NB: This is an excellent read and well
researched, well informed piece that deserves to be widely read and
consulted by anyone wishing to get a summary on the impasse confronting
Cambodia and the historical underlying dynamics leading to it. Well done, Mr Kasem - School of Vice
'Many CPP leaders and high-ranking officials would not have their prestigious positions and titles without Vietnamese backing: they know it, and Hanoi knows it.'
By Hassan A Kasem
Cambodia, for all its pretensions towards sovereignty and
democracy, has yet to free itself from neighboring Vietnam's political and
strategic grip 20 years after United Nations-organized elections ended its
debilitating civil war. The international community has since invested over
US$2 billion on peace initiatives to repair the damage done by Vietnam's 1979
invasion and seizure of power. Yet Hanoi continues to exercise covert power
over the country through its proxy ruling Cambodia People's Party (CPP).
Most Khmer citizens fail to fathom the depths of the ongoing
subterfuge. Many have conveniently chosen ignorance over truth, as is common
among traumatized populations in post-conflict societies. Western audiences,
including the international donor community that continues to bankroll the
CPP's corrupt and compromised tenure, should be less easily forgiven for
turning a blind eye to Vietnam's still strong command over the country.
Some in the West saw Vietnam as a magnanimous liberator in
1979, an occupying army that rescued Cambodia from the radical Khmer Rouge
regime's massacre of its own people. But Hanoi's use of force turned a
difficult situation to its geopolitical advantage, putting an end to the Khmer
Rouge regime's nationalistic stance vis-a-vis Vietnam, including its combative
insistence on resolutions to border disputes held over from the French colonial
era.
Hanoi's invasion and occupation with over 200,000 troops
under the direction of communist revolutionary, politician and diplomat Le Duc
Tho further weakened a nation reeling from the anti-communist war and Khmer-on-Khmer
death and destruction. A number of brave revolutionary leaders who fell from
grace at Hanoi's behest, including ex-prime minister Pen Sovann, have claimed
Vietnamese troops deliberately looted and plundered national treasures and
wealth during the invasion. Those installed into power by Hanoi, including
incumbent prime minister Hun Sen, subsequently brushed off the theft as a mere
war casualty.
To some Khmers, including many opposition politicians
attached to the aptly named Cambodian National Rescue Party (CNRP), Hanoi is
able to maintain its grip on Cambodia through its historical ties to Hun Sen
and the CPP. CNRP members have not spoken without substantiation, feeling it
would be morally wrong to exchange denial of truth for peace and power-sharing.
The late King Norodom Sihanouk, for instance, said pointedly at a Paris meeting
with his compatriots in early 1990 that, "it's meaningless to accept peace
without independence, sovereignty and dignity".
After occupying Cambodia for more than a decade from
1979-89, Hanoi developed an elaborate, behind-the-scenes network of control
that is in many ways still in place today. It first installed a proxy
administration in 1979 known as the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) run by
the Kampuchean People's Revolutionary Party (KPRP), which morphed into the CPP
in the early 1990's after Vietnamese troops ostensibly withdrew from the
country.
The KPRP was a direct offshoot of the Indochina communist
Party formed in the 1930s with Vietnamese revolutionary leader Ho Chi Minh as
its head. Following its unilateral and unmonitored symbolic withdrawal of
troops in 1989, hundreds, if not thousands, of Vietnamese "experts"
stayed behind, adopted Khmer names and continued to assist their comrades at
every important government ministry and department. Nowadays, only locals can
tell who is really Vietnamese and who is Khmer.
Hanoi created a perfect ally in the CPP to defend and
protect its substantial interests in Cambodia, ranging from land border areas,
to maritime concessions, to allowances for illegal Vietnamese immigrants to
settle unperturbed throughout the country. Many CPP leaders and high-ranking officials
would not have their prestigious positions and titles without Vietnamese
backing: they know it, and Hanoi knows it.
Foreign academics have corroborated in detail the ongoing
special relationship. Michael Benge, a former American prisoner of war in
Vietnam who speaks fluent Vietnamese and many ethnic minority dialects, wrote
in 2007 that "Hanoi maintains a contingent of 3,000 troops, a mixture of
special forces and intelligence agents, with tanks and helicopters, in a huge
compound about two kilometers outside Phnom Penh right next to Hun Sen's Tuol
Krassaing fortress near Takhmau".
