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- <text id=90TT1077>
- <link 90TT2357>
- <link 90TT1982>
- <link 89TT2605>
- <title>
- Apr. 30, 1990: Cambodia:Still A Killing Field
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Apr. 30, 1990 Vietnam 15 Years Later
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIETNAM, Page 26
- COVER STORIES
- Still a Killing Field
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Cambodia remains a pawn in the regional power game--and the
- slaughter continues
- </p>
- <p>By Stanley W. Cloud
- </p>
- <p> In a spacious and sunny Washington office, an anonymous
- senior Administration official sits and discusses U.S. options
- in Indochina. "The simplest approach in Cambodia," he
- theorizes, "is to let the military situation play itself out."
- </p>
- <p> On the other side of the globe, in a military ward of a
- hospital in the Cambodian town of Kampong Spoe, 25 miles
- southwest of Phnom Penh, a soldier named Neh Kon, 30, lies on
- a wooden pallet. He has lost both legs--one just above the
- knee, the other just below. The stumps are wrapped in
- flyspecked, blood-soaked bandages. Neh Kon's wife sits beside
- him, holding their young child. Two weeks earlier, on patrol
- in Khmer Rouge territory, Neh Kon stepped on a mine. "By the
- time we get peace," he says, "a lot of people won't have legs."
- </p>
- <p> In another ward of the same hospital lies a civilian
- woodcutter named Top Sakhan, 44. He is the father of a boy, 10,
- and a girl, 7. A week before, Khmer Rouge guerrillas jumped him
- in a nearby forest. For no particular reason, they shot him in
- both legs with an AK-47 and left him lying there. "I called
- after them, `Why don't you just kill me?'" Top Sakhan says.
- "But they didn't answer." Doctors saved his right leg and
- amputated the left. "His life is finished," whispers the
- hospital administrator.
- </p>
- <p> This is what is meant by letting the military situation
- "play itself out." Such cool foreign-policy analysis rarely
- takes into account the suffering of people like Neh Kon and Top
- Sakhan. Nowhere is this truer than in Cambodia, whose modern
- misfortune has been to act as buffer and bargaining chip to
- nations more powerful than itself. Like Blanche DuBois, modern
- Cambodia has always depended for its survival on the kindness
- of strangers--and the strangers have not always been kind.
- While diplomats negotiated their shameful and shameless deals,
- Cambodians were paying a fearful price: hundreds of thousands
- died between 1970 and 1975, when Cambodia became a theater of
- the Vietnam War, a million or more (out of a population of 7
- million) in the Khmer Rouge's ensuing four-year reign of
- terror.
- </p>
- <p> The Vietnamese occupation of Phnom Penh in 1979 forced the
- Khmer Rouge from power and replaced them with a pro-Hanoi and
- pro-Soviet government currently headed by Prime Minister Hun
- Sen, 39, a poorly educated but extraordinarily bright former
- Khmer Rouge officer who lost an eye during the 1970-75
- Cambodian war. Since that government took office, the toll in
- the country has been markedly lower: a few dozen or so limbs
- and lives lost each week as the deposed Khmer Rouge and other
- Cambodian factions--each representing combinations of outside
- support--fight to regain power. Vietnam ostensibly withdrew
- the last of its 150,000 troops in September, but attempts to
- negotiate an end to this new war are stymied, and the violence
- has escalated.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, it is not true that Vietnam has completely left
- Cambodia. A well-informed intelligence source in Indochina
- acknowledges that several hundred Vietnamese military advisers
- are still attached to Hun Sen's army, as are two understrength
- Vietnamese regiments of about 1,000 troops each. Two
- Vietnamese-speaking soldiers in Cambodian uniforms were aboard
- a recent flight from Phnom Penh to the provincial capital of
- Siem Reap, and interviews with residents there confirmed that
- many Vietnamese-speaking troops are assigned to government units
- in the area.
