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Subject: A bit of history: 18 March1970 - Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.
tjkhan    3/17/2006 4:19:49 PM
In my view the start of the Cambodian Tradgey... From Wikipedia: "While Prince Norodom Sihanouk was away on a trip to Moscow and Beijing being treated for cancer, .....on 18 March 1970 the National Assembly was convened, and voted unanimously to depose Sihanouk as head of state. Lon Nol, who had been serving as prime minister, was granted emergency powers. Prince Sirik Matak, a royal prince who in 1941, had been passed over by the French government in favor of his cousin Norodom Sihanouk as king, retained his post as Deputy Prime Minister. Following Sihanouk's exit, Lon Nol demanded that the North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong leave Cambodia. He also closed the ports of Cambodia to military supplies for the Vietnamese forces. Sihanouk had, in 1965, made a secret deal with North Vietnam and China which allowed those countries to use Cambodia as a base area for the war on South Vietnam. In 1968, he struck another secret deal with the Americans allowing them to Bomb eastern Cambodia. Lon Nol allowed American and ARVN forces to cross occasionally into Cambodia. The government also assumed a pro-Western, anti-Communist stance. The goal of American bombings in Cambodia was to destroy North Vietnamese and National Liberation Front (Viet Cong) bases in the area. Soon after, The North Vietnamese and Chinese began arming the Khmer Rouge who had been fighting against the government since 1968. Sihanouk, in China, allied himself to the communists and allowed himself to be used as a powerless figurehead for the anti-government forces. The Cambodian Civil War then began between the Khmer National Armed Forces (FANK) loyal to Nol and the Cambodian People's National Liberation Armed Forces (which was under the total control by the communist-Maoist-nationalist Khmer Rouge). Because he had abolished the monarchy and established the Khmer Republic, Nol was widely unpopular in the countryside, where support for Sihanouk was strong. Sihanouk formed a government-in-exile in Beijing known as the Royal Government of the National Union of Kampuchea (GRUNK), and a political coalition known as the National United Front of Kampuchea (FUNK), urging resistance to Nol. Sihanouk served as a useful symbol of resistance for the Khmer Rouge, who consolidated control in GRUNK and FUNK and rallied peasants to join the insurgency. With his country descending into civil war, Nol turned to the Americans for assistance. On November 18, 1970, U.S. President Richard Nixon responded by requesting Congress to approve $155 million in supplemental aid for the Cambodian government ($85 million was allocated for military assistance.) The Nixon administration and the CIA maintained friendly relations with Nol's government, having been frustrated with Prince Sihanouk's phony neutralist policies which in practice were not neutral and simply gave over control of eastern Cambodia to the NVA, PAVN and Viet Cong. However, despite U.S. aid, Nol was unable to defeat the North Vietnamese forces or the Khmer Rouge. In the name of "neutralism" and out of fear of a coup, Sihanouk had kept the Cambodian army small. Despite large numbers of volunteers, the Cambodian Army was simply outmatched by a Vietnamese opponent with heavy weapons and years of war experience. Given that the entire country quickly turned into a war zone, economic destablization and refugees meant that no amount of money could make the situation better. With the unlimited material backing of China and Vietnam, the direct assistance of the North Vietnamese Army and with Sihanouk as a figurehead, the Khmer Rouge could not be stopped. After many years of holding on, the government was eventually reduced to holding little more than Phnom Penh. At one point during a Khmer Rouge assault on Phnom Penh, Nol resorted to tradition and sprinkled a circular line of magic sand in order to defend the city. Finally, on April 1, 1975, Nol resigned and fled the country into exile in Hawaii. He had reason to flee in that the Khmer Rouge with the implicit approval of Sihanouk had published a death list with his name at the top. His brother Lon Non and other Khmer Republic officials including Sirik Matak chose to stay behind. They stayed behind because their names had not been published on the death lists and they made the assumption that either the Khmer Rouge would be moderate in victory or that Sihanouk could restrain them. They were summarily executed by the Khmer Rouge after Phnom Penh was captured on 17 April. Lon Nol first settled in Hawaii and then moved in 1979 to California. He died on November 17, 1985."
 
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bigfella    RE:A bit of history: 18 March1970 - Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.    3/21/2006 7:30:52 AM
One of the most foolish moves in recorded history TJ. Sihanouk essentially had cut a deal with everyone. He let the PAVN use part of his country & let the Americans bombe them while the Chinese promised to keep the Vietnamese & KR from toppling him. An imperfect compromise, but probably the best available. Unfortunately Nixon & Kissinger had other plans. While the US didn't stage the coup as such, it had always kept ties with the top brass of the Cambodian Military.Lon Nol knew he was on a promis to get as many shiny new toys as he could use if he took over. He & Matak played on the resentment of many Cambodians over the Vietnamese presence in their country & increasing questions about Sihanouk's behaviour to harness a degree of popular support. it didn't last. Unfortunately the Cambodian Army made the ARVN look like the Wehrmacht. With US & Cambodian ground forces now spoiling their cozy arrangement, the Vietnamese not only moved deeper into Cambodia, they also let the KR get their hands on enough weapons to overrun the country. Even worse, Sihanouk, in a fit of jealous rage & hoping his Chiese benefactors would return him to power, sided with the KR. This gave them a credibility they could never have otherwise gained. By 1971 they only reason Cambodia was not communist was that China & Vietnam didn't want to spook the Americans into doing something rash like getting serious about saving the RVN. Better to let them think Cambodia had a chance until the RVN was ready to drop. The Vietnamese neither liked nor trusted the KR, but you can't always choose your friends. The KR despised the Vietnamese (along with the Chinese, Chams, Thais, Westerners & anyone who wasn't Khmer), but were wise enough to keep it to themselves for long enough to get the keys to the palace. This caution collapsed once they got into power. Over a period of years the paranoia took hold, as did delusions worthy of Hitler. Pol Pot & his buddies decided that, having wiped out most of the ethnic minorities & 'class enemies' at home (the latter was a fairly flexible category) that it was time to teach Vietnam a lesson for occupying Khmer land. The nutjobs in Phnom Penh launched a series of bloody raids over the border not far from Saigon. Not even a large & devastating Vietnamese raid in 1977 convinced them this was a bad idea. They blamed it on 'traitors' and continued on as before. Thus Vietnam launched the invasion that eventually brounght down Pol Pot (after a rather nasty famine). Sadly the story does not end there. Convinced that Vietnam was about to invade Sth East Asia, Thailand & her mates in ASEAN jumped to the aid of the fleeing KR. Sihanouk, not having learned his lesson (despite losing most of his family to the KR) formed a loose alliance with the KR in order to throw out the Vietnamese. The Chinese, having shown Vietnam what they thought of removing their friends by invading, then proceeded to prop up the KR (with enthusiastic support from the US & ASEAN, who wanted to bleed Vietnam a bit). Bottom line, Cambodia got royally screwed by bigger, nastier nations who were prepared to exploit one of the least impressive collections of leadership material ever assembled by one nation for their own petty ends. Pity about the Cambodians. Just one more bit of Cold War roadkill.
 
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tjkhan    RE:A bit of history: 18 March 1970 - Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.    3/21/2006 1:53:01 PM
bigfella: "One of the most foolish moves in recorded history TJ." I couldn't agree more. Towards the end Sirik Matak wrote to the US Adminsitration in the following terms: "Dear Excellency and Friend, I thank you very sincerely for your letter and your offer to transport me towards freedom. I cannot, alas, leave in such a cowardly fashion. As for you, and in particular for your great country, I never believed for a moment that you would have this sentiment of abandoning a people, which has chosen liberty. You have refused us your protection, and we can do nothing about it. You leave, and my wish is that you and your country will find happiness under this sky. But, mark it well, that if I shall die here on the spot and in my country that I love, it is too bad, because we are all born and must die one day. I have committed this mistake of believing in you, the Americans." Of course, Sirik Matak was executed by the Khmer Rouge on 21 April, 1975, in Phnom Penh.
 
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bigfella    RE:A bit of history: 18 March 1970 - Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.    3/22/2006 4:00:15 PM
TJ, A bit rich for Matak to slag off the Yanks. Sure, they didn't drop an army in to bail he & Lon Nol out, but I don't think they ever promised to. Ultimately it was Lon Nol's dilusion that his army could take on the KR & more importantly the PAVN that doomed him. Given that the PAVN had waxed the French & taken it up to the Yanks, I'm not sure what the guy was thinking. Should have stayed in the barracks. I also love the bit about 'choosing liberty'. The Lon Nol regime might look good compared to what followed, but I don't think 'liberty' would be the way to describe it. Indeed, Lon Nol was head of the army when it put down peasant protests in 1967. Petty personal jealousy had a bit more to do with matak's actions than love of liberty. Sihanouk was no democrat, but neither was he much of a tyrant. One other thing that Matak's decision to stay shows is that no one, not even anti-communist Cambodians, predicted what the KR would be like in power. They wisely kept their plans very much to themselves. It is eerie to read newspaper accounts of the fall of Phnom Penh (as I have for my thesis) and see grainy photos of 'unknown Khmer Rouge leaders' or 'senior KR officials' with Pol Pot & Ieng Sary lurking in the background. Even in victory they were obsessively secretive, leaving the public stuff to the more presentable Khieu Samphan.
 
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tjkhan    RE:A bit of history: 18 March 1970 - Lon Nol ousts Prince Norodom Sihanouk of Cambodia.    3/23/2006 1:49:00 AM
bigfella, well put. I can't disagree with anything you say.
 
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