2012
Genocidal Khmer Rouge regime was backed by the US in ‘shameful foreign policy episode’
Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen has categorically rejected the notion that Vietnam invaded the neighboring Southeast Asian kingdom in the 1970s, saying Vietnamese soldiers had sacrificed their lives for “the survival of the Cambodian people and the country.”
“I
myself cannot explain all the meanings of the word ‘Vietnam’. In brief,
Vietnam means the revival and development of Cambodia,”
he said at a press briefing on January 3 in Dong Nai Province after a
ceremony to launch a monument for Unit 125 the earlier day.
Founded by Hun Sen, Unit 125 was the initial force of Cambodia’s
resistance movement prior to the founding of the United Front for
Salvation of Cambodian Motherland on December 2, 1978 that eventually
defeated the genocidal regime.
The monument was launched to mark what
would be the 33rd anniversary of the ouster of the Khmer Rouge regime on
January 7.
At the press conference, Hun Sen said he wanted to express his thanks to
Vietnamese veterans and war martyrs who “sacrificed for the survival of
Cambodian people and the country.”
Commenting on accusations by a former Khmer Rouge leader at a trial last
month that Vietnam had invaded Cambodia in the 1970s, Hun Sen said it
was not necessary to respond to such “deceitful” words.
“The killer and genocide (perpetrator) defending himself in an effort to
evade the crime.
Everybody knows our country used to have
a genocidal regime and [now] we and the world have opened a trial
against them,” he said.
The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia, commonly known as
the “Khmer Rouge Tribunal,” is a national court established under an
agreement between the Royal Government of Cambodia and the United
Nations to try senior members of the Khmer Rouge.
Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot died in 1998 without facing justice but the
regime's four most senior surviving members, accused of genocide, war
crimes and crimes against humanity, finally went on trial in Cambodia
late last year.
Noun Chea, 85, is among four defendants in the tribunal’s Case 002
together with Ieng Sary, Khieu Samphan and Ieng Thirith. They face
charges of crimes against humanity, grave breaches of the Geneva
Conventions of 1949 and genocide, according to the tribunal’s website.
Led by Pol Pot, who died in 1998, the
Khmer Rouge regime pursued an extreme policy designed to establish an
urban utopia that forced people to leave cities, abolished money and
outlawed religion. Its brutal practices of wanton executions,
overworking of the population and starvation are estimated to have wiped
out some two million people from 1975-1979 before the Vietnamese army
drove them out of power.
In the book Hun Sen: Strong man of Cambodia, authors Harish Mehta and
Julie Mehta wrote that Hun Sen was very angry when asked about Vietnam’s
“invasion of Cambodia.”
Reminded of the anger at the press
conference, Hun Sen said some people had wrongly described Vietnam’s
military assistance to Cambodia as an invasion.
“I am ready to strongly reject any such allegations. Vietnam’s presence
in Cambodia was to meet a demand of Cambodian residents and for their
survival… Has any country helped Cambodia as much as Vietnam? No! Only
Vietnamese people and army helped Cambodia when it faced the worst
difficulties.
“Many of our people were killed by Pol Pot, why can’t we ask for
Vietnam’s assistance? Whenever we became stronger, Vietnam would
withdraw its military force.
In reality, they withdrew in 1989. They
have not been present for more than 20 years,” he said.
Edwin Martini, author of Invisible Enemies: The American War on Vietnam,
1975-2000 and Associate Professor of History at Western Michigan
University, said the US had backed the Khmer Rouge and blamed Vietnam
for the invasion of Cambodia.
“The long-term US position on blaming Vietnam for the invasion of
Cambodia, and the Third Indochina War in general, really was made
permanent during the Reagan administration of the 1980s,” he told
Vietweek.
“There was, simply, no sense in Washington that the Vietnamese might
also be responsible for stopping the genocide in Cambodia,” he said.
In an interview with Vietweek in July
last year, Martini pointed out that the US was providing “all these
supplies and materials to what they called the ‘non-communist
resistance’ when everybody knew full well that most of those supplies
and most of those materials were going to the Khmer Rouge.”
“There's certainly a recognition among most scholars and historians that
Vietnam played a significant role in ending the Cambodian genocide and
that the invasion was provoked by the Khmer Rouge,” he said.
Carl Robinson, an Associated Press
correspondent in South Vietnam during the 1968-75 period, shared similar
views about the US blaming Vietnam.
“I believe the American reaction to Vietnam's invasion and overthrow of
the Khmer Rouge regime was one of the most shameful episodes in US
foreign policy after 1975,” Robinson told Vietweek.
“What's more, they continued to support the Khmer Rouge at the United
Nations for many years.
I believe the ‘hard-liners’ won the
debate and wanted to punish Hanoi for the way the war had ended only
four years before with its attack on the Saigon regime,” he said.
Retired Colonel Andre Sauvageot of the US Army had referred to US’s
support for the Khmer Rouge at the time in his statement at a hearing
before the Subcommittee on East Asia and Pacific Affairs of the
Committee on Foreign Relations in March 2008.
“The United States supported China and the genocidal Khmer Rouge against
Vietnam's liberation of Cambodia, e.g., by lobbying the UN to keep
‘Democratic Kamphuchea's’ seat at the UN and lobbying ASEAN to form a
united front against Vietnam in Cambodia,” he testified at the time.
