The Khmer Rouge (Khmer: ខ្មែរក្រហម — “Khmer Krahom” in Khmer) was the name given to the followers of the Communist Party of Kampuchea, who were the ruling party in Cambodia from 1975 to 1979, led by Pol Pot, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary, Son Sen and Khieu Samphan. The regime led by the Khmer Rouge from 1975 to 1979 was known as the Democratic Kampuchea.
This organization is remembered primarily for its policy of social engineering, which resulted in genocide. Its attempts at agricultural reform led to widespread famine, while its insistence on absolute self-sufficiency, even in the supply of medicine, led to the deaths of thousands from treatable diseases (such as malaria). Brutal and arbitrary executions and torture carried out by its cadres against perceived subversive elements, or during purges of its own ranks between 1976 and 1978, are considered to have constituted a genocide.
The clandestine Communist Party of Kampuchea
itself constituted the secret leadership of the Khmer Rouge, as its
official name was known only to a few insiders: it called itself the Angkar (the organization)
and only announced officially its existence in 1977, almost two years
after the establishment of Democratic Kampuchea. After the fall of the
Khmer Rouge regime, the organization's remaining guerrilla forces
became known as the National Army of Democratic Kampuchea. In 1981 the party itself was dissolved, and substituted by the Party of Democratic Kampuchea.
Historical legacy
After taking power, the Khmer Rouge leadership renamed the country to Democratic Kampuchea. The Khmer Rouge subjected Cambodia to a radical social reform process that was aimed at creating a purely agrarian-based Communist society. The city-dwellers were deported to the countryside, where they were
combined with the local population and subjected to forced labor. About
2 million Cambodians
are estimated to have died in waves of murder, torture, and starvation,
aimed particularly at the educated and intellectual elite.
Losing power following a Vietnamese military intervention in December 1978, the Khmer Rouge maintained control in some regions and continued to fight on as guerillas. In 1998 their final stronghold, in Anlong Veng District, fell to the government.
Following their leader Pol Pot,
the Khmer Rouge imposed an extreme form of social engineering on
Cambodian society — a radical form of agrarian communism where the
whole population had to work in collective farms
or forced labor projects. In terms of the number of people killed as a
proportion of the population (est. 7.1 million people, as of 1975), it was the most lethal regime of the 20th century.
Flag of Democratic Kampuchea |
The Khmer Rouge wanted to eliminate anyone suspected of "involvement in free-market
activities". Suspected capitalists encompassed professionals and almost
everyone with an education, many urban dwellers, and people with
connections to foreign governments.
The Khmer Rouge believed parents were tainted with capitalism. Consequently, children were separated from parents and brainwashed to socialism as well as taught torture methods with animals. Children were a "dictatorial instrument of the party" and were given leadership in torture and executions.
One of their mottoes, in reference to the New People, was: "To keep you is no benefit. To destroy you is no loss." The ideology of the Khmer Rouge evolved over time. In the early days, it was an orthodox communist party and looked to the Vietnamese Communists for guidance.
It became more anti-intellectual when groups of students who had been studying in France returned to Cambodia. The students, including future party leader Pol Pot, had been heavily influenced by the example of the French Communist Party (PCF).
After 1960, the Khmer Rouge developed its own unique political ideas. Contrary to Marxist doctrine, the Khmer Rouge considered the farmers in the countryside to be the proletariat and the true representatives of the working class, a form of Maoism which brought them onto the Chinese side of the Sino-Soviet Split.
They started to incorporate Khmer nationalism into their ideology, as
well as anti-intellectualism by this time. This was evident in the
persecution of ethnic Chinese, Thais, Muslims, Christians (most of them Catholics), etc.
By the 1970s, the ideology of the Khmer Rouge combined its own ideas with the anti-colonialist
ideas of the PCF, which its leaders had acquired during their education
in French universities in the 1950s. The Khmer Rouge leaders were also
privately very resentful of the Vietnamese,
and were determined to establish a form of communism very different
from the Vietnamese model and also from other Communist countries,
including China.
After four years of rule, the Khmer Rouge regime was removed from power in 1979 as a result of an invasion by the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and was replaced by moderate, pro-Vietnamese Communists. It survived into the 1990s as a resistance movement operating in western Cambodia from bases in Thailand. In 1996, following a peace agreement, their leader Pol Pot formally dissolved the organization. Pol Pot died on 15 April 1998, having never been put on trial.
