---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Sep 15, 2009 at 10:25 AM
Subject: Many factors led to Khmer Rouge rise
To:


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
September 16, 2009

Many factors led to Khmer Rouge rise

A Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D

Cambodia is a very old country. Her recorded history dates back to the first
century A.D. But she has a very large young population. One source
estimates that one-third of Cambodia's total population of 14 million
is below the age of 15 years.

It is no wonder that this young population appears to have little or no
sense of why as many as two million people in Cambodia were killed from
1975-1979 by Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime.

Yet Cambodians seem receptive of the view that U.S. B-52 bombings of
Cambodia resulted in the radicalization of the Khmer Rouge, and the
U.S. invasion of Cambodia eventually brought Pol Pot to power.

After all, Cambodians, young and old, frequently hear Premier Hun Sen's
reminder: The killings wouldn't have occurred had Lon Nol's coup not
taken place. This effective political socialization method has brought
now King Father Sihanouk to describe Sen's ruling Cambodian People's
Party as the "younger sibling" and has diverted attention from KRT's
investigation of other "suspects" involved in the Killing Fields. Sen
was a Khmer Rouge northeastern regional commander.

The search for truth that presents only one side of the coin is at best an
incomplete interpretation of historical facts -- a half-truth, if not a
manipulation of facts.

Former Congressman Stephen Solarz said in 1985 that Americans "have partial
responsibility, but by no means exclusive responsibility" for the Khmer
Rouge's success. He said, Sihanouk, the Khmer demi-god, who in 1970
called on the people to overturn the government that had replaced his
own, "had as much if not more to do with the ultimate success of the
Khmer Rouge than the American bombing."

Former national security adviser Henry Kissinger wrote that Hanoi brought
the
war to Cambodia and "made possible the genocide by the Khmer Rouge."

Australian journalist John Pilger's "Cambodia's empty dock," in the Feb. 21
Guardian, said the U.S. bombings provided "a catalyst" for Pol Pot, who
came to power because Nixon and Kissinger had "attacked neutral
Cambodia." Pilger called the KRT "a farce" if "those who sided with Pol
Pot's mass murders" escape trial.

But Australian academic Stephen Morris's "Vietnam and Cambodian Communism"
of April 2007 posited, "Without the support of the Vietnamese and
Chinese communists, the regime known as Democratic Kampuchea would
never have existed," and, "Vietnam played a vital role in the rise of
the Khmer Rouge to power."

Readers in Cambodia e-mailed to remind me that the U.S. bombed Cambodia.
Recently, a Cambodian who says he was only 7 when Pol Pot came to
power, who has lived in the U.S. for 26 years now, wrote on the
Internet that he has learned quite a bit: "America is the country that
bombed Cambodia in the 1970s, thereby giving strength to the
ultra-extremist Khmer Rouge to come to power in 1975 full of thirst for
blood."

What do available historical records show?

A "protocol" to the agreement for China's military aid to Cambodia,
signed by Cambodia's Lon Nol and China's Lo Jui-ching on Nov. 25, 1965,
stipulates Cambodia agreed to Vietnamese communist "command posts,"
"passage," "refuge," and "protection if necessary," in the frontier
region; and "passage of material coming from China" for the Vietnamese.

Read Pyongyang's KCNA News Service Release of April 30, 1972, which lists
aid given to the Vietnamese communists by the Cambodian government
beginning in 1963: food, medical supplies and commercial agreement;
establishment of "small bases" for rest and medical care; free access
to the Sihanoukville seaport by ships "carrying arms and military
equipment" for the Vietnamese National Liberation Front; and transport
by trucks belonging to the royal armed forces from the seaport to the
border.

Cambodia's neutrality was thus destroyed since 1963 because of the belief
the
communists were going to be the future masters of the region.

When Jacqueline Kennedy visited Cambodia on Nov. 1, 1967, George McArthur
and Horst Faas of The Associated Press, and Ray Herndon of United Press
International, slipped out of Phnom Penh to the South Vietnamese border
and found a Vietnamese communist campsite four miles inside Cambodia,
in Kompong Cham.

Robert Shaplen's "Time Out of Hand" reported that in the late 1960s,
Sihanouk
told The Washington Post he wouldn't mind American actions against
illegal Vietnamese communist presence in Cambodia's uninhabited areas.
Vietnam War critic William Shawcross wrote in "Sideshow" that by that
time, U.S. Special Forces teams had already operated 18.75 miles inside
Cambodia. In December 1967, the U.S. presented to the Cambodian
government, through Australia, findings of a classified project code
named "Vesuvius" that documented communists' use of Cambodian land and
resources during the Vietnam War.

In "White House Years," Kissinger wrote that Sihanouk, at a May 13, 1969,
news conference, talked about "the first report" on "several B-52
bombings," saying he could not protest -- "an affair between the
Americans and the Viet Cong-Viet Minh without any Khmer witnesses," as
not even a buffalo was killed.

Yet, 10 days after the first series of B-52 bombing strikes three to five
miles inside Cambodia, Sihanouk presented to the press corps a detailed
map of the location of Vietnamese communist troops "by entire
battalions and regions" from northeastern Ratanakiri to the sea in the
south -- an area of 3,500 square kilometers. His monthly political
magazine "Le Sangkum" placed Vietnamese communist strength along the
borders at 35,000 to 40,000 men.

A scholar posited in Foreign Policy Research Institute Online, "History
teaches above all that there is no such thing as history, only
historical interpretation."

Based on available historical records, how did the Khmer Rouge rise to
power?

A Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam, where
he taught political science for 13 years. Write him at [email protected].

http://www.guampdn.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/200909160300/OPINION02/909160323



--

--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Cambodia Discussion (CAMDISC) - www.cambodia.org" group.
This is an unmoderated forum. Please refrain from using foul language. 
Thank you for your understanding. Peace among us and in Cambodia.

To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/camdisc
Learn more - http://www.cambodia.org
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to