Sauvageot had nine years of active duty in the US Army, serving in
Vietnam from 1964-73, followed by post-war stints with the US government
service to provide political analysis.
He said Vietnam’s role was critical
because Vietnam acted unilaterally, with diplomatic support from only
the Soviet Union. “The reality is that Vietnam – and only Vietnam –
saved the Khmer people from the genocidal, maniacal rule of Pol Pot’s
Khmer Rouge,” he told Vietweek.
“It was the heroic, but humane People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN) which
after quickly overthrowing the Khmer Rouge effective 7 January 1979,
closed the torture chambers/death camps such as Tuol Sleng, stopped the
mass killings, known as the ‘killing fields’ and opened a path for a new
Cambodian government under the leadership of Heng Samrin and Hun Sen…
which eventually would be strong enough to insure that the horror and
terror of the Khmer Rouge could never again return to Cambodia.”
He said Vietnam, even though it was
still impoverished itself from years of fighting for its independence
and freedom, shipped food into Cambodia to help Cambodians whose harvest
had been disrupted by the necessary deployment of PAVN to end the
horrific rule of the Khmer Rouge.
He alleged that China “was using the Khmer Rouge raids as part of its
strategic attempt to force Vietnam to distance itself from the Soviet
Union and accept being a satellite in the Chinese Orbit.
Beijing also believed Vietnam would not
dare do anything to counter their Khmer Rouge allies.
“Sadly, my friends/colleagues in the US government believed the same
thing. Khmer Rouge, Chinese, American assessments were all wrong. And
frankly I predicted that at the time,” he said.
According to Sauvageot, Vietnam did not want to go into Cambodia and had
tried hard to persuade China to quit supporting the Khmer Rouge but to
no avail. “Vietnam tried to persuade Khmer Rouge to stop the raids -
again could not do so,” he added.
“So only course of action left for Hanoi to protect the freedom and
independence of Vietnam was to deploy PAVN’s heroic young soldiers into
Cambodia.
“Hanoi not only did not want to go into Cambodia, the Party/Government
did not want to remain any longer than necessary to insure that the
Khmer Rouge terror (and Chinese supported raids into Vietnam) could
never return,” he said.
By Minh Nam – Tan Tu – An Dien, Thanh Nien News (The story can be found in the January 6th issue of our print edition, Vietweek
5 comments:
These westerners reporters had very shallow knoweledges of world history especially Viets-Kampuchea problems. Yes, Pol Pot Khmer Rough cadres did committed genocide on Cambodian. Although the root of the problems started by a more clever, manipulative, trickeries, history twisting, expansion, ruthless Vietnamese. These westerner loved Vietnamese women, who wouldn't ! They forgot that it was these Viet Minh supported Japanese WW II and when it look like Japan loosing Ho Chi Minh adopted American constitutions ideas. These Viets would even gave away their wives, daughters if it benefits their political gain. These shallow westerner forgot these VC wasted over 58,000 American lives. They wounded close to 2 millions American. Not to mention ruined thousands American families. They forgot VC violated agreements with Henry Kissinger.
These VC helped created Khmer Rough from an uneducated, ignoranted, gullible, vengeance Khmer
peasants. Viets planted thousands of their agents through Khmer Rough ranks. They called up these traitors to created an atmosphere of DISTRUST among Khmer Rough leaders. Like magic it worked. Cambodian killing each others by millions. Then these Viet Cong thought only a few tens of thousands Cambodian left so they INVADED Kampuchea claiming LIBERATIONS. They were wrong there still millions Cambodian left. Its still hard for the Viets swallow Cambodia while still millions of us left. Shallow minded western Vietnamese lovers bought
into it. In reality these VC wanted to annexed middle
Kampuchea like Kampuchea Krom. These Viets can only have partial controlled Cambodia by mean of CPP/Youn puppet government. These Viets tried to swallow up Cambodia and might have chocked a big bones in their throats. We Cambodian WILL NOT LET YOU TAKE OUR MOTHERLAND THAT EASY LIKE YOU ALREADY DID TO LAOS. CNRP WILL HAVE VICTORY AT THE VERY END. THEN WE MUST ARREST THESE TRAITORS INCLUDING THIS PUPPET KING.
Because Khmer people are so dump to let the foreigner used them like animals.
5:44 pm
Not an entire people; just a handful like HS and his clans and Hanoi's lackeys like today who are ready to sell all in exchange for power and personal privileges.
2:22 pm
I agree with your last statement: king or subject, if you commit treason be it through bowing to political pressure or self-motivated opportunism must be held accountable before the people and nation.
We have enough of rulers and leaders who thrive on the Khmer people's miseries and the losses/sacrifices of sacred ancestral soil to foreign nations.
unforfunately for our homeland and cambodian people,it was mistake by noly one person king sihanouk uncleaver man(reading prince of ligth prince of darkness)and the ambitiouscrook nation like veitnam alway want to swollow our homeland.even hun-sen(PM)if he serve cambodian people?he got alot of bloods in his hand under his rul.he away followe his boss(veitcong)kill the nationalish kill anybody to oppose him because he love power,and do anything to serve his boss,economy , land , tralisland.this criminal should go to hell 10000 years
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