their talks mentioned their agreement to work for a political solution to the 
nine-year-old conflict and to call for an international conference. The 
conference, to be convened only after all Cambodian factions reached an 
agreement on a coalition arrangement, would support the new coalition accord 
and would guarantee the country's independence, neutrality, and nonalignment. 
The two leaders also agreed to meet again at Fère-en-Tardenois in January 1988 
and in Pyongyang at a later date. The communiqué ended with a plea to the other 
Cambodian parties--Sihanouk's coalition partners--to join the next rounds of 
talks. 

The communiqué offered no practical solution. In fact, it did not mention 
Vietnam, despite Sihanouk's demand that the communiqué include a clause on 
Vietnamese withdrawal. At a December 4 press conference, Hun Sen disclosed an 
understanding with Sihanouk that "concrete questions" would be discussed at 
later meetings. 

Included in the concrete questions were "the withdrawal of Vietnamese troops, 
Cambodia's future government, and Norodom Sihanouk's position." 

Hun Sen also revealed that during the meeting Sihanouk had told him that "the 
future political regime of Cambodia" should be a French-style democracy with a 
multiparty system and free radio and television. In an official commentary the 
following day, Hanoi was deliberately vague on Hun Sen's concrete questions, 
which, it said, would be dealt with "at the next meetings." 

In foreign capitals, there were mixed reactions to what Hun Sen called the 
"historic meeting." Officials in Phnom Penh, Hanoi, Vientiane, and Moscow were 
enthusiastic. Thai officials, however, were cautious, if not disappointed, and 
they stressed the need for Vietnamese withdrawal and for Thailand's 
participation in peace talks with the Cambodians. Kuala Lumpur and Jakarta both 
welcomed the unofficial, or indirect, talks as a promising start toward a 
political solution. 

They agreed with Bangkok on the necessity of Vietnamese withdrawal. Officials 
in Pyongyang said the meeting was "a good thing," but declined to accept the 
suggestion of Hun Sen and Sihanouk that they mediate between China and the 
Soviet Union on the Cambodian issue. China stressed that it supported 
Sihanouk's efforts to seek "a fair and reasonable political settlement of the 
Kampuchean question." Such a settlement was said to be possible only when 
Vietnam withdrew all its troops from Cambodia. 

On December 10, Sihanouk abruptly announced the cancellation of the second 
meeting with Hun Sen. He said that such a meeting would be useless because Son 
Sann and Khieu Samphan refused to participate in it and because they also 
refused to support the joint communiqué. He added that--out of fear that the 
governments in Phnom Penh, Hanoi, and Moscow might realize an unwarranted 
propaganda advantage from the meeting--he would not meet Hun Sen.

 But on December 15, Sihanouk announced abruptly that he would resume talks 
with Hun Sen because ASEAN members saw the cancellation as "a new complication" 
in their efforts to pressure the Vietnamese into leaving Cambodia. 

By December 20, Sihanouk and Hun Sen had agreed to resume talks on January 27, 
1988. On December 21, Son Sann expressed his readiness to join the talks in a 
personal capacity, provided that Vietnam agreed to attend the talks or, if this 
was not possible, provided that Vietnam informed the UN secretary general and 
the five permanent members of the UN Security Council of its plan to vacate 
Cambodia as quickly as possible after all Cambodian factions had embarked on 
the process of internal reconciliation. 

As 1987 drew to a close, talking and fighting continued amid hopes and 
uncertainties about the future of Cambodia. It was equally clear that progress 
toward a political settlement hinged chiefly on the credibility of Vietnam's 
announced intention to withdraw from Cambodia by 1990 and that this withdrawal 
alone was insufficient to guarantee a peaceful solution to Cambodia's problems. 
At least three more critical issues were at stake: an equitable power-sharing 
arrangement among these four warring factions, an agreement among the factions 
to disarm in order to ensure that civil war would not recur, and an effective 
international guarantee of supervision for the implementation of any agreements 
reached by the Cambodian factions. Still another critical question was whether 
or not an eventual political settlement was sufficient to assure a new Cambodia 
that was neutral, nonaligned, and noncommunist.





More about the Government and Politics of Cambodia.

 


 

 
Source: U.S. Library of Congress

 
 
 WHAT CAN  ALL KHMER LEARN FROM THIS LESSONS MADE BY FORMER KING SIHANOUK AND 
THE VIETNAMESE COMMUNISTS?
 
REGARDLESS YOUR VIEWS ,
CAMBODIA REMAINS OCCUPIED BY VIETNAM 1979-2009 ,
DUE TO VIETNAM'S ARROGANCE ,& DISRESPECT TO THE 10 UN RESOLUTIONS (CALLING 
VIETNAM TO CEASE HER OCCUPATION OF CAMBODIA ,NOT RESPECTED AS OF TODAY ), 
AND  ALSO THE BETRAYAL OF FORMER KING SIHANOUK ,WHEN HE CHANGED HIS MIND BY 
APPOINTING ALL THE VIETNAMESE OCCUPIERS AS ADMINISTRATORS IN THE "CAMBODIAN" 
GOVERNMENT , IN ORDER TO RUN THE COUNTRY WITH HIM FROM 1993-2004 IN VIOLATION 
OF THE UN CHARTER.
 
Bury
 
 ========================================================
reading material  
 

UN Passes Strong Resolution on Cambodia Human Rights Abuses 

Feb. 27, 1982 : UN Commission on Human Rights meeting in Geneva adopted a 
resolution condemning Vietnam’s occupation of Cambodia as a violation of 
Cambodian human rights. The vote was 28 in favor, 8 against, and 5 abstentions.

Oct. 21, 1986 The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution A/RES/41/6, by vote 
of 116-21 with 13 abstentions, calling for a withdrawal of Vietnamese forces 
from Cambodia.

"Prime Minister Pham Van Dong called on me and, in the presence of Premier Chou 
En-lai, swore in the name of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam that the latter 
would always respect the land frontiers as well as all islands belonging to the 
"Kingdom of Cambodia" March 1970 by Sihanouk . Wilfred Burchett book "The China 
Cambodia Vietnam triangle " P-176-177

 
 
 
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