By H.D.S. Greenway
The Boston Globe (Mass., USA)
WHEN I saw pictures of the British sailors and marines, on the eve of their freedom from Iran, dressed in ill-fitting suits that Iranian tailors had run up for them, memory raced back nearly 40 years when a similar drama was being played out in another country of which the United States then disapproved.
It was Cambodia in the autumn of 1968, in that last twilight time before regime change, war, and the Khmer Rouge tore that country to pieces. Prince Norodom Sihanouk had managed to keep Cambodia out of the inferno that was raging in neighboring Laos and Vietnam, but the United States was cross at him for allowing the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese to use his territory -- not that he really had any choice.
Some American soldiers, on a river boat, had wandered up the Mekong from Vietnam into Cambodian territory and been captured. Sihanouk played the incident with the same theatricality as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did with his British prisoners.
"When we do something from Islamic compassion, we expect nothing in return," Ahmadinejad said, and so he freed his prisoners as a gift.
Sihanouk used the occasion of a national holiday to release his captives. He, too, had sent tailors around the jail to measure his prisoners for new suits -- white linen suits in this case. Sihanouk threw in neckties as well -- the tie of his political organization. Like the Iranians, he made a public spectacle of his country's generosity, and spoke, too, of religion.
"I love Buddha," he said in his high-pitched voice, "all Cambodians are small Buddhas. . ." and they would be compassionate and let the prisoners go.
But he refused to give back their boat. "It has no heart, it has no soul, it will do very well here with our little navy," he said.
I was amused when a Financial Times editorial used the word "mercurial" when referring to Ahamadinejad. That was the favorite adjective newspapers used for Sihanouk, although for my money Sihanouk had a great deal more to recommend him than the Iranian president.
Scarcely 18 months later, Sihanouk was deposed. I have never believed that the Americans were directly involved in the coup, but they certainly encouraged it, and took advantage of it. An American invasion, and a no-quarter war followed for five years, until the long, genocidal night of the Khmer Rouge descended across the land.
It was the final spasm of a disastrous American foreign-policy mistake that had engulfed Indochina, and I thought, when it was finally over, that a painful lesson had been learned. I was wrong.
Some of the same characters in the American government who later brought us Iraq -- Vice President Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld high among them -- took the wrong lesson away from the Indochina debacle. They thought: Just give us another chance and we'll get it right.
They didn't get it right, of course, and now Iran is in America's crosshairs. It is probably fortunate for Ahmadinejad that his captives were not Americans for it is unlikely that the Bush administration would have played the incident with the same skill as the British. A hostage crisis might have been just what Cheney needed to press for an attack upon Iran.
It is unlikely that Iran's dramatic release of the British servicemen, and one woman, will gain any good will with the Bush administration, any more than Sihanouk's gesture did with Nixon. In the end Congress closed down the Indochina war, and the last fighter bomber flying the last mission flew away with the pilot playing "Turkey in the Straw' on his harmonica over the radio.
Terrible things happened to Indochina after American power was withdrawn, and reasonable people worry that the same things will happen in Iraq. But the real betrayal was going in, not out, and the great mistake was to believe that the American public support would keep a losing war going on forever.
Iraq has passed beyond the ability of the United States to control in anything but the most temporary and superficial way. General David Petraeus undoubtedly spoke the truth when he said: "The Washington clock is moving faster than the Baghdad clock."
The Iraq drama will play out to its inevitable end, but if Congress really wants to do some good it should start putting up every possible legal barrier to a war with Iran.
H.D.S. Greenway's column appears regularly in the Globe.
It was Cambodia in the autumn of 1968, in that last twilight time before regime change, war, and the Khmer Rouge tore that country to pieces. Prince Norodom Sihanouk had managed to keep Cambodia out of the inferno that was raging in neighboring Laos and Vietnam, but the United States was cross at him for allowing the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese to use his territory -- not that he really had any choice.
Some American soldiers, on a river boat, had wandered up the Mekong from Vietnam into Cambodian territory and been captured. Sihanouk played the incident with the same theatricality as Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad did with his British prisoners.
"When we do something from Islamic compassion, we expect nothing in return," Ahmadinejad said, and so he freed his prisoners as a gift.
Sihanouk used the occasion of a national holiday to release his captives. He, too, had sent tailors around the jail to measure his prisoners for new suits -- white linen suits in this case. Sihanouk threw in neckties as well -- the tie of his political organization. Like the Iranians, he made a public spectacle of his country's generosity, and spoke, too, of religion.
"I love Buddha," he said in his high-pitched voice, "all Cambodians are small Buddhas. . ." and they would be compassionate and let the prisoners go.
But he refused to give back their boat. "It has no heart, it has no soul, it will do very well here with our little navy," he said.
I was amused when a Financial Times editorial used the word "mercurial" when referring to Ahamadinejad. That was the favorite adjective newspapers used for Sihanouk, although for my money Sihanouk had a great deal more to recommend him than the Iranian president.
Scarcely 18 months later, Sihanouk was deposed. I have never believed that the Americans were directly involved in the coup, but they certainly encouraged it, and took advantage of it. An American invasion, and a no-quarter war followed for five years, until the long, genocidal night of the Khmer Rouge descended across the land.
It was the final spasm of a disastrous American foreign-policy mistake that had engulfed Indochina, and I thought, when it was finally over, that a painful lesson had been learned. I was wrong.
Some of the same characters in the American government who later brought us Iraq -- Vice President Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld high among them -- took the wrong lesson away from the Indochina debacle. They thought: Just give us another chance and we'll get it right.
