*Vietnam's forgotten Cambodian war*
*http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034*
<http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034>
Kevin Doyle | Phnom Penh

Vietnam's forgotten Cambodian war
<http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034>


[image: image] <http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034>





Vietnam's forgotten Cambodian war
<http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034>
Tens of thousands of young Vietnamese soldiers fought the Khmer Rouge,
reports Kevin Doyle, but Hanoi doesn't commemorate them and Cambodia wants
to forget ...
View on www.bbc.com <http://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-29106034>
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 *Vietnam's forgotten Cambodian war*
BBC News | 14 September 2014

[image: The author, Nguyen Thanh Nhan, (kneeling second from left) at a
Vietnamese military base inside Cambodia, 1985]*Vietnamese veterans like
Nguyen Thanh Nhan (Bottom, second from left) are still haunted by the war*

*On 30 April 1975, the last American helicopters beat an ignominious
retreat from Saigon as the tanks of the North Vietnamese Army rumbled into
the capital of defeated South Vietnam*.

Victory over the US military is remembered each year in Vietnam as a
triumph over foreign aggression in a war of national liberation.

Less celebrated is Vietnam's quiet retreat from its own deeply unpopular
foreign war that ended 25 years ago this month. A war where Vietnamese
troops, sent as saviours but soon seen as invaders, paid a steep price in
lives and limbs during a gruelling decade-long guerilla conflict.

On the 25th anniversary of their withdrawal from Cambodia, Vietnamese
veterans are still haunted by their memories of war with Pol Pot's army.

Some wonder why Cambodians are not more grateful to the troops who freed
them from the brutal Khmer Rouge regime.
"Anyone who came back from Cambodia intact was a lucky person," said Nguyen
Thanh Nhan, 50, a veteran of the war and author of the autobiographical
book "Away from Home Season - The Story of a Vietnamese Volunteer Veteran
in Cambodia".

Sent to Cambodia at the age of 20, Mr Nhan served from 1984 to 1987 in a
frontline combat unit near the Thai-Cambodian border where some of the
bloodiest confrontations with Khmer Rouge fighters took place.

[image: An entry in the war diary of the author and veteran Nguyen Thanh
Nhan, which recounts a battle in 1986 where many Vietnamese soldiers were
killed by Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge]Mr Nhan has kept detailed accounts of the
war, including this diary entry recounting a 1986 battle
Though the Vietnamese government has never officially confirmed casualty
numbers, some 30,000

*American soldiers thought they helped Vietnam; we were the same in
Cambodia” - Nguyen Thanh Nhan Vietnamese war veteran*

Banned in its original form by the Vietnamese government, Mr Nhan's book
recounts the hardships of the Vietnamese soldiers and their camaraderie
while trying to survive among a population who played host to them by day,
and their enemy by night.

Much like the young Americans who fought in Vietnam, Mr Nhan's years in
Cambodia have left indelible psychological marks. He still suffers from
nightmares, and their daytime equivalent that drag him back into the terror
of battle.

"When your companions die in battle, it is a very great loss," Mr Nhan
said. "During the war, the battle does not stop. We have no time to
reflect. We must be strong to continue. Later, more than 30 years later,
memories come back - over and over again."

"The injury in the body is not so heavy but our injury was mental. Many
soldiers, one or two years later, when they came back, they went mad."

His experience parallels the disillusionment of American troops, a
generation before who arrived in Vietnam believing they were coming to save
a nation, only to find that many ordinary people considered them the enemy.

"American soldiers thought they helped Vietnam. Then their illusion was
broken," Mr Nhan said. "We were the same in Cambodia."

[image: Pol Pot]Pol Pot led the Khmer Rouge in a wave of killing
[image: A Khmer Rouge guerrilla soldier holding a gun rides a motorcycle
while he and his fellow comrade enter Phnom Penh on 17 April 1975]The Khmer
Rouge forced millions of Cambodians out of the city and into the countryside
[image: Skulls are displayed at the Choeung Ek killing fields memorial in
Phnom Penh on 25 June, 2011]Up to two million people are believed to have
died under the Khmer Rouge

Vietnam launched an invasion of Cambodia in late December 1978 to remove
Pol Pot. Two million Cambodians had died at the hands of his Khmer Rouge
regime and Pol Pot's troops had conducted bloody cross-border raids into
Vietnam, Cambodia's historic enemy, massacring civilians and torching
villages.

