----- Forwarded Message ----
*From:* Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]>
*Sent:* Tue, March 2, 2010 10:42:56 AM
*Subject:* Cambodians complicit in Vietnamization


*PACIFIC DAILY NEWS*
March 3, 2010

Cambodians complicit in Vietnamization

By A. Gaffar Peang-Meth

I promised last week to discuss today the 25-year treaty of peace,
friendship and cooperation concluded by Heng Samrin, a former Khmer
Rouge commander who is now a leader in Cambodia's government, and
Vietnam's prime minister Pham Van Dong on Feb. 18, 1979.

This treaty binds Cambodia and Vietnam in what the treaty terms, "militant
solidarity and fraternal friendship." In a stroke of the pen, the
signatories extol a symbiosis of interests between Cambodia and
Vietnam, opening the door to an even more thorough Vietnamization of
Khmer land and culture than might have taken place in a federation of
the states of the former French Indochina.

Retired Johns Hopkins professor Naranhkiri Tith observes on his Web site
that
the 1979 treaty between Hanoi and its puppet in Phnom Penh "became
official in 2005" when Cambodia's King Sihamoni, "with the support of
his father Sihanouk," put his royal signature on "supplements" to the
treaty, thereby making Cambodians complicit in the Vietnamization of
Cambodia.

Some readers have requested a review of Vietnam's historical expansionism
and its contemporary revolutionary activities that ended with the 1979
treaty. I will provide that review today and then deal with the treaty.

A saying goes, "Necessity is the mother of invention."

Vietnam, which broke off its thousand-year bondage to China in 939, began
its
southward movement a few decades later, to escape Mongol and Chinese
military threats in the north. Migration to the west was hampered by
natural and physical barriers. To the south, the territory was
unoccupied and the land was fertile. The horizon seemed infinite.

The migration was ongoing, even as other kingdoms were encountered. In
1406, the ancient kingdom of Champa's capital, Vijaya, was seized and
the kingdom was extinguished in 1471. Then, in 1630, Vietnamese
princess Ngoc Van, married to Khmer King Chey Chetha II, promoted
Vietnamese settlements in the low delta in Khmer Preah Suakea (Ba Ria)
and Prey Nokor (Saigon).

The 1979 friendship-cooperation treaty brings Hanoi's influence as far west
as the border with Thailand.

What started as a necessity dictated by the search for security and growth
became a strategy for expansionism. The intention to expand its
influence is illustrated even in the name of the political party
founded by modern Vietnam's leader, Ho Chi Minh, in 1930 -- the
"Communist Party of Indochina." Ho Chi Minh didn't just want to
liberate Vietnam from the French; he defined the task of CPI "to make
Indochina completely independent."

In 1941, Minh created the Viet Minh, an abbreviation of "Vietnam Doc Lap
Dong Minh Hoi," or "League for the Independence of Vietnam," and spread
its anti-French activities to Laos and Cambodia, where the Viet Minh
later fragmentized the anti-French local Khmer Issarak front into a
Khmer Viet Minh front.

In 1949, the Viet Minh instituted the "Ban Van Dong Thanh Lap Dang Nhan
Cach Mang Cao Mien" -- "Canvassing Committee for the Creation of the
Revolutionary Kampuchean People's Party" -- and created the Kampuchean
People's Liberation Army in 1950.

Although the CPI was dissolved to demonstrate Vietnam did not harbor
expansionist intentions toward its neighbors, it resurfaced in February
1951 as the Vietnam Workers' Party (Lao Dong), with the same agenda. In
November of that year, the Revolutionary Kampuchean People's Party was
created. It has been said the RKPP and the Cambodian local Communist
Pracheachon Party were one and the same.

As Prince Sihanouk wrote in February 1960, the Pracheachon Party was
"working indefatigably ... and specifically to bring Cambodia under the
heel of North Vietnam."

Finally, in 1952, the Hanoi-created "Kampuchean Resistance Government"
emerged to rival Sihanouk's royal government.

When the 1954 Geneva Accords ordered the Viet Minh to leave Cambodia, they
took with them to Vietnam between 4,500 and 8,000 Cambodians, mostly
young children.

According to Cambodian Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot, the Marxist-Leninist
Communist
Party of Kampuchea was born on Sept. 30, 1960, after the first party
congress of 21 people met for three days and three nights. According to
Pol Pot, a Cambodian revolutionary movement that "truly belonged to our
people," existed prior to the Geneva Convention, but its dissolution
after the 1954 agreement was acknowledged because "people lacked a
correct and enlightened guideline." Pol Pot described 1968 as the year
when armed struggle -- civil war -- began.

Undoubtedly, Hanoi was aware that its publicly proclaimed "fraternal
brothers and
sisters," the Khmer Rouge, were not so "fraternal" privately, and it
knew its relationships with the Khmer Rouge were unsatisfactory. But
Hanoi let the Khmer Rouge be while it looked to building its own
Kampuchean puppets. Hanoi was biding its time.

And as it was fighting a war against the Americans in Vietnam, Hanoi threw
in its battle-tested troops to fight Lon Nol's republican army, enemies
of Prince Sihanouk, who had allied himself with Hanoi. It was Hanoi's
troops that routed Lon Nol's army and put Pol Pot in power in Phnom
Penh.

Neither Hanoi nor the world governments intervened to stop the genocide that
followed. However, when the Khmer Rouge's fierce independence of Hanoi
was more than the latter would tolerate, Hanoi concluded it was time to
teach its insolent comrades a lesson. The invasion of Cambodia
followed, on Christmas Eve 1978.

Phnom Penh was captured and a subservient regime was installed, leading to
the signing of the February 1979 treaty between the master and the
puppet comrades.

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=/201003030300/OPINION02/3030318

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