They didn't get it right, of course, and now Iran is in America's crosshairs. It is probably fortunate for Ahmadinejad that his captives were not Americans for it is unlikely that the Bush administration would have played the incident with the same skill as the British. A hostage crisis might have been just what Cheney needed to press for an attack upon Iran.
It is unlikely that Iran's dramatic release of the British servicemen, and one woman, will gain any good will with the Bush administration, any more than Sihanouk's gesture did with Nixon. In the end Congress closed down the Indochina war, and the last fighter bomber flying the last mission flew away with the pilot playing "Turkey in the Straw' on his harmonica over the radio.
Terrible things happened to Indochina after American power was withdrawn, and reasonable people worry that the same things will happen in Iraq. But the real betrayal was going in, not out, and the great mistake was to believe that the American public support would keep a losing war going on forever.
Iraq has passed beyond the ability of the United States to control in anything but the most temporary and superficial way. General David Petraeus undoubtedly spoke the truth when he said: "The Washington clock is moving faster than the Baghdad clock."
The Iraq drama will play out to its inevitable end, but if Congress really wants to do some good it should start putting up every possible legal barrier to a war with Iran.
H.D.S. Greenway's column appears regularly in the Globe.
8 comments:
Later the khmer rouge did not have that chance to parade the prisoners
in the Mayaguay affair.
King Sihanouk is the greatest Khmer politician of all time and he told President Nixon that American would not win the war in Indochina because of what the French had done to Indochina and to most Indochinese, American is just another Anglo-Saxon who is bending to make Indochinese people as their slave and beside Indochinese people still remembered how American took control of the Phillipine as their slave!!
King Sihanouk had been keeping the score of American victory against the Vietcong otherwise King Sihanouk would have switched camp if only American can prove their Victory over the Vietcong who had China and Russia as their backer!!!
Now I truely understand who destroyed Cambodia neutrality!!!!!!
"Prince Norodom Sihanouk had managed to keep Cambodia out of the inferno that was raging in neighboring Laos and Vietnam, but the United States was cross at him for allowing the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese to use his territory -- not that he really had any choice."
Attempting to fabricate the facts?
Either the author so ignorant, did not know, or he/she left out the important piece of information - Sihanouk had secretly diplomatic talked with Ho about the return of Kampuchea Krom territory, if he [Sihanouk] were to allow the Viet Cong to use Cambodian territory as their [Viet Congs] sanctuary. Sihanouk, not only he did have any arms to defend for his little Buddha people and the country but he was also severely undermined his enemy - Vietnam. AT THE END, SIHANOUK GOT BURNED FROM BOTH ENDS. HIS SO-CALLED LITTLE BUDDHA GOT SLAUGHTERED AND HIS VERY OWN COUNTRY GOT RAPED UP UNTIL NOW!
I HELP YUONS!
http://devaraja.free.fr/index.htm
9:18pm I agree. The only greatest thing King Sihanouk ever did was get our freedom back from the French. Like a Ball on a palm of a hand, he could`nt grasp it tightly enough and the ball ROLLED.
LOL, 9:18 Sihanouk ain't that dumb
to believe that he will get
Kampuchea Krom back in exchange
for allowing the vietcong to used
the HCM trail. I have heard that
roumors a lot from Ah Khmer-Yuons,
but I don't know who started it.
Here's a simple logic. The Vietcong
sacrificed their men and women to
fight to take the entire south
vietnam for themselves. Why will
they want to give about 80% of it
to cambodia for just the use
of the HCM trail? If you were the
Vietcong, would you make such deal?
I tell if there is a fair trade,
the Vietcong would have asked
the Khmer to sacrifice the men
and women also if they want any
territory back not just the use
of the land. Stop embarrasing
yourselve with the stupid roumors,
buddy. Anyone with a drop of
intelligence know it is not for
real.
King Sihanouk is the greatest Khmer politician of all time ...
Wow, 8:51, are we related?
I am with you 100%, bro!
I feel so bad that oppositions are
not trying to learn from the master
and use it to defeat the
inexperience CPP, but what can I
say? If opposition is that stupid
they shouldn't be ruling anything
anywhere. Is that unfair to say?
To 1:28AM
It is possible that we are related!
I don't want to give out my location or anything for verification...but base on the knowlege of very old educated Cambodian people who had experience first hand with the French,the Vietcong, the Thaicong,China,Russia,the Japanese,the Khmer Rouge, and the American and I was told certain things...but then I did more research and I came to the conclusion that King Sihanouk is the greatest Khmer politician of all time!!!
It is so easy to make judgement on King Sihanouk when everything is said and done!!!
Too many Cambodian people are quick to make judgement base on disinformation( enemy propaganda) and blind to reasoning of all the facts and fail to connect all the dots!! If these ignorance continue among Cambodian people the Cambodian palace will one day burn down to the ground!!!
Cambodian people need to remember that it took a Super power with hundred of million of people to destroy King Sihanouk who had only 8 million people!!!! This is such a fucken mismatch if talking about a boxing match but then again life ain't fair!!!!Please excuse me!!!!
Now please make way, I would like to welcome King Sihanouk to Cambodia!!!Welcome!!!Welcome!!Welcome!!!Welcome the King!!!Please watch out and make way!!Please!!Please!!Please make way for the King!!!Watch out!!Watch outr!!Watch out!!!
That is okay, 12:13. You needn't
give out anything. I appreciate
you doing you own research and
follow your own conclusion instead
of riding along with any roumors.
I am sure we'll meet one day where
we can chat and share some of your
discoveries and knowledges.
Keep up the great work and may God
continues to help you uncover the
truth.
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