- </p>
- <p> But that is a far cry from the armored units that had been
- fighting in Cambodia. Even with a lingering Vietnamese
- presence, the Hun Sen government is basically on its own at
- last. Although the government's international isolation
- continues--only the Soviet Union, its allies and India confer
- full recognition--Hun Sen's record so far is pretty good. On
- the battlefield, government troops have rolled back most of the
- border-area gains made by rebel forces earlier this year. And
- despite rising public anger at official corruption, political
- and economic reforms on the Vietnamese model have had a
- dramatically positive effect.
- </p>
- <p> Phnom Penh, once the loveliest capital in Southeast Asia,
- looks dusty and exhausted after years of war and atrocities,
- but it is beginning to regain some of its old spirit. Rice and
- other foodstuffs are fairly plentiful again in the large
- central market, as are Heineken beer, gold jewelry and Casio
- calculators. Prices tend to fluctuate with rumors of peace.
- But, says Le Hor, a proprietor at one of the market's stalls,
- "here we are relatively safe and don't think the Khmer Rouge
- are dangerous." Then he adds, "I'm not sure they feel so
- confident in the [western] border areas."
- </p>
- <p> The farther one gets from the capital, the more the picture
- darkens. A lack of proper irrigation machinery severely limits
- rice production. On Route 1, in the arid border area between
- Vietnam and the Mekong river, there is virtually no fighting,
- but poverty is so acute that beggars line the road and try to
- flag down the occasional passing car. The area just to the
- north is more prosperous, but government troops at checkpoints
- along Route 7 often demand money or cigarettes from travelers
- for permission to continue on a road that is in such disrepair
- as to be all but impassible anyway. To the south, west and
- northwest of Phnom Penh, reminders of the never ending war are
- abundant. Not long ago, a handful of adventuresome American
- tourists at the fabled Angkor Wat ruins in the northwest were
- startled to see an army truck speed by, carrying wounded from
- the front in Oddar Meanchey province, a Khmer Rouge stronghold
- only about 35 miles away.
- </p>
- <p> How does the U.S. Government fit into this mixed picture of
- revival and suffering? Unfortunately, in Cambodia now as in the
- past, the U.S. is part of the problem, not part of the
- solution. During the 1960s, American diplomats used to belittle
- the attempts by Cambodian leader Prince Norodom Sihanouk to
- keep his country out of the Vietnam War. They also criticized
- Sihanouk's enforced willingness to look the other way while
- North Vietnamese troops used his border areas as sanctuaries
- and staging grounds for attacks into South Vietnam. In 1969 the
- Nixon Administration began the secret U.S. bombing of the
- sanctuaries. Then in April 1970 it joined South Vietnam in an
- invasion to clean them out. Just before the assault, Sihanouk
- was overthrown by a pro-U.S. junta led by Prime Minister Lon
- Nol, and Cambodians were suddenly engulfed in war against North
- Vietnamese and their then allies the Khmer Rouge, while U.S.
- bombs rained from above.
- </p>
- <p> Within two years, the Lon Nol forces were plainly losing.
- The Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh on April 17, 1975, two
- weeks before the fall of Saigon. Under the insanely radical
- policies of Communist Party Secretary Pol Pot, the new
- government began butchering its own citizens. The xenophobic
- Pol Pot also made territorial demands against Vietnam and
- ordered attacks on Vietnamese villages. Faced with all this,
- Hanoi invaded Cambodia and overthrew the Pol Pot regime on Jan.
- 7, 1979.
- </p>
- <p> China's leaders, staunch backers of the Khmer Rouge, saw the
- invasion as an attempt to extend Vietnamese and Soviet
- "hegemony" over the rest of Indochina and thus box them in.
- Vowing to teach Hanoi "a lesson," they sent 85,000 troops
- across the border into Vietnam on Feb. 17, 1979. After
- ferocious fighting, the Chinese withdrew 16 days later, but it
- was unclear just who had taught whom a lesson.
