Friday, June 17, 2011

Theary Seng's Commentary

Here are excerpts, emphasis added, from Brother Enemy— The War after the War: A History of Indochina Since the Fall of Saigon (New York, 1986) by Nayan Chanda to give some historical context to the VOA report of 16 June 2011 Assembly Approves Triple-Country Convention

“Cambodia’s ruling party on Thursday approved a regional convention that would set up a joint development area between Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam, but which opposition critics argue would cede land to Vietnam.”

Theary Seng (Photo: Nigel Dickinson, 2010)
________

Chapter 11:  Indochina: War Forever?

Three Countries, One Current (p. 370)

One refrain that I heard constantly from the survivors was “If the Vietnamese hadn’t come, we’d all be dead.” That expression of gratitude was, however, often laced with apprehension that the traditional enemy—Vietnam—might now annex Cambodia.  “I fear they [the Vietnamese] want to stay here to eat our rice,” a former schoolteacher whispered to me on the road on his long march back home.

The Vietnamese certainly did not help to foster confidence.  In the three months following the occupation of Phnom Penh they had systematically plundered the capital.  Convoys of trucks carrying refrigerators, air conditioners, electrical gadgets, furniture, machinery, and precious sculptures headed toward Ho Chi Minh City.

[…]

Thousands of Vietnamese officials and technicians were commandeered to Cambodia to restore the water supply and electricity in Phnom Penh, put the railway line back into service, and reopen rudimentary health clinics with Vietnamese doctors and paramedics and a handful of Cambodian doctors.  Ministries were set up, with Vietnamese advisers running things behind the scenes.  Hundreds of Khmers were sent to Vietnam to take crash courses in health care, education, banking, foreign trade, and security work.

[…]

Militarily, Cambodia was brought under the responsibility of Vietnam’s Fourth Army Corps… three Khmer divisions had been raised to play a supporting role, the 180,000 strong Vietnamese army led by Fourth Corps commander General Le Duc Anh

Three shadowy Vietnamese organizations controlled the pulse of the People’s Republic of Kampuchea, as the new regime calls itself.  The highest of these organizations was a body called A-40 composed of some experts from the Vietnamese party’s Central Committee.  They maintained liaison between the Cambodian and Vietnamese parties and offered advice on all key issues.  Another group, called B-68, was headed by Tran Xuan Bach, a member of Vietnamese Party secretariat and consisted of midlevel Vietnamese experts attached to various Cambodian ministries and participating in day-to-day decision making.  A third group of advisers, A-50, consisted of experts who worked with provincial administration.

In rural areas, civilian advisers from Vietnamese “sister” provinces worked in Khmer provincial offices and services.  Below the provincial level the advisory work was left to special teams from the Vietnamese army commanded by captains.

In the years since its invasion and occupation of Cambodia the Vietnamese have refined their justifications for an Indochinese alliance and raised it to the level of some immutable natural law—a law dictated by geography and history.  “For centuries,” General Le Duc Anh wrote in a major article, “the three-countries [Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam] shared the same fate as victims of aggression by the Chinese feudalistic forces, imperialism, and international reactionary forces.” Dividing one country from another, using one as a springboard from which to annex another, and then annexing all three countries “became the law for all wars of aggression by outside forces against the Indochinese peninsula.” Consequently, Anh argued, building a “strategic and combat alliance among the three Indochinese countries constitutes the law of survival and development for each individual country and the three countries as well.”

[…]  “If Phnom Penh falls, Saigon falls.  If we have to fight and die, we do it here, not in Vietnam.” This was the way Vietnamese officers explained the reason for their presence in Cambodia.

[…]  Thenceforward such gatherings became regular biannual affairs to present the latest Hanoi position as that of the whole Indochinese grouping. By associating Laos and Cambodia with its policy position, Hanoi only formalized its leadership role vis-à-vis those countries but sought to boost the legitimacy of its client regime in Phnom Penh and to convey a sense of irreversibility to the newly formed alliance.

[…]

What Hanoi sought was not only the security of a politically bloc, but the creation of an economically integrated unit in which to achieve “gradual implementation of labor distribution, ensuring an effective use of labor and land potentials of the three countries.” With its 6 million hectares of cultivated land and population of 60 million (1985), Vietnam clearly saw potential in sparsely populated Cambodia (7 million population) with its 1.5 million hectares of cultivated land and enormous fishing grounds.

Pursuing a policy begun since the signing of the Lao-Vietnamese treaty of 1977, all the Lao and Cambodian provinces were coupled with sister provinces in Vietnam.  Vietnamese advisers, technical experts, and doctors from the provinces were dispatched to sister provinces in Laos and Cambodia to help in small projects and to build a special Indochinese bond.

[…]  Whether it was Hanoi’s deliberate policy to settle Vietnamese in Cambodia, as its opponents charged, or whether it was just the continuation of the historical pattern of spontaneous movement of the Vietnamese to less populated areas, the result could only be strengthening of the Vietnamese hold over the country.  According to the estimate of a leading Western demographer, by 1985 more than one hundred and seventy-five thousand Vietnamese civilians—including former residents, new landless immigrants, traders, and discharged soldiers—had settled in Cambodia.  Other estimates were as high as six hundred thousand.
. . . . .

