Khmer Rouge soldiers await orders from their commanding officer during the Democratic Kampuchea period.
(Source: Documentation Center of Cambodia) |
“It's estimated that somewhere between 1.5 million and 2 million Cambodians were killed during this period. If the higher number is correct, that represented more than 20 percent of the population of Cambodia in 1975.”
By Cody Carlson
For the Deseret News
Wednesday, Jan. 9 2013
On Jan. 7, 1979, the communist Vietnamese army
captured the Cambodian city of Phnom Penh, signalling the downfall of the
bloodiest per-capita regime in world history: the Khmer Rouge.
Like Vietnam, Cambodia had been part of the French
colonial empire in Indochina since the late 19th century. In 1953, Cambodia
gained its independence and was ruled a constitutional monarchy until a coup in
1970. What followed were several years of civil war between a nationalist,
pro-Western government and a radical new communist movement, the Khmer Rouge.
During the Vietnam War, the communist North Vietnamese
funnelled weapons and logistical support to the Viet Cong guerrillas in South
Vietnam through the Ho Chi Minh trail which ran partially through Cambodia. In
1973, U.S. President Richard Nixon authorized the bombing of the trail in
Cambodia. Many historians suggest that this move marginalized the nationalist
government and swelled the ranks of the Khmer Rouge.
The Khmer Rouge ultimately triumphed in the civil war
and came to power in 1975. Changing the name of the country to Democratic
Kampuchea, the regime and its leader, Pol Pot, sought to completely expunge the
past and create a more radical form of communism. What followed was one of the
most uncompromising experiments in social engineering in history.
In his book “The Red Flag: A History of Communism,”
historian David Priestland wrote: “Money was abolished, and everybody ...
became laborers on collective farms. Urban life was destroyed, the cities
emptied, schools closed. The country became one large agricultural labor camp,
and the lives of all were devoted to labor and political education.
"The regime sought to destroy old hierarchies of
all sorts. Children were expected to call their parents 'comrade father' and 'comrade
mother' and the use of the term 'sir' was banned. Only marriages approved by
the party were allowed. Pol Pot even declared that 'mothers should not get too
entangled with their offspring' and communal dining halls were introduced to
stop family bonding.”
Sexual relations outside of marriage were outlawed and
punishable by death, as was the consumption of alcohol. Anyone with any kind of
formal education was suspect, and anyone with a college degree was executed.
Anyone who had been involved in any “free-market activities” was also executed.
Those who appeared to shirk their duty to cultivate the fields could be
murdered as saboteurs. Anyone participating in any kind of religious practice
or ritual was put to death.
One terrifying policy that echoed the famous “Twilight
Zone” episode “It's a Good Life” saw children put in command of revolutionary
cadres. With this power the regime hoped to indoctrinate the next generation in
brutality, as they were allowed to oversee torture and executions.
From 1975 to 1979, during the period of the Khmer
Rouge's rule, Cambodia became known as “The Killing Fields.” In addition to
those who were executed as declared political enemies, many Cambodians were
worked to death or died from starvation as the collective farms failed to keep
up with demand.
It's estimated that somewhere between 1.5 million and
2 million Cambodians were killed during this period. If the higher number is
correct, that represented more than 20 percent of the population of Cambodia in
1975.
For all of its xenophobic policies, the Khmer Rouge
did not operate in a vacuum, however, and Cambodia soon found itself drawn into
the larger communist division known as the Sino-Soviet split. Far from being
socialist allies, by the late 1960s communist China and the Soviet Union had
become bitter rivals and both sought to lead the wider communist world.
While the Vietnamese communist party had looked to the
USSR for guidance, the Khmer Rouge looked to China. This ideological difference
sparked conflict along the Vietnamese-Cambodian border, and soon ethnic
Vietnamese living in Cambodia were also targeted by the regime.
This conflict came to a head in late 1978 when the
Vietnamese government, no stranger to atrocities itself, decided to intervene
and stop the rampant killing in Cambodia. On Jan. 7, 1979, the capital city
fell to the Vietnamese.
In his book “The Rise and Fall of Communism,”
historian Archie Brown wrote: “After almost two years of border clashes,
Vietnamese forces invaded Cambodia/Kampuchea at the end of December 1978. Their
intention was to dislodge the Khmer Rouge — not, of course, to put an end to
communist rule. Most of the Cambodian population welcomed them as liberators,
and in the course of that year a more 'normal' communist government than Pol
Pot's was established, under Vietnamese supervision.”
The ousting of the Khmer Rouge from power was not the
end of the movement, however. China still supported the party as a resistance
group, which operated out of western Cambodia and Thailand, and even invaded
Vietnam itself to restore the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia. The Chinese invasion of
Vietnam, however, proved short-lived and unsuccessful.
Despite U.S. President Jimmy Carter's emphasis on
international human rights, the United States opposed the actions of the
Soviet-backed Vietnamese and gave support to the defunct Khmer Rouge. This was
also done because the U.S. was seeking better relations with China (Carter
extended formal diplomatic recognition to China on Jan. 1, 1979).
The Khmer Rouge continued to formally represent
Cambodia in the United Nations until the early 1990s. Pol Pot died in 1998 and
the Khmer Rouge officially dissolved the next year.
In his book “The Cold War: A New History,” historian
John Lewis Gaddis wrote of the Khmer Rouge's legacy: “No tyrant anywhere had
ever executed a fifth of his own people, and yet the Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot
did precisely this in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. The future will surely
remember that atrocity when it has forgotten much else about the Cold War, and
yet hardly anyone outside of Cambodia noticed at the time.
"There was no trial for crimes against humanity:
Pol Pot died in a simple shack along the Thai border in 1998 and was
unceremoniously cremated on a heap of junk and old tires. At least there was no
mausoleum.”
Cody K. Carlson holds a master's degree in history
from the University of Utah and currently teaches at Salt Lake Community
College. He is also the co-developer of the popular History Challenge
iPhone/iPad apps. Email: ckcarlson76@gmail.com
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