Accuracy is of the essence for new Khmer Rouge dictionary Henri Locard October 1, 2008

Similar documents
The Invasion of Cambodia and Laos during the Vietnam War

Government Today Democracy under a Constitutional Monarchy Prime Minister Hun Sen. Ancient Cambodian History 5/14/14. Located on Indochinese Peninsula

Kingdom of Cambodia Nation Religion King. Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

Khmer Rouge Leaders Case

22 April 2007 REVIEW OF GENOCIDE EDUCATION PROJECT. Documentation Center of Cambodia. Khamboly Dy, A History of Democratic Kampuchea ( )

Cambodians in the Bronx and Amherst

Did the Khmer Rouge get away with committing genocide?

Norwegian Delegation to Democratic Kampuchea 1978

THE COLD WAR IN SOUTH EAST ASIA,

Historical Security Council of 1978

ASIL Insight October 13, 2010 Volume 14, Issue 31 Print Version

FRCSE machinist defies death, finds new home in America

Vietnam, Cambodia, Laos Annotation

Summary of Judgement

1969 U.S. troops begin their withdrawal from Vietnam

Cambodia. Suppression of Freedom of Expression, Association, and Assembly

Southeast Asia: Violence, Economic Growth, and Democratization. April 9, 2015

Repatriation to Cambodia. W. Courtland Robinson, PhD Johns Hopkins University Center for Refugee and Disaster Studies

KRT TRIAL MONITOR Case 002/02 Issue 40 Hearings on Evidence Week January 2016

KRT TRIAL MONITOR Case 002 Issue No. 67 Hearing on Evidence Week July 2013

Ended French rule in Indo-China

CASE STUDY #1 CAMBODIA. 'To spare you is no profit; to destroy you is no loss.'

Preparing a Multimedia Presentation: The Legacy of Imperialism and the Impact of the Cold War

THE RESISTANCE TO THE KHMER ROUGE GENOCIDE: ARMS AND EMOTION. Youk Chhang. Presented in Collaboration with:

Pol Pot and His Gang of Murderers, the Khmer Rouge

Literature and Genocide in Cambodia

Request for a subvention to the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

Interview With Pol Pot, Brother Number One of the Khmer Rouge Regimepart

National Nightmare Begins: Origins of Vietnam War

KRT TRIAL MONITOR Case 002 Issue No. 64 Hearing on Evidence Week June 2013

Witness for Khieu Samphan Speaks, after Schanberg Testimony Ends

UNITED NATIONS. General Assembly Security Council. Distr. GENERAL. A/53/850 S/1999/ March 1999 ORIGINAL: ENGLISH

mcämnðlékßrkm<úca Joint Trials and the ECCC by Marwan Sehwail Summer 2008 DC-Cam Legal Associate Northwestern University School of Law 2010

Elizabeth Becker Cambodia and Khmer Rouge Collection,

The Vietnam War Vietnamization and Peace with Honor

UNIT Y222 THE COLD WAR IN ASIA

The Cold War. Chapter 30

The S-21 Project. Context. Publié sur le site : Violence de masse et Résistance (

to Switzerland ព រ ត ត ប ព ត រ ត ម ន Year: 7 No. 75 King and Queen-Mother Return Home from China

Global History and Geography Content-Specific Rubric Document-Based Question June 2011

INTRODUCTION. Major countries involved

Ch 29-1 The War Develops

The CPS approach: dealing with the past

The Vietnam War,

Survey of Cambodian Public Opinion. International Republican Institute November 30 December 25, 2011

Jim Grossmann CARE Cambodia :

Chapter 29 Section 4 The War s End and Impact

Anatomy of an Interrogation: The Torture of Comrade Ya at S-21

Chapter 17 Lesson 1: Two Superpowers Face Off. Essential Question: Why did tension between the U.S. and the U.S.S.R increase after WWII?

KRT TRIAL MONITOR Case 002 Issue No. 1 Initial Hearing June 2011

Press Release by Victims Support Section WIDE RANGING SUPPORT FOR REPARATION

Cambodia JANUARY 2017

December 17, 1960 Memorandum of Chairman Mao's Conversation with Sihanouk on 17 December 1960

The Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia: Assessing their Contribution to International Criminal Law

A HISTORY OF THE VIETNAM WAR

The Cold War Finally Thaws Out. Korean War ( ) Vietnam War ( ) Afghan War ( )

Classicide in Communist China

The Khmer Institute of Democracy. Fair Trial Principles

CAMBODIA Collaborating in Efforts to Advance Criminal Justice and the Rule of Law

How should the various nations of the world respond to the atrocities committed by other nations such as genocide and human rights violations?

