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The Friends of Pol Pot by John Pilger
[Australian John Pilger is one of the best of a small group
of foreign correspondents whose devotion to telling the truth
is not constrained by editors' sensibilities, career considerations
or any other form of bowing to the media Establishment. Pilger,
who is also a film-maker and author, has especially distinguished
himself as nearly the only voice illuminating Western responsibility
for Cambodia's "killing fields." The following article
first appeared in the U.S. publication The Nation (www.thenation.com);
it was brought to our attention by our friends at India's
national newsweekly, New Wave (285 New Defense Colony Flyover,
New Delhi 110024). - SeeingRed]
"It is my duty," wrote the correspondent for The
Times of London at the liberation of the Nazi death camp at
Belsen, " to describe something beyond the imagination of
mankind." That was how I felt in the summer of 1979 when
I arrived in Cambodia. In the silent humidity, houses, office
blocks, hotels and schools stood empty, as if vacated that day.
In the ruined National Bank, blown up by the retreating Khmer
Rouge, a pair of spectacles rested on a ledger. When the afternoon
monsoon broke, the streets nearby ran with money as thousands
of brand-new banknotes washed away in the gutter. Children, orphans,
collected and dried them for fuel; I can still hear the crackle
as the money burned.
As if in a mirage, a pyramid of cars rose on a football field.
It included an ambulance, a fire engine, police cars, refrigerators,
washing machines, TV sets, telephones and typewriters. It was
if these had been swept there by a gigantic broom on April 17,
1975 -- Year Zero in Pol Pot's calendar. From that date, anybody
who had owned them, anybody who had lived in a city or town, or
anybody who had known or worked with foreigners was in mortal
danger. More than a million and a half would die--although recent
discoveries of mass graves by a Yale University team suggest that
this figure may be a gross underestimate. During the three years
and eight months they held power, Pol Pot and his medievalists
may have put to death a third of the nation.
It is all too easy and too dangerous to remember Pol Pot as a
unique monster. What is remarkable about the U.S. coverage of
his [recent} death is the omission of U.S. complicity in his rise
to power -- a complicity that sustained him for almost two decades.
For the truth is that Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge would be historical
nonentities--and a great many people would be alive today--had
Washington not helped bring them to power and the governments
of the United States, Britain, China and Thailand not supported
them, armed them, sustained them and restored them. In other words,
the iconic images of the piles of skulls ought to include those
who, often at great remove in distance and culture, were Pol Pot's
accessories and Faustian partners for the purposes of their own
imperial imperatives.
To hear Henry Kissinger deny recently that the United States and
especially the Nixon administration bore any responsibility for
Cambodia's horror was to hear truth denigrated and out intelligence
insulted. For Cambodia's nightmare did not begin with Year Zero
but on the eve of the U.S. land invasion of neutral Cambodia in
1970. The invasion provided a small group of extreme ethnic nationalist
with Maoist pretensions, the Khmer Rouge, with a catalyst for
a revolution that had no popular base with the Cambodian people.
Between 1969 and 1973, U.S. bombers killed perhaps three-quarters
of a million Cambodian peasants in an attempt to destroy North
VietNamese supply bases, many of which did not exist. During
one six-month period in 1973, B-52's dropped more bombs on Cambodians,
living mostly in straw huts, than were dropped on Japan during
all of World War #2, the equivalent of five Hiroshimas. Evidence
from U.S. official documents, declassified in 1987, leaves no
doubt that this U.S. terror was critical in Pol Pot's drive for
power. "They were using [the bombing] as the main them of
the propaganda," reported the CIA Direct of Operations on
2 May 1973. "This approach has resulted in the successful
recruitment of a number of young men [and] the propaganda has
been most effective among refugees subjected to B-52 strikes."
What Kissinger and Nixon began, Pol Pot completed. Had the United
States and China allowed it, Cambodia's suffering could have stopped
when the VietNamese finally responded to years of Khmer Rouge
attacks across their border and liberated the country in January
1979.
