Monarchic manipulation in
Cambodia<http://www.sophanseng.info/2012/12/monarchic-manipulation-in-cambodia/>
*Monarchic manipulation in Cambodia*
By Geoff Gunn

*Source: Asia Times<http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/NL22Ae01.html>
*

*The survival of the monarchy in Cambodia is little short of remarkable in
the light of that country’s modern history. French manipulation of the
monarchy and attempts to buttress religion and culture alongside the rise
of nationalist youth and Buddhist radicalism was an important precursor to
postwar events.*
*
*

No less momentous for modern Cambodian history was the Vichy French
installation of Norodom Sihanouk as king and the elevation under Japan of
the putative republican Son Ngoc Thanh. Facing down an armed Issarak-Viet
Minh challenge also joined by a dissident prince, it is no less significant
that the young King Sihanouk successfully trumped French ambitions by
mounting his own “royal crusade” for independence even ahead of the Geneva
Settlement of 1954.

Undoubtedly the passing of Norodom Sihanouk on October 15, 2012, at the age
of 89 after six decades of close involvement in Cambodian politics has
served to refocus attention upon the status of the monarchy in that
country, facts not diminished by the actual succession in October 2004 to
his son Norodom Sihamoni (b. 1953).


*A phoenix float carries the casket of Sihanouk*

Though much exoticized and othered as a peaceful realm under the French
protectorate, at least alongside the challenges imposed by Vietnamese
nationalists, dissent always simmered beneath the surface calm in Cambodia,
whether from the overburdened-over taxed peasantry, from the major
immigrant communities, from religious radicals within and without the
Buddhist hierarchies, or even from scheming royal princes.

Given French manipulations of religion, tradition and even the royal line,
a complex political picture emerges, even prior to the Japanese occupation.
Japan was even more successful in Cambodia than in the other Indochina
states in installing an anti-French republican demagogue, an enigmatic
figure whose name recurs in Cambodian history down until the US-backed
military coup in Phnom Penh of March 1970.

Thanks to Anglo-French intervention, and Sihanouk’s personality, the
post-war outcome in Cambodia was a “royal road to independence” although
even that pathway was severely challenged by the Viet Minh and their
sometime Issarak (Free Khmer) allies. Yet the royal ascendancy around the
Vichy French-anointed monarch, Sihanouk, would also come back to haunt
Cambodia, not only in striking a neutral course in the maelstrom of the
American war, but also in lending his name to the China-backed
anti-Vietnamese communist movement that triumphed in Phnom Penh in 1975.

As this article develops, below the politics of culture or the tendency of
the French to buttress neo-traditionalist trends wherever they saw them,
emerges a byzantine crossover of royal dynasties, powerful families and
cliques that, in many ways, continued to define Cambodian politics through
the modern period. It is also true, as Roger Kershaw (2000; 6; 17; 19-20)
unveils in a comparative study on the “fortunes” of monarchy in Southeast
Asia, that analysis of surviving monarchies (as with Thailand and Brunei
alongside Cambodia), should at least account for the “synthetic” alongside
the “authentic traditional values” (not excepting even Britain from this
analysis).

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