Ho Declares Independence of Vietnam British Forces Land in Saigon, Return Authority to French First American Dies in Vietnam

Post Conflict Peace Building: A Cambodian Case Study

The Cambodian genocide and the culture of impunity. Bruce Leimsidor, Università Ca Foscari

The Vietnam War

agrarian communism of the Khmer Rouge and the lack of responsibility by the United States.

GENOCIDE. WHO ARE THE SENIOR KHMER ROUGE LEADERS TO BE JUDGED? The Importance of Case 002

The Establishment of the National Language in 20th Century Cambodia: Debates on Orthography and Coinage. SASAGAWA Hideo, Associate Professor, APS

Ch 29-4 The War Ends

On the Record: Civil Society and the Tribunal in Cambodia. Issue 2: July 17, The Case for Prosecution

THE COLD WAR Part Two Teachers Notes by Paul Latham

Open the following documents from my website. Chinese Nationalism Notes

Interview with Nguyen KhacVien

CCHR Briefing Note October 2013 Severance of Proceedings in Case 002 at the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

Cambodia country profile 4 September 2015

ANSWER KEY..REVIEW FOR Friday s QUIZ #15 Chapter: 29 -Vietnam

The Vietnam War

Who Have Killed Khmer People until today?

World History (Survey) Restructuring the Postwar World, 1945 Present

National Self-Determination

The Roots of the Cold War

CHAPTER 34 - EAST ASIA: THE RECENT DECADES

Cold War in Asia,

Topic Page: Khmer Rouge

Challenges in the Quest for Justice in Cambodia. Rudina Jasini. 8 June 2010

OBJECTIVES. Describe and evaluate the events that led to the war between North Vietnam and South Vietnam.

THE LONG TERM VIEW. Thugs Who Have Run Governments in the Last Century MASSACHUSETTS SCHOOL OF LAW. at Andover $4.95

1. America slowly involves itself in the war in Vietnam as it seeks to halt the spread of communism.

The Analytical Errors of the Kampuchean Communist Party

Conflict in Indochina

Request for a subvention to the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia

Medicine in Cambodia during the Pol Pot Regime ( )

One element involved soliciting articles from leaders of civil society. These form the basis for the previous six issues of this series.

Angka Wanted To Eat Their Own Children -Last witness of the first appeal hearings

The History of Cambodia from 1 st Century to 20 th Century [18] Who created Kampuchea People s Revolutionary Party?

VIETNAM WAR

Nixon & Vietnam -Peace with Honor

Our objective is to evaluate the U.S. Policy of containment in response to the causes and effects of the Korean and Vietnam Wars.

The Cambodian Genocide

Teaching Genocide in Cambodia: Challenges, Analyses, and Recommendations

KRT TRIAL MONITOR Case 002 Issue No. 57 Hearing on Evidence Week April 2013

Transcription:

Accuracy is of the essence for new Khmer Rouge dictionary Henri Locard October 1, 2008 Author Solomon Kane has completed the first historical dictionary of the KR, but French historian Henri Locard argues that the ambitious work is limited by multiple inaccuracies One must agree with David Chand-ler, author of the foreword for Solomon Kane's Dictionnaire des Khmers Rouges (Dictionary of the Khmer Rouge), who calls the book "an extraordinary work". It is amazing to see how a single man could amass such an amount of data covering such a dense subject. Unfortunately, it seems to fall somewhat short of his self-proclaimed ambition of "a tool for completely deciphering the tragedy that... has cost the lives of almost two million Cambodians". Chandler provides a highly complimentary foreword that skillfully explains the historical significance of the Democratic Kampuchea regime. It is a pity, however, that the dean of Cambodian historical studies gave wrong dates for both Cambodia's independence and America's massive bombings (although in the later case, I am quite sure this must be a mistranslation from Chandler's English). I am not certain that this kind of format - a dictionary - is best suited to the subject, apart from the biographical entries that constitute the most solid backbone of the book. Although well-documented entries are numerous, there are far too many that are inaccurate. Also, the author does not tell us much about his sources, which makes it very difficult for the reader to check the information. Role of US dubious When describing the fateful American bombings (p.56), the author writes: "According to sources [which sources?], the campaign would have made 300,000 to 1,000,000 victims among the guerrillas and the civilians." One reliable source, indeed quoted but not used by Kane, is the demographer Marek Sliwinski's Le Génocide Khmer Rouge (The Khmer Rouge Genocide). It is reckoned in this book that the civil war made a total of some 310,000 victims, or about half of the number most often quoted. Among those, some 17.1 percent were killed by bombardments, or about 53,000 people, both civilians and military. True, unexploded ordinances continue to this day to be very lethal for the Cambodian population, as Kane rightly points out. But can he also explain why, when the American bombings ceased in August 1973, the civilian population continued nevertheless to take refuge in all the cities? Were they not just running away from the war but also from the repression and the collectivisation inflicted by the revolutionaries? 1

