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From: Gaffar Peang-Meth <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 1:28 PM
Subject: Gen. Dien Del gave his all for Khmer
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Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Gen. Dien Del gave his all for Khmer
2:00 PM, Feb. 26, 2013  |
[http://cmsimg.guampdn.com/apps/pbcsi.dll/bilde?Site=M0&Date=20130226&Category=OPINION02&ArtNo=302260314&Ref=AR&MaxW=300&Border=0&Gen-Dien-Del-gave-his-all-Khmer]
Written by
Gaffar Peang-Meth
This article is a tribute to a distinguished field commander, Gen. Dien Del, of 
the Khmer Republic from 1970-1975 and of the Khmer People's National Liberation 
Armed Forces. Dien Del fought Vietnam's military occupation of Cambodia from 
1979-1990.
Born in 1932 at Soc Trang, Kampuchea Krom, now southern Vietnam, Dien Del 
passed away in Phnom Penh on Feb. 13. His body was cremated on the 17th.

I knew Dien Del as a friend and a comrade-in-arms. We met in Cambodia when I 
took a semester out of graduate school to observe the situation in the field 
after the March 18, 1970, deposal of then Chief of State Prince Sihanouk. Dien 
Del was a lieutenant colonel.
We did not meet again until sometime after May 1975, in the United States. This 
time, Dien Del was a refugee. The Khmer Republic collapsed on April 17, after 
the U.S. withdrew from the region. Most government members declined the U.S. 
offer to be airlifted to safety -- including Republican leader Prince Sisowath 
Sirik Matak, who was executed by the Khmer Rouge.
Rising young star
A young rising star, Dien Del was a brigadier general commanding the 2nd 
Division in 1972, and was commander of the Territorial Forces and governor of 
Kandal Province from 1974 until April 16, 1975.

His and others' dreams to set up a rear base in northwestern Cambodia as the 
Khmer Rouge entered Cambodia's towns and cities were thwarted because of 
volatile conditions on the ground, and their helicopters landed them in 
Thailand.

At the end of May 1975, Dien Del, his wife, and two children, arrived as 
refugees in Alexandria, Va. I reconnected with him.

Two years later, in May 1977, he left the U.S. for France. There he and Khmer 
senior statesman Son Sann formed a committee for liberation of Cambodia. On 
Feb. 1, 1979, he left Paris for Bangkok, and subsequently made his way to the 
border region.

He persuaded 13 different armed groups to merge. On March 5, 1979, Dien Del 
proclaimed the Khmer People's National Armed Forces; he was named chief of 
general staff.

In the fall 1980, Dien Del, wearing army fatigues, drove an oxcart as he 
escorted me, fresh from the U.S., down a muddy road to show off the KPNLAF 
"liberated zone."

At Banteay Ampil, Dien Del and his civilian colleague, Hing Kunthon, enrolled 
me in Class V of political warfare training. Dien Del signed my certificate in 
October 1980. The year after, 1981, Dien Del sent me to the Military School for 
a crash course in the KPNLAF's first officer training class.
Adapt to integrate
Dien Del and Hing Kunthon were determined to integrate me into the nascent 
movement. They insisted one must adapt (I was ill for a week from impure water 
and eating snails from a local pond) in order to be adopted by the KPNLAF. In 
order to be accepted, I was coached that I was to watch, listen and remain 
quiet. I should speak, I was told, only after a lengthy period of observation 
and reflection, or I would not earn the trust of those in the field.

Foreign observers' descriptions of Dien Del in Wikipedia are accurate: Dien Del 
commanded respect from superiors, colleagues, subordinates; seasoned 
journalists who saw Dien Del in combat "admired" his appearance of calm and 
control; he was "perhaps (the army's) best general, a man with a merry sparkle 
in his eyes ... (strutting) up and down in his tiger suit, pistol at his hip, 
saying he would fight to the last."

I worked with Dien Del in good and bad times. He had his strengths and 
weaknesses. When I was with him in the field, his confident demeanor sometimes 
belied the danger at hand. Though he seemed to hesitate before signing the 
authorization for my first mission with a KPNLAF company to probe the heavily 
mined Vietnamese-held area of Beung Ampil, a stone's throw away, he did let me 
go. A Brit with a movie camera also went.

As we moved, the company commander radioed progress to HQ. When a firefight 
broke out, Dien Del's voice was heard as I busily snapped photos of a combatant 
falling, a couple with blood on their clothes. Suddenly an arm dragged me, and 
we jumped behind a small mound. As a mortar shell crashed on the very spot I 
stood seconds earlier, I rose with my camera; a soldier pushed me down. The 
company commander radioed that we two civilians were all right, no thanks to my 
naiveté, but it was a close call.
Was good with troops
When Dien Del received intelligence reports from his foreign friends -- the 
exact date the enemy would attack the headquarters -- he let me stay at HQ in a 
bunker. I watched as Dien Del met with his commanders. He took me with him as 
he toured the defense line. He joked with troops, suggested how best to raise 
huge columns to obstruct tanks, where else to implant mines.

Reaching a tall tree, which some said was home to a bad spirit, Dien Del pulled 
his pistol and fired shots at the tree.

"That should do it," he said. Those around him let out nervous laughter.

As expected, the enemy opened fire before dawn, followed by continuous 
artillery shelling until mid-morning. I was in the bunker, praying the roof 
wouldn't collapse as a shell exploded above. Come morning, Dien Del, puffing a 
cigarette and smelling of alcohol, told me to run to the border.

"Someone has to live to continue the struggle. We shouldn't all die here," he 
shouted, as I replied there wasn't enough time to reach the border. Dien Del 
shoved me out.

Ampil never fell. Reporters were skeptical as we reported that the KP forces 
had destroyed more than one tank. It was not until a few years later that 
troops went back and photographed a rusted tank at the site of the battle. Dien 
Del was then KPNLAF deputy commander-in-chief. This charismatic, 
larger-than-life figure gave his all to bring a republican form of government 
to Cambodia, and will be well-remembered by his countrymen.

Gaffar Peang-Meth, Ph.D., is retired from the University of Guam. He was a 
former assistant to the Commander-in-Chief of the Khmer People's National 
Liberation Armed Forces. Write him at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>.




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