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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>