The Editor,
Christine Chaumeau's article [PP Post, Nov 21-Dec 4] clearly shows the quagmire
in which the French (in this instance) have allowed themselves to be sucked. The
corruption of the gendarmerie force is well-known: I was told by a recruit how much
you had to pay to take the classes "supervised" by the French, and how
much to pass the exams. After which you had to pay some more to obtain a useful assignment,
i.e. one where you could recoup your losses (hundreds of dollars)... I am not talking
of salaries, but of "roadblocks" and the like. Needless to say, the French
Embassy were aware of this and other facts.
However, there are two points of history that I would like to nuance slightly. First,
the letter 'A' did not only designate the gangs involved in intimidation and murder
at the time of the elections. "A 3" was in the late 80s the name of the
elite Interior Ministry forces involved in the fight against the Khmer Rouge and
their allies, and more successful at it according to my "informants" than
most regular army units. Second, the use of vehicles donated by aid agencies (or
latterly, bilaterals) for various unofficial purposes, personal or commercial, is
a very old problem (and one not restricted to Cambodia). Donors usually pretend not
to notice, but it was well-known, again in the late 80s, that the largest fleet of
taxis in Cambodia were the PEV (Programme Elargi de Vaccination) cars. I could adduce
many other examples.
I wonder whether Claudia Rizzi ["Royal watchers ponder 'what's the deal?'"]
believes that King Sihanouk and Queen Monique had more than two sons? Prince Sihamoni
is the older of two sons, the younger one being somewhat disaffected from the family...
and the world.
My main "bone of contention" however is with the "Cambodian Fear of
Vietnam" piece. Michael Vickery is exceptionally well able to defend himself,
so I will not address the ad hominem side of the article. I am certainly not averse
to wordplay, and the manipulation of the phrase "anti-Vietnamese chauvinism"
was bound to attract my attention. I know very few Cambodians, and this includes
CPP officials, who are not viscerally anti-Vietnamese. The distinction between "the
Vietnamese" and "those in power in Vietnam at a given time", obvious
to me, and presumably to the authors, is either incomprehensible or merely academic
to them, convinced as they are that all Vietnamese, contrary to them, are true patriots,
therefore agents of their government - just as some older Belgians (or Dutch or French
people, etc) might say that Germans, our (most recent) "historic enemy",
will always be invaders, are by essence a militarist, overly disciplined and humourless
lot: fortunately we are now all part of a not very united European "Union".
(Indeed formerly colonial countries are not the only ones ever to have been invaded
and occupied: most countries in Europe have known what it is like... the US hasn't,
which may go some way towards explaining their - apparent - naivete in international
matters. The category "Western countries", by the way, is hardly more pertinent
than that of "Third World"). The only Cambodian I have heard praise both
the Vietnamese intervention in 1978-79 and the generous behaviour of ethnic Vietnamese
people in pre-Khmer Rouge Cambodia - but not, of course, the machinations of the
Vietnamese party and its government - is Keng Vannsak whose credentials as a Cambodian
patriot, and knowledge of Khmer culture are I believe second to none. No doubt the
Vietnamese were not pure liberators of Cambodia... neither were the Americans pure
liberators of Europe in WW I and WW II. Strategic and economic concerns, as well
as more individual plundering, are always involved. The "reconstruction"
of Kuwait was also big business for US companies, and oil had been a major consideration
from the start. Governments and the businesses they represent are rarely if ever
driven by even the most rudimentary of morals. But we may nevertheless be glad that
it was to the interest of the US or Vietnam to crush their rivals, Nazism or the
Khmer Rouge.
The phrase "atrocities continuously perpetrated" by the Vietnamese is obviously
a combination of a wild hyperbole and a solecism: no doubt the authors mean "continually",
i.e. frequently. The idea that the name "Indochina" would be demeaning
to all but the Vietnamese is ludicrous: the problem with that word, in addition to
its colonial undertones, is that it implies that those countries, all of them, are
geographically and culturally defined as (solely) an intermediary or mixture between
India and China. As for the reason why others prefer the seemingly innocuous phrase
"South-East Asia", it may have something to do with another, neo-colonial
agenda.
The reference to Frantz Fanon, one of the greatest anti-colonialist thinkers to be
sure, is a trifle worrying, as his stress on land, to us Europeans at least, evokes
a Nazi ideology which is still alive, not only in Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia, but
also for instance in Flanders. The full phrase is "Blut und Boden", and
indeed many Cambodians, including some quite eminent ones, boast, or worry, that
there is something unique about their blood. The reference to Sartre is a bit arbitrary
(name-dropping?). It may well be that smaller cultures, including that of Cambodia,
are under increasing threat. But that threat comes I believe from one or two hegemonic
countries and their celluloid, sound-bite "culture", not from poor little
Vietnam.
Finally, it may interest the authors of the article to know that the "personalisation"
of the Khmer Rouge, in the form of the "Pol Pot-Ieng Sary genocidal clique"
(to which was sometimes added the name of Khieu Samphan, but never, intriguingly,
those of Ta Mok, Nuon Chea or Son Sen) was the result of a decision reached at the
highest levels of the immediate forerunner of the CPP, and therefore, possibly at
the instigation of their Vietnamese advisers.
I realise how hard it is for most people in Cambodia, and often even more so for
exiles, to admit that, however much the Vietnamese, the Thai, the Chinese, the American
government, and other imperialists large and small may have contributed to their
recent misery, it is they themselves, and their power-mad, factionalist, war-mongering,
dollar-hungry elites that have allowed this to happen. Again, I think I am in agreement
with that master of most educated Cambodians, Keng Vannsak.
It is hard to be a survivor of a genocide, as Primo Levi and others have shown: much
harder to be a survivor of what is primarily a self-inflicted carnage. So it is only
"natural" to project. I remember seeing at Site 2 a large notice which
proclaimed that the genocide was the work of the Vietnamese. This may be as convincing
(but certainly no more so) as saying that the Nazi genocides were the work of the
bankers, industrialists, church leaders and "democratic powers" who diversely
paved (in various currencies) the way of Nazism, of those who turned away ships full
of refugees (or incarcerated those dangerous Jewish and/or Red spies in their own
movingly "democratic" concentration camps).
- Philippe Hunt, Brussels.
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