Pol Pot fled ahead of the onslaught and Phnom Penh was placed under
Vietnamese control in a little over a week.

Those that survived the Khmer Rouge regime initially greeted the Vietnamese
as liberators. Years later, however, Vietnamese troops were still in
Cambodia and by then, many Cambodians considered them occupiers.

Cambodia was an unpopular war for Vietnam, said Carlyle Thayer, an expert
on Vietnam and emeritus professor at the University of New South Wales at
the Australian Defence Force Academy in Canberra.

*"The dead are lucky as they rest in peace; we struggle every day”* -
Nguyen Thanh Nhan War veteran

"The Vietnamese military had been trained and experienced in overthrowing
an occupying power and all of a sudden, the shoe was on the other foot.
They had to invade Cambodia and occupy it, and succeed in setting up a
government and engineer a withdrawal."
Unlike Vietnam's wars against the French and Americans, the intervention in
Cambodia was "downplayed" to the Vietnamese public, Mr Thayer said. When
soldiers returned from Cambodia without the fanfare of previous wars,
veterans felt that they had been "forgotten".
Gratitude was also not forthcoming from Cambodia, where hostility towards
the Vietnamese remains ubiquitous. It is an enmity borne of conflicts
between ancient emperors and kings, of lost territory and a much smaller
Cambodia fairing poorly through history to a far more populous Vietnam.
Today, many in Cambodia would like to forget that it was Vietnam that saved
their country from Pol Pot's vicious revolution.

[image: Vietnamese propaganda poster from the 1980s extolling solidarity
between the people of Vietnam and Cambodia]A propaganda poster from the
1980s depicts Cambodian-Vietnamese relations
[image: The Cambodia-Vietnam Friendship Monument in Phnom Penh commemorates
Vietnam’s role in removing Pol Pot’s Khmer Rouge regime from power in 1979]The
Friendship Monument in Phnom Penh commemorates Vietnam's role in defeating
Pol Pot
[image: The former Vietnamese military cemetery in Phnom Penh where troops
who died in Cambodia were laid to rest. Following the Vietnamese withdrawal
from Cambodia in 1989, the soldiers’ remains were removed from the cemetery
and reinterred in Vietnam]Following Vietnam's withdrawal from Cambodia,
soldiers' remains were removed from this war cemetery

Every few months, a group of veterans from the war in Cambodia meet in Ho
Chi Minh City. On a recent Sunday morning, their get-together started early
with short welcome speeches followed by swift toasts of strong rice wine.

Asked about the war, their mood shifted perceptibly. What happened in
Cambodia is not something they discuss often.

One relents, likely out of politeness, and he describes an enduring image
from his first days in Cambodia in 1979.

Le Thanh Hieu's unit pursued the retreating Khmer Rouge to the border with
Thailand. He remembers seeing Cambodian villagers lying on the sides of
roads dying of starvation and illness.

"They were dying everywhere. They were dying of hunger," said the
54-year-old. "We didn't have rice to feed the starving. We only had army
rations to feed ourselves in battle."

Yet, he said, "faced with this situation the soldiers could not avoid
saving lives" and they used their rations to make a thin rice soup for the
starving.

"I don't want to have this experience to tell you about," Mr Hieu said.

Vietnam does not want to entirely forget about the war in Cambodia, said Mr
Nhan. It only wants to remember an official version: a victorious,
lightning attack that toppled Pol Pot.

Best forgotten, Mr Nhan said, are the 10 years of punishing hit-and-run
fighting and the largely-forgotten veterans still scarred from their
experiences.

"For me, the truth needs to be said," he said.

"Sometimes I think the dead are lucky. They rest in peace. We have to
struggle every day. Our lives continue."

--

Best Regards,

*Khmer Forum*
*A place for sharing community events and public news.*

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