Kane repeats the accusation that the Americans were involved in the March 18, 1970, socalled "coup", although there is no evidence of this in American archives. Kane accuses Lon Nol of having thrown overboard the policy of neutrality during the Cold War. But so had Prince Sihanouk when he tacitly allowed the Vietminh to use large pockets of the country as sanctuaries in the second Indochinese War. And that was precisely why he was voted out of office by the National Assembly, under military pressure. The same approach is further developed in the entry concerning the [current] trials of the KR leaders (p.307-10). Americans are accused of having made sure that only the 1975-79 period was involved. But, if this was true, certainly some communist countries were not keen to see their involvement in the coming to power of the KR being further researched either. Kane fails to quote the true reason why the US delayed for so long to help finance the KR tribunal: the fear it would not meet international standards, and because of the corruption prevailing in Cambodia. Facts and figures Kane is speculative in his approach to figures: he tends to inflate them. What is the source of the 60-percent death toll of the Chinese? We are told they were 400,000 in 1975 and 175,000 in 1979. It is the same with the Chams: we are given figures that could lead the reader to believe that as many as 60 percent of the Chams died under DK, while the figure is closer to 40 percent, which is horrendous enough (p.69). Among other inflated figures, we have the entry on the mass graves (charniers, p.72-75) and an uncritical repetition of extravagant figures: some contained 100,000 to 150,000 victims! The same implausible number is given for pits in Kampong Chhnang (p.214), and Kampong Thom (p.216). Among other inaccuracies, we can quote: What evidence has the author that the people starved partly because of "bad harvests" (p.133); the real reason was of course that rice was stolen by Angkar and that meals were collectivised. Several witnesses have told me harvests were all good under the regime. Keo Meas cannot have "participated" in the July 1954 negotiations in Geneva, as the Khmer Communist groups were not admitted (p.191) to the negotiation process. Kambuja was not "an Anglophone magazine" (p.198). It was written in French - I contributed to it in the sixties - but an English edition was also produced, translated from the French. Khieu Samphan could not have been "the first member of the CPK to have been received by Mao Tse-tung" in 1974, and in claiming this, the author shows he is quite ignorant of the etiquette amongst communist parties or countries. Pol Pot had already been received by Mao twice before, in 1965 and in 1970 (p.201). Where did the author see that Khieu Thirith got a degree in English literature, "after an exhaustive study of the works of William Shakespeare" (p.204)? She did not join the maquis in 1968, but in 1965 (p.205). How could Ieng Sary have "accepted a post as 2