But almost immediately the United States began secretly backing
Pol Pot in exile [and openly in the United Nations, refusing to
seat the new Cambodian representative and ensuring the seat remain
in the hands of Pol Pot forces--SeeingRed]. Direct contact
was made between the Reagan White House and the Khmer Rouge when
Dr. Ray Cline, a former deputy director of the CIA, made a clandestine
visit to Pol Pot's operational base inside Cambodia in November
1980. Cline was then a foreign policy adviser to President-elect
Reagan. Within a year some fifty CIA and other intelligence agents
were running Washington's secret war against Cambodia [and for
Pol Pot--SeeingRed] from the U.S. embassy in Bangkok and along
the Thai-Cambodian border. The aim was to appease China, the
great Soviet foe and Pol Pot's most enduring backer, and to rehabilitate
and use the Khmer Rouge to bring pressure to bear on the source
of recent U.S. humiliation in the region: the VietNamese. Cambodia
was now America's "last battle of the VietNam War,"
as one U.S. official put it, "so that we can achieve a better
result."
Two U.S. relief aid workers, Linda Mason and Roger Brown, later
wrote, "The U.S. government insisted that the Khmer Rouge
be fed.... The U.S. preferred that the Khmer Rouge operation
benefit from the credibility of an internationally-known relief
operation." In 1980, under U.S. pressure, the World Food
Programme handed over food worth $12 million to pass on to the
Khmer Rouge. In that year, I traveled on a UN convoy of forty
trucks into Cambodia from Thailand and filmed a UN official handing
over the supplies to a Khmer Rouge general, Nam Phan -- known
to Western aid officials and The Butcher. There is little doubt
that without this support and the flow of arms from China through
Thailand the Khmer Rouge would have withered on the vine.
If the U.S. bombing was the first phase of Cambodia's holocaust
and Pol Pot's Year Zero the second, the third phase was the use
of the United Nations by Washington, its allies and China and
the instrument of Cambodia's--and VietNam's--punishment. With
VietNamese troops preventing the return of the Khmer Rouge, and
a Hanoi-installed regime in Phnom Penh, a UN embargo barred Cambodia
from all international agreements on trade and communications,
even from the World Health Organization. The UN withheld development
aid from only one Third World country -- Cambodia, which lay unreconstituted
from the years of bombing and neglect. For the United States
the blockage was total. Not even Cuba and the Soviet Union were
treated this way.
If on his deathbed Pol Pot had felt moved to offer thanks to his
Western collaborators, he surely would have made special mention
of an unworkable UN "peace plan" imposed by the West
and China in 1992. At the insistence of Washington and Beijing,
the Khmer Rouge was included in the UN operation as a legitimate
"warring faction;" the rationale was that they were
far too powerful to be left out. Since then, the argument has
been turned upside down. Thanks to the "triumph" of
the UN in Cambodia, the Khmer Rouge has "virtually disappeared."
In 1993 the UN's military maps showed that in half of Cambodia
Pol Pot had a military advantage he did not have before the UN
arrive. "You must understand," the UN spokesman in
Phnom Penh, Eric Falt, told me in 1992, "the peace process
was aimed at allowing the Khmer Rouge to gain respectability."
I watched Khmer Rouge officials welcomed back to Phnom Penh by
UN officials who went to astonishing lengths not to offend them.
Khieu Samphan, Pol Pot's henchman who once said that the only
mistake the Khmer Rouge made was not killing enough people, took
the salute of U.S. and other UN troops as a guest of honour on
United Nations Day in Phnom Penh.
The West, with the UN as its vehicle, brought to Cambodia elections,
the "free market," AIDS and massive corruption, all
of it reminiscent of the surreal and violent days when the B-52's
were bombing the countryside and the Khmer Rouge were infiltrating
the cities and towns. The fact that this process of infiltration
is underway again was one of the reasons Cambodia's "second
prime minister," Hun Sen, last year attacked the forces and
supporters of the "first prime minister," Prince Ranariddh,
who in exile had been the leader of the Khmer Rouge-dominated
coalition.
[With Pol Pot dead] are the Khmer Rouge now finished? I doubt
it. The more pertinent question is: will those foreign governments
that backed Pol Pot while wringing their hands now help rebuild
the country they helped to devastate? Henry Kissinger appeared
to answer this when he said, "Why should we flagellate ourselves
for what the Cambodians did to each other?"
_____________
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