Extending that analysis, local intelligence sources have
said when border clashes between Thai and Cambodian troops first erupted in
2008, at least one battalion of Vietnamese elite units was put on standby to
assist their Cambodian comrades.
Dr Markus Karbaum, a German academic, revealed in an April
Southeast Asia Globe article that Vietnamese officials shared dossiers kept on
Cambodia's current ruling elite with the former East Germany's Stasi soon after
their defection from the Khmer Rouge in 1977. A young Hun Sen, whose real name
according to his dossier was "Hun Bonal", referred to himself as
"Hai Phuc", a Vietnamese name, apparently to ingratiate himself with
Hanoi. He had served as a Khmer Rouge battalion commander but downplayed his
role in commanding over 2,000 soldiers along their shared border at a time the
Khmer Rouge had launched many violent cross-border assaults into Vietnam.
The Stasi archive reveals that Hun Sen and other current CPP
leaders were first placed in a detention camp and ordered by Vietnamese
authorities to write their own biographies. Vietnam's own assessments of those
who sought to shift their allegiance to Hanoi were often unforgiving. Current
CPP stalwart and president of the Cambodian Senate Chea Sim, for instance, was
characterized as "conciliatory, craven and undecided". Heng Samrin,
CPP honorary president and a National Assembly chairman, is referred to in the
Stasi archive as of "a low education .. [He] does not talk a lot and
sometimes he has an inferiority complex ... his political understanding is
limited".
While Vietnamese-backed CPP politicians have unquestionably
grown into their roles over the years, these intelligence assessments are
noteworthy considering Cambodia has been ruled or co-ruled uninterrupted by the
CPP ever since it was first installed into power after Vietnam's 1979 invasion.
While younger CPP rank and file members are known to have grown weary of the
same old names and faces of their party leaders, any generational transition is
complicated by Vietnam's continued influence over the party and its historical
ties to the old guard.
Puppet masters
The CNRP's repeated reference to CPP leaders as
"puppets" of Vietnam is thus not without historical validity. The
examples of kowtowing to Hanoi during Hun Sen's 28 consecutive years in power
are multiple. On February 26, 1986, while Cambodia was still under direct
Vietnamese occupation, Hun Sen signed a directive ordering local authorities to
facilitate the settlement of hundreds of thousands of Vietnamese immigrants all
over the county, particularly in and around the Tonle Sap Lake region.
Four previous treaties of friendship and cooperation between
the two countries (1979, 1982, 1983, 1985), and a 2005 supplemental treaty
resulted in territorial loss to Vietnam both on land and at sea. The most
glaring recent loss was Koh Tral, an island larger than Singapore located
directly opposite the Cambodian coastal town of Sihanoukville known as Phu Quoc
in Vietnam. The CNRP has said it still considers the island Cambodian territory
because its handover came while the country was under Vietnamese occupation.
In 2010, Hun Sen responded to Vietnamese prime minister
Nguyen Tan Dung's concern over ongoing, politicized border disputes by having
his controlled courts sentence opposition leader Sam Rainsy to 10 years in
prison for uprooting a few contested wooden border posts in Svay Rieng
province. Meanwhile, Hun Sen and his CPP party have relied every election cycle
on at least three million Vietnamese immigrants who unfailingly vote for the
CPP to guarantee victory.
In July 28 elections, however, the Hun Sen-led CPP failed to
win its usual landslide. Politically conscious and emboldened voters challenged
through exposes over social media the CPP's use of illegal voters, vote-buying
and voter intimidation to tilt the result in its favor. The CPP nonetheless
rigged the result, officially winning 68 seats to the opposition's 55. Sam Rainsy
has claimed his CNRP was robbed of a slim parliamentary majority and in protest
has ordered his party members to boycott parliament and staged popular street
demonstrations.
The result as it stands means Cambodia will still be
subservient to Vietnam's interests for at least another five years. Under Hun
Sen's CPP-led government, Vietnamese companies have secured large swathes of
Cambodian land in concessions to develop rubber plantations in north and
northeast Cambodia. These Vietnamese companies have engaged in massive logging
of luxury timber across the country, an unsustainable process that has brought
little or no benefit to local Khmer.