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the Carter Administration, determined to
- normalize relations with Beijing, denounced Vietnam's invasion
- but only tsk-tsked at China's (which National Security Adviser
- Zbigniew Brzezinski privately applauded). Most startling of all
- for an Administration that championed human rights, the State
- Department, in its anger at Vietnam, recognized the legitimacy
- of the Khmer Rouge's claim to Cambodia's U.N. seat.
- </p>
- <p> That remains U.S. policy today. When the Khmer Rouge in 1982
- allied with two less powerful, noncommunist rebel groups (one
- loyal to Sihanouk, the other led by aging Cambodian democrat
- Son Sann), Washington extended its recognition to the umbrella
- organization. The U.S. also provided "nonlethal" aid to the
- noncommunist members of the coalition. The U.S. thus lines up
- with China and the Association of South East Asian Nations (led
- in this case by Thailand) against Vietnam and the Soviet Union.
- </p>
- <p> The current U.S. position is based on what a senior Bush
- Administration official calls "three fairly simpleminded
- propositions": the demand for complete withdrawal of Vietnamese
- forces, opposition to the Khmer Rouge's return to power, and
- calls for free elections to determine a new government. The
- U.S. argues that Hun Sen's government is illegitimate because
- it was installed by force and because Hun Sen and his President,
- Heng Samrin, were Khmer Rouge officers who did not desert
- until Pol Pot began devouring his own followers. Yet Hun Sen's
- government, while still nominally communist, has shown no Khmer
- Rouge tendencies in eleven years and has significantly
- broadened its base to include representatives of virtually all
- political persuasions.
- </p>
- <p> The problem with the U.S. position is that its various parts
- don't mix. How, for example, can Washington recognize the Khmer
- Rouge as legitimate, if tainted, participants in the political
- process while also insisting that they must be prevented from
- returning to power? If Pol Pot and other top Khmer Rouge
- leaders are guilty of genocide, shouldn't they be excluded from
- all negotiations--and even be tried as criminals? How can the
- U.S. criticize the Khmer Rouge's record and yet reserve its
- bitterest invective for Vietnam's use of force to oust Pol Pot?
- </p>
- <p> The illogic of the U.S. position has infected the entire
- peace process. No one wants the Khmer Rouge to return to power,
- but their military strength, many believe, makes them
- impossible to ignore. Various highly complex peace proposals
- have been offered by the governments of Australia and Thailand,
- and by the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council.
- Under some of these plans, the Khmer Rouge would even be
- permitted to serve in an interim coalition, pending elections.
- In all of them, Pol Pot's party has been given effective veto
- power--with predictable results. A peace conference in Jakarta
- earlier this year failed basically because of Khmer Rouge
- opposition. Says Cambodia's Deputy Foreign Minister, Sok An:
- "If the international community continues to allow the Khmer
- Rouge to thwart the will of the conference, then we cannot have
- an agreement."
- </p>
- <p> Is there no other way? Many think there is, including former
- Carter Administration Secretary of State Edmund Muskie. "It is
- time to change U.S. policy," said Muskie recently. He suggested
- direct contact between the U.S. and the Hun Sen government, an
- end to Washington's "implicit" support for the Khmer Rouge, and
- separate verification of Vietnam's withdrawal as first steps
- toward a long-term political solution. This would shift the
- U.S. focus away from the rebel coalition that includes the
- Khmer Rouge and would require the U.S. to abandon its
- unyielding opposition to Hun Sen. As Muskie put it in a speech
- last December, "When we finally left Vietnam, we opened the way
- for the historic conflict between Vietnam and China to
- re-emerge. Vietnam went on to invade Cambodia, and China
- invaded Vietnam. In these conflicts, we took the side of China.
- Now that phase of their history, and of ours, is over. Or, at
- any rate, it will be over once we are prepared to let it be."
- </p>
- <p> Conditions seem right for the kind of reassessment Muskie
- recommends. But would the Bush Administration be willing to
- risk political flak, particularly from the right, if it seemed
- to be moving toward normalization with Cambodia, let alone
- Vietnam? The answer to that question will go a long way toward
- determining whether the bones will continue piling up in
- Cambodia's killing fields.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-