Monday, September 10, 2007

Lesson in Cambodian genocide

Bill Nojay
Guest essayist
Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (Rochester, New York, USA)


(September 10, 2007) — President Bush has warned the American people and Congress that withdrawal from Iraq may cause the kind of human rights disaster that followed American withdrawal from Vietnam and Cambodia in the 1970s.

In response, a local college professor wrote an op-ed piece ("Bush's Vietnam-Iraq Analogy Falls Flat," Aug. 30) suggesting the 2 million deaths in Cambodia under the communists were somehow triggered by American actions and that the Vietnamese re-education camps were merely "essentially prisons" where former civilian and military officials were "instructed" in the new government's values and policies.

The Vietnamese camps were scenes of torture and forced labor under harsh conditions. Prisoners were forced to clear mine fields and other dangerous tasks, with no shelter from the hot tropical sun, poor nutrition and no medical care. Estimated deaths from disease, starvation, execution and accidents range from tens of thousands to more than 100,000.

In Cambodia, it was worse. While an exact count is impossible, between 1 million to 3 million Cambodians died following the communist takeover.

Last week, I was in Cambodia for a meeting with former King Sihanouk and a tour of the "killing fields," including Tuol Sleng prison, one of the torture and death camps run by the communists after the American withdrawal. No one I met there blamed the United States for the genocide. Everyone I spoke with blamed the communist despots and revolutionaries for the mass starvation, torture and death that followed the American withdrawal.

The Vietnamese and Cambodian communist movements can be traced to the late 1920s, when Vietnamese communist leader Ho Chi Minh began organizing cells to follow the philosophy of Karl Marx. His timing and methods followed Chinese Communist Chairman Mao's model for political and social revolution. The Vietnamese and Cambodian communist movements evolved over decades, picking up support after World War II amongst Paris-educated radicals who believed in a remaking of their societies according to Marx's model.

Their activities therefore began decades prior to the American military involvement in Southeast Asia. Indeed, their tracts and propaganda literature focus on Marxism's dogma and social theories, not on American involvement in their countries. America's involvement altered the timing of their military victories but did not cause them.

History shows a pattern in communist states, whether in Russia, China, Vietnam or Cambodia. Military victory was followed by genocide, with the deaths usually preceded by torture, starvation or imprisonment. The specific circumstances varied, however the indiscriminate violation of the most basic human rights is a common trait of despotic regimes everywhere. American involvement in Vietnam and Cambodia slowed the communist advances, however our withdrawal removed any last hope for these countries to avoid the carnage of authoritarian regimes.

President Bush's warnings about the potential for mass murders and ethnic cleansing in Iraq if the United States withdraws its forces should be taken seriously by the Congress and the American people as our country debates its options for the future of Iraq. The grisly torture and murder of thousands of civilians by the Islamic militias fighting American involvement confirms their total lack of regard for human rights. Whether your torturer is called a communist or an Islamic radical is of little importance to the victim. Evil follows a familiar pattern where it is allowed to flourish.

Whether American withdrawal from Iraq would produce an Iraqi genocide comparable to the aftermath of Vietnam and Cambodia is a legitimate issue for debate. If history does indeed repeat itself, President Bush may be correct in warning of the consequences of withdrawal.

Nojay first traveled to Cambodia in 1984. He is an attorney in Pittsford.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

hOW CAN YOU BLAM aMERICAN IF YOU COUNT THOSE COMMUNIST COUNTRY CHINA, RUSIA, VIETNAME , AND POL POT AS HUMAN?

BUT NOW WE KNOW THAT THEY WERE AND ARE RABIS DOG, PLEASE HELP US WANT MORE TIME TO HAVE A REAL FAIR ELECTION OR FORCE THEM CPP AND SIHANOUK TO GIVE US REAL DEMOCRACY!


THE ONE WHO CAIGHT IN THE VICIOUSE CIRCLE!

Anonymous said...

khmer pheas khloun said...
Regarding of your letter date 09/06/2007
We understand that handling and processing take some times. It is not hard like searching the needle in the hay stack N Seihaknouk , evidences , witnesses and documents all are there ,the person whom did the Cambodian holocaust is norodom Seihaknouk from 1970 to 1979 seihaknouk created Cambodian bloodbath with two million and plus of it citizen to lose their lives. Seihaknouk and Pol Pot 's hand are stained by Cambodian 's blood NOT USA sorry folks, Pol Pot was trained by Vietnam and Seihaknouk is very close friend with Vietnam,So Seihaknouk,China and Vietnam have to go to UN court ,that is right things to do,I strongly hope Seihaknouk,China and Vietnam are guilty.
Seihaknouk slaughters of million Khmer and wily a manipulator.

Anonymous said...

khmer people, from my understanding. its not just china, vietnam, pol pot, and the king ! The U S play some involvement also. The used Lon nol, to toppled the king. And then supported the khmer rouge into power. And with all their promises to help cambodia. They ( u s ) abandoned khmer people to be slaugther.

And now, Bush uses cambodia as an example to not abandon Iraq.
The u s, shouldn't have been in the iraq in the first place. because no ligitimate reason at all. Bush alway sounds stupid, only because he alway lying through his teeth.

Bush is no different from hun sen ,and hun sen as we know it is just one of the worst in khmer history. why i said that? drugs, human trafficing, prostitution, stravation. And many other illegal activities.

The good, and innocent people need to be smarter and wiser then these crook of no character.

Anonymous said...

khmer people raise ur children well please. So they won't turn up into people like hun sen, hok lundy, heng pov, pol pot, and many others like the vietcong now occupading cambodia.

Anonymous said...

Whatever had happened to us Cambodia, The American should stay and see to it that Iraqis people will be safe.

Everyone knows how serious and deadly the extremists are..... except some of you few.

Anonymous said...

American must stay in Iraq!