history teacher at Sisowath High School" (p.210), given he was never offered such a post? Nuon Chea did not study at Chulalongkorn University in Bangkok, but Thammassat (p.227). Kane rightly reports that Nuon Chea was trained for two years in the North Vienamese maquis, from 1952 to 1954, but fails to mention that he became a friend of Le Duan, the successor of Ho Chi Minh. This saved him from being tried in the July 1979 "genocidal" trial in Phnom Penh of the "Pol Pot-Ieng Sary clique". In the entry on genocide (p.144-45), Kane overlooks a vital piece of information: it was the Vietnamese who first stuck that label to the DK regime to justify their intervention. No other communist regime has had the honour to be called "genocidal" since - not even North Korea, which must have exterminated as many of its citizens as DK, although over a much longer period, no doubt. Too many entries are broad approximations. For instance, when describing the sahakor, the KR basic administrative division, the author gives the usual translation of "cooperative", instead of the more accurate "people's commune", as they were called in China. To support the allegation, Kane claims that the people had a free choice in the creation of those collectives during the civil war, and collectives were "supported by the rural communities" (p.111). So, once again, why did the population, including many peasants, flee those "liberated" zones in the hundreds of thousands after August 1973 when the American bombing had ceased? There is no evidence that collectivisation was popular with any layer of the society at any time. The entry on the Montagnards contains a number of useful and accurate pieces of information. But in this case the author is somewhat misinformed. The villages of the ethnic minorities were not brutally "destroyed" to make room for the Labansiek State Rubber Plantation in the early sixties, but dismantled and transported by the company trucks, to be moved further on, as there was then plenty of available space on the rich volcanic plateau. The minorities were given the choice either to be salaried on the plantation, to start their own rubber plantation with saplings given by the State company, or move further if they wished to continue with their traditional way of life. One curious assertion is that Pol Pot based his repression of Buddhism on article 20 of the constitution. Does he really believe that the ultimate leader of the revolutionary regime cared in the least about the legality or illegality of his criminal decisions (p.59)? The entry on Maoism misses much vital information, speaking mainly about the so-called Cultural Revolution, overlooking the Great Leap Forward that directly inspired Pol- Potism. We have here mainly the fanciful image of the doctrine entertained by some French "intellectuals" in the sixties and early seventies that was aeons from the reality in China at the time, and later DK (p.237-38). 3

Useful information The Mey Man entry contains plenty of useful information about that Marxist intellectual of the early days of the revolutionary movement, who refused to follow the party along its violent ways. In later life, he set up the UN Human Rights office in Pailin which is curiously called une officine (a pejorative word in French for an agency or something of the sort). What is a pity is that Kane failed to mention that this was the only "intellectual" connected with the KR movement who, shortly before his death from cancer, publicly expressed his profound regret to have seen his career associated with that criminal movement. He spent the last months of his life translating the remarkable history of Cambodia written by the late Nhiek Tioulong (The Khmer Chronicles) from French into Khmer. Kane states that Pol Pot escaped four assassination attempts, without mentioning that we are not at all certain if those were real or imagined (p.323). Philip Short believes they were figments of Angkar's imagination. At least the question should be raised. In the entry about "collectivist ideology" (p.99), Kane alludes to the 1869 Basle Conference of the Socialist International, but manages not to mention either the forced collectivisation under Stalin, Mao or Ho Chi Minh, which all served as models for Pol Pot. Sometimes, the book is a directory of the many minor KR military leaders, in particular in the eighties and the nineties, that is, much after the rout of the regime. But Kane has neither identified their real names, nor given dates during which they operated. A single entry around the KR military leaders in those post-dk decades might have regrouped information of use for history. Quantity, not quality All this being said, there are numerous very useful and well-informed entries. And it is a remarkable achievement for a single individual to have accumulated so much data, with such dedication over more than a decade. For instance the entry on the refugee camps in both Vietnam and Thailand (p.64-66) is well-informed, as is the one on animism (p.35). We could quote the "Cambodian Master Performers Program", thanks to which the first Cambodian opera by Him Sophea was first performed in Lowell, Massachusetts, and will soon be performed in Cambodia itself. The author is indeed a great expert in military art. We can quote, for instance, the entry on Chan Chakrey, purged in August 1976, the description of his rivalry with Kae Pauk, and the informative entry on Chou Chet (p.92-93). And so are the entries on the Vietnamese invasion (p.170-72) and the military aspects of January 7, 1979 (p.175-76). One apposite reference is the entry on Hate Day (p.176) instituted by the PRK regime; it was ironically first celebrated precisely in 1984 - a reference to George Orwell, whose description of the totalitarian State was prophetic in the case of DK, as it was modelled on the Stalinist regime (p.176-77). Clever too is the brief description of justice under DK, in which "slogans are a substitute for a civil code" (p.177), and one can add, a criminal code as well. 4

Kane is absolutely right when he denounces the myth that Buddhist monks were widely targeted by the KR (p.59). Quite rightly, Kane insists, too, that industry played a significant part in DK's economy (p.167). Indeed, Solomon Kane has accumulated an impressive amount of information on the lethal regime. But writing a dictionary on the KR must be well beyond the reach of any single individual. He would have been well-advised to have formed a team of both international analysts and Cambodian survivors, in order to produce a fully reliable compendium of KR lore that would be of use to the coming generations. 5