The problem is us—our leadership, our reactions, our policy—and the Vietnamese political aggression and policies, not the Vietnamese people.  If we really care about Cambodia, focus on EDUCATION.  Think Singapore.  If we care about Cambodia, get Vietnamese-military owned Viettel/Metfone out of Cambodia by not using its services.

-  Theary C. Seng, Phnom Penh, 17 June 2011



20 comments:

Anonymous said...

Theary Seng, you seem incapable of producing your own analysis, as all you seem to be doing is using other peoples work and attaching your photos and name to it. And throwing dirt at other people via KI Media.

Anonymous said...

1:37PM! at lease you may get some education from it!

Anonymous said...

2:21, apparently this is how you got what you think is education. But education means using your own head, not plagiarizing other people.

Anonymous said...

2:48PM!Educatio using your head to reconize, leurn, and copy!Than after education you use your head to organize, experiment, and add or creat new thing!

Most of the time you need not to try new thing in real live! lot of old application is verry usefull and not too dangerouse to try!

Anonymous said...

2:48! ever you go to school! don't used to copy all the knowledge in primary school and hight school too? Or you jump to thinking like Ph. D.?

Anonymous said...

I know that in Cambodian schools education is top down, students are encouraged to just accept the supposed wisdom of their teachers without question.

This is part of the problem, not the solution. Real education is learning to analyse, to question, to challenge. This is the basis of innovation and learning.

Anonymous said...

3:24, I agree that Theary Seng's level of education is equivalent to primary school and therefore it is appropriate for her to copy people who are smarter than her, which is just about anyone. What I am opposed to is just that Theary Seng's learning attempt are imposed on the entire readership of KI Media. Imagine the content of all Cambodian pupils' notebooks posted on KI Media. It would be impossible to find any piece of useful information or news. Its getting difficult already.

Can anyone point me to a source of information about Cambodia that is not contaminated with spam? I used to like KI Media but with all the spam it is now becoming useless.

Anonymous said...

People, it's calling READING EXCERPTS from a well-known history book.

Anonymous said...

haha, but you keep coming back!

Anonymous said...

Thank you so much Theary for taking the time to educate us through relevant excerpts from:

Brother Enemy— The War after the War: A History of Indochina Since the Fall of Saigon (New York, 1986) by Nayan Chanda.

Your analysis is deep and may serve as the backbone of future academic publications.

Anonymous said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
Anonymous said...

4:25PM,
Can you please stop writing spams?

Anonymous said...

To all the evil CPP HunSin Vietcong supporters above.

Do land grabbing, illegal eviction, torture and rape, cruelty, lawlessness, human rights abuse, unfair treament of workers, no fair wage etc.. ever bother you?

Vietnam vietcong CPP are aggressor and terrorist in Lao, Khmer Krom, Burma, and Cambodia.

Anonymous said...

Yes,indeed the Indochina will have
war forever because Thai and Vietnam
are greedy.Cambodia is the victim.
Cambodia must help himself.Be united,
Khmer will be strong.if Khmer is
divided,he'll be lost forever like
Champa and Khmer Krom.
May all Gods bless Cambodia and
Cambodians.Khmer love Khmer,Khmer
survive.Dare to die for their lovely
Cambodia,they survive on this planet.

Anonymous said...

to all the motherfuckers that bad mouth about Theary Seng, she copy and give the credit to the author.
unlike the motherfucking Shitnamese took controled of Kampuchea Krom and still continued to do harm to Cambodia and her people.what an Ugly Heart Parasites
you are Shitnamese.

Anonymous said...

SHE'S OUT OF MY LEAGUE.

I’m a six; she’s a ten

I’m steady; she likes trends

I’m classic; she’s fashioned

I drive Corolla; she drives Mercedes Benz

She’s out of my league.

I like Kpop; she likes Hip Hop

I like full lens; she likes it cropped

She’s tagged with LV; I’m labeled with just a flip-flop

I’m here; she’s living at the top

She’s out of my league.

I use N ‘ចុចពិល’; she uses iPhone4

She lives in a luxurious mansion; I rent a tiny room and lie on the floor

I use old PC; she owns MacBook Pro with the latest iCore

She eats Pizza; I check my wallet to see if I can survive more

She’s out of my league

Born with a silver spoon in her mouth, she’s so high high

Even she needs the whole world, her papa can’t deny

Siem Reap is too great for me, while LA, HK… to which she always flies.

What a cruel world! — the earth vs. the sky.

O! Girl!

You’re undeniably out of my league.

Anonymous said...

Racist bitch. Chinese control 90 percent of Cambodian economy and use Sino-Khmers as Theary Seng and Sam Rainsy to push their line. Sam Rainsy works for Chinese money, he is an ethnic Chinese not Cambodian.

Anonymous said...

Yeah, right, kick Yuons out and Chinese will finish off Khmers like Pol Pot planned. Kill of Khmers and pass land to Chinese. Too bad Vietnam intertwined many of those who were saved should be sent to Tuol Sleng, now saved by Yuons and brought to democratic US they start their racist propaganda. I wish you be kicked out off US, you dont deserve democracy - you deserve Pol Pot.

Anonymous said...

Thank you, theary.

Justin

Anonymous said...

4:37, I enjoyed reading your comment immensely.