In the capital of Phnom Penh, more and more Vietnamese
immigrants rent or own new residential buildings, including new luxury
apartments and condominiums, with the financial help of Vietnamese government
subsidized bank loans. With those state subsidies, part of Hanoi's policy to
maintain grassroots control of the local economy, their community and
businesses are growing briskly.
Tellingly, Hen Sen and his CPP party seldom use the word
"Khmer" in their official addresses. Instead, they use "prajia
jun Kampuchea", which means "the people of Kampuchea".
Additionally Khmer citizens risk being penalized for referring to their eastern
neighbor as "yuon", which merely means "Vietnamese" in the
local language; the word "yuon" carries no negative racial overtone
towards ethnic Vietnamese. For political correctness, Khmers have been
officially encouraged to follow the pro-Hanoi line in referring to Vietnamese
as "junjiat Vietnam", which in the Khmer language literally means
"Vietnam ethnic or tribe."
During the People's Republic of Kampuchea (1979-1989) and
the State of Cambodia (1989-1992) regimes, the majority Khmer used to refer to
ethnic Vietnamese as "bang pa-aun Vietnam," which literally means
"elder-younger (siblings) Vietnam." There are other words considered
to be pejorative, offending, or racial slurs for ethnic Vietnamese, but
"yuon" is not one of them. Yuon became a hypersensitive word only
after 1979. In 1993, Westerners played into Vietnam's hands by regarding the
term without foundation as a racial slur.
When the CNRP claims that Khmer citizens have been
systematically victimized while Vietnamese have been protected, some Cambodian
government officials and Western donors have raised concerns about the future
security of Vietnamese immigrants. When the opposition called for a nationwide
mass protest against election irregularities and fraud, many feared pro-CNRP
demonstrators may exploit the situation to target ethnic Vietnamese for
revenge.
In apparent response, on August 15 Vietnamese troop convoys
were reportedly ferried across the Bassac River near Cambodian territory and
Vietnam's naval gunboats traveled up the Mekong River toward Phnom Penh in a
show of force. Meanwhile, Khmer protesters, most of them disenfranchised and
dispossessed members of the impoverished population, faced off with heavily
armed security forces backed with high-caliber guns, tanks and armored
personnel carriers. Many pro-CNRP protestors and even foreign journalists have
been violently assaulted by CPP forces in recent weeks.
As grass roots people protest against the rigged election,
many Western commentators have focused narrowly on the impact of the political
impasse and rising political instability on economic growth rather than the
CPP's illegitimate claim to power. In the final analysis, the opposition CNRP
will likely eventually join the CPP-led government because no country in the
free world is willing to support its democratic claim to legitimacy in the same
way that Vietnam backs Hun Sen and his CPP. The CNRP, meanwhile, risks losing
the support of the millions of Cambodians who voted for political change and
genuine sovereignty if it joins the CPP-led government.
What is happening now in Cambodia warrants international
monitoring since the political impasse is not solely a Khmer versus Khmer
issue. To achieve lasting peace and stability, the signatory states to the 1991
Paris Peace Agreement should, as stipulated in Article 5, "undertake to
consult immediately with a view to adopting all appropriate steps to ensure
respect for these commitments". The international community promised
peace, independence, sovereignty and democracy for Cambodia in that agreement.
Vietnam's ongoing interventions in Cambodian politics is inconsistent with that
vision and in violation of its core principles.
Hassan A Kasem has lived in the United States for 33 years.
He previously worked for Radio Free Asia for 14 years in Washington DC and is
now the US representative for Khmer M'Chas Srok (KMS), a non-profit,
non-partisan NGO advocating the legitimate rights of the Khmer people and
preserving the 1991 Paris Peace Accords on Cambodia. Hassan served in the
Cambodian air force as a helicopter pilot toward the end of the war. He
survived a Khmer Rouge detention camp and challenged the Vietnamese occupation
before leaving Cambodia in 1979.
2 comments:
It is very well informed,in dept in Cambodia's politics.Someone should translate this article in Khmer.
Thank you Hassan A Kasem.
True Khmer
in depth...
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