The Khmer Rouge is remembered mainly for the deaths of an estimated 1.5 million people or 1/5 of the country's total population (estimates range from 850,000 to 2.5 million) under its regime, through execution, torture, starvation and forced labor.
Because of the large number of deaths, and because ethnic groups and
religious minorities were targeted, the deaths during the rule of the Khmer Rouge are often considered a genocide as defined under the UN Convention of 1948.
Name history
The term "Khmer Rouge," French for "Red Khmer", was coined by Cambodian head of state Norodom Sihanouk and was later adopted by English speakers. It was used to refer to a succession of Communist parties in Cambodia which evolved into the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK) and later the Party of Democratic Kampuchea. The organization was also known as the Khmer Communist Party and the National Army of Democratic Kampuchea.
Origins
The Cambodian Left: the early history
The history of the communist movement in Cambodia can be divided into six phases: the emergence of the Indochinese Communist Party (ICP), whose members were almost exclusively Vietnamese, before World War II; the 10-year struggle for independence from the French, when a separate Cambodian communist party, the Kampuchean (or Khmer) People's Revolutionary Party
(KPRP), was established under Vietnamese auspices; the period following
the Second Party Congress of the KPRP in 1960, when Saloth Sar (Pol Pot
after 1976) and other future Khmer Rouge leaders gained control of its
apparatus; the revolutionary struggle from the initiation of the Khmer
Rouge insurgency in 1967–68 to the fall of the Lon Nol government in
April 1975; the Democratic Kampuchea regime, from April 1975 to January 1979; and the period following the Third Party Congress of the KPRP in January 1979, when Hanoi effectively assumed control over Cambodia's government and communist party.
In 1930 Ho Chi Minh founded the Vietnamese Communist Party
by unifying three smaller communist movements that had emerged in
northern, central and southern Vietnam during the late 1920s. The name
was changed almost immediately to the Indochinese Communist Party
(ICP), ostensibly to include revolutionaries from Cambodia and Laos.
Almost without exception, all the earliest party members were
Vietnamese. By the end of World War II, a handful of Cambodians had
joined its ranks, but their influence on the Indochinese communist
movement and on developments within Cambodia was negligible.
Viet Minh units occasionally made forays into Cambodian bases during their war against the French, and, in conjunction with the leftist government that ruled Thailand until 1947, the Viet Minh encouraged the formation of armed, left-wing Khmer Issarak bands. On April 17, 1950 (25 years to the day before the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh), the first nationwide congress of the Khmer Issarak groups convened, and the United Issarak Front was established.
Its leader was Son Ngoc Minh, and a third of its leadership consisted of members of the ICP. According to the historian David P. Chandler, the leftist Issarak groups, aided by the Viet Minh, occupied a sixth of Cambodia's territory by 1952; and, on the eve of the Geneva Conference, they controlled as much as one half of the country.[12]
In 1951 the ICP was reorganized into three national units — the Vietnam Workers' Party, the Lao Itsala,
and the Kampuchean (or Khmer) People's Revolutionary Party (KPRP).
According to a document issued after the reorganization, the Vietnam
Workers' Party would continue to "supervise" the smaller Laotian and
Cambodian movements. Most KPRP leaders and rank-and-file seem to have
been either Khmer Krom, or ethnic Vietnamese living in Cambodia. The party's appeal to indigenous Khmers appears to have been minimal.
According to Democratic Kampuchea's version of party history, the
Viet Minh's failure to negotiate a political role for the KPRP at the 1954 Geneva Conference
represented a betrayal of the Cambodian movement, which still
controlled large areas of the countryside and which commanded at least
5,000 armed men. Following the conference, about 1,000 members of the
KPRP, including Son Ngoc Minh, made a "Long March" into North Vietnam, where they remained in exile.
In late 1954, those who stayed in Cambodia founded a legal political
party, the Pracheachon Party, which participated in the 1955 and the
1958 National Assembly elections. In the September 1955 election, it
won about four percent of the vote but did not secure a seat in the
legislature.
Members of the Pracheachon were subject to constant harassment and
to arrests because the party remained outside Sihanouk's political
organization, Sangkum. Government attacks prevented it from
participating in the 1962 election and drove it underground. Sihanouk
habitually labeled local leftists the Khmer Rouge, a term that later
came to signify the party and the state headed by Pol Pot, Ieng Sary, Khieu Samphan, and their associates.
During the mid-1950s, KPRP factions, the "urban committee" (headed by Tou Samouth), and the "rural committee" (headed by Sieu Heng),
emