The death of Pol Pot
By Peter Symonds and Martin McLaughlin
18 April 1998
The death of former Khmer Rouge leader Pol Pot on April 15
in the Thai-Cambodian border area brings to an end one of the
most chilling and bloody chapters of the twentieth century. During
Pol Pot's three and a half years of rule over Cambodia, from 1975
to 1978, the Khmer Rouge killed as many as two million people
through mass executions, starvation and slave labor.
The genocide in Cambodia was the outcome of a complex historical
development in which the pernicious ideological influence of Stalinism
came together with the military bloodbath carried out by American
imperialism against the people of Indochina. Little of this history
can be gleaned from the commentaries in the corporate-controlled
media, which used the occasion to rehash old anticommunist myths
and whitewash the US role in the Cambodian tragedy.
The political activity of Pol Pot (Saloth Sar) began in post-World
War II France, which ruled Cambodia as part of its Indochina colony.
The son of a relatively well-off peasant family, he received a
government scholarship in 1949 to study in Paris, where he gravitated
with a number of his friends to the Stalinist circles around the
French Communist Party.
He returned to Phnom Penh in 1953, worked as a teacher and
was involved in the establishment of the embryonic Communist Party
in Cambodia. Faced with police repression under the government
of Prince Norodom Sihanouk, the country's first post-colonial
ruler, the party leaders fled the capital in 1963, seeking sanctuary
in the remote rural areas of the country.
It was here that Pol Pot, heavily influenced by the Chinese
Stalinists, devised the political perspective of what was to become
the Khmer Rouge--an extreme form of Mao Zedong's eclectic mixture
of Stalinism, nationalism and peasant radicalism.
It is characteristic of the ideological falsification produced
by Stalinism that the label of Marxism has been placed upon social
and political phenomena which have nothing whatsoever to do with
the ideas of Marx, Engels or Lenin.
Classical Marxism envisioned a new society, democratically
controlled by the working class, which would take as its point
of departure the highest level of the productive forces developed
under capitalism. This presupposed the widest possible scope for
the development of industry, science and technique, all of them
bound up with the growth of cities, the urban proletariat and
the cultural life of the population as a whole.
No more grotesque distortion can be imagined than to categorize
as "Marxist" the ideas of Pol Pot and his cohorts. As
early as the 1950s Khieu Samphan, Pol Pot's closest aide, had
outlined a perspective of creating a primitive peasant-based society
in which money, culture and all other facets of urban life would
be abolished.
Like the Maoists, the Khmer Rouge appealed not to the working
class but to the peasantry, and especially to the most backward
and impoverished layers of the peasantry, who became the backbone
of its guerrilla army units. In its parochialism and nationalism,
its anti-intellectualism, and its hostility to urban life, the
Khmer Rouge reflected the outlook of this social stratum.
The American role
The responsibility for the rising popularity of the Khmer Rouge
rested with the successive US administrations which prosecuted
a protracted and brutal imperialist war throughout Indochina in
the 1960s and 1970s, destroying millions of lives and devastating
industry and agriculture.
Prince Sihanouk had sought to maintain his country's distance
from the war in Vietnam through a policy of neutralism. He refused
to act against Vietnamese supply lines along the Ho Chi Minh trail,
which ran through eastern Cambodia. At the same time he kept silent
about US military actions against Vietnamese forces operating
on Cambodian soil.
The Nixon administration finally broke with Sihanouk in April
1970, backing a CIA-directed military coup that installed General
Lon Nol and sent Sihanouk into exile in Beijing. One month later
Nixon announced the invasion of Cambodia by 20,000 US and Vietnamese
troops.
Cambodia was transformed into a battlefield with Lon Nol's
troops fighting the Khmer Rouge and American and Saigon troops
in combat with NLF and regular North Vietnamese forces. The country's
population experienced the most intensive saturation bombing in
world history. During nearly five years of bombing raids, from
1969 to 1973, some 532,000 tons of bombs were dropped on Cambodia,
more than three times the tonnage dropped on Japan in all of World
War II.
Under the impact of the bombing and widening warfare, Cambodian
society disintegrated. By 1974, 95 percent of Cambodia's national
income came from US aid, much of it siphoned off into the pockets
of corrupt military officers. Two million out of the seven million
people were homeless. Annual rice production had plunged from
3.8 million tons to only 655,000 tons. Much of Cambodia's farmland
remains even today untillable because of bomb craters and unexploded
ordnance.
The major responsibility for this social catastrophe lay with
Nixon and his principal foreign policy aide, National Security
Adviser Henry Kissinger. The bombing of Cambodia was carried out
as a secret and illegal operation--secret, at least, from the
American people, if not from the victims in Cambodia, or the thousands
of American military personnel who participated in the attacks,
or the American reporters in Vietnam who knew of the bombing raids
but kept silent.
There was no constitutional authority for the Nixon administration
to wage war against a peaceful and neutral country. The White
House did not even notify Congress of the bombing until April
1973, after the last American ground troops had been withdrawn
from Vietnam and the war had been all but lost.
The Khmer Rouge in power
It was only after the American intervention in Cambodia that
Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge began to win wider support. From a
badly organized and poorly equipped force of less than 5,000 men
in 1970, it grew to be an army of around 70,000 when, in April
1975, the Lon Nol dictatorship finally collapsed.
The shattering, not only of urban economic life but even of
traditional peasant agriculture, led the Khmer Rouge to rely more
heavily on the most culturally and socially primitive layers of
the peasantry, those living an essentially tribal existence, with
little or no connection to the money economy and urban life. In
this they resemble such contemporary groups as the Sendero Luminoso
in Peru and the JVP in Sri Lanka, originating as movements led
by radicalized middle class intellectuals, which have evolved
in the direction of fascism.
Certainly once it came to power at the head of a peasant-based
army, the Khmer Rouge leaders carried out policies of a profoundly
anti-working-class character, which had far more in common with
fascism than socialism. Faced with an economy in shambles, unable
and unwilling to organize the feeding of the cities, they ordered
the evacuation of Pnomh Penh and other towns. The entire urban
population--workers, intellectuals, civil servants, small shopkeepers
and others--were driven into the countryside to labor under very
harsh conditions on irrigation schemes and other grandiose projects
aimed at elevating agricultural production to unattainable levels.
Hundreds of thousands died of overwork, hunger and disease.
Many more were executed in the course of the pogroms launched
against all forms of culture and intellectual life. Others died
in the vicious factional disputes that erupted within the Khmer
Rouge as its economic plans fell to pieces, and its grip on political
power became more tenuous.
The nationalist xenophobia of the Cambodian leadership led
to a series of clashes with Vietnam, as Khmer Rouge forces staged
bloody attacks on ethnic Vietnamese living along the Cambodia-Vietnam
border. After nearly a year of such raids, the Hanoi government
ordered a full-scale Vietnamese invasion in December 1978, which
rapidly overwhelmed the Khmer Rouge forces and led to the installation
of the current ruler in Phnom Penh, Prime Minister Hun Sen.
A mass murderer under US protection
If the Khmer Rouge did not disintegrate completely after this
debacle, it was largely because it had the support of powerful
backers. China launched a military assault on Vietnam in retaliation
for its invasion of Cambodia, with the tacit backing of the Carter
administration in the United States.
Deng Xiaoping visited Washington in January 1979, in the midst
of the Vietnamese offensive in Cambodia, which both China and
the US condemned. Less than two months later, nearly a million
Chinese troops carried out attacks along Vietnam's northern border,
where they suffered a bloody repulse.
The most critical role was played by the United States government,
which saw Pol Pot as a useful Cold War ally, since he was at war
with Vietnam, which was allied to the Soviet Union. With US backing,
China supplied the Khmer Rouge with military equipment and the
right-wing military regime in Thailand, a US client state, allowed
free flow of supplies to Pol Pot's guerrillas in their base camps
along the Thai-Cambodian border.
As Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carter's national security adviser,
later admitted, "I encouraged the Chinese to support Pol
Pot. The question was how to help the Cambodian people. Pol Pot
was an abomination. We could never support him, but China could."
Equally important was the diplomatic support from the United
States and other imperialist powers, which recognized the Khmer
Rouge as the legitimate government of Cambodia and backed the
seating of Pol Pot's representative as the Cambodian delegate
to the United Nations for more than a decade. Throughout the 1980s
the Reagan administration blocked international efforts to characterize
the events of 1975-78 in Cambodia as genocide or to hold the Khmer
Rouge leadership responsible for mass murder, since it would undercut
the American alliance with Pol Pot.
The final collapse of the Khmer Rouge and its disintegration
into rival factions was bound up with the imposition of a new
imperialist settlement on Cambodia under the UN's auspices in
1993. The aim of this UN intervention was to open up the country
as a source of cheap labor for international investors. Since
then, key Khmer Rouge groupings have formally surrendered and
been integrated into the army and official political life in Cambodia.
The remnants are fighting a rearguard action on the Thai-Cambodian
border.
Only last year, after an internal split in the remnants of
the Khmer Rouge led to Pol Pot's arrest, did the United States
withdraw its objections to his trial as a war criminal. But there
was no mistaking the sigh of relief in Washington after the Khmer
Rouge leader died, apparently of natural causes.
As one Cambodia scholar, Stephen Heder, a lecturer at London's
School of oriental and African Studies, told the New York Times:
"There's certainly a major American responsibility for this
whole situation. A war-crimes trial could have posed a problem
for the US because it could have raised questions about US bombing
from 1969 through 1973."
With its typical indifference to history, the American media
carried interviews with Henry Kissinger after the death of Pol
Pot in which there was no mention of the US contribution to the
tragedy of Cambodia. The principal architect of Nixon's Cambodia
policy pontificated about Pol Pot's bloody crimes and discussed
the prospects of a war crimes trial for the surviving Khmer Rouge
leaders. If the truth be told, Kissinger would deserve his own
place in the dock at any such tribunal.
See Also:
Deng Xiaoping
and Fate of the Chinese Revolution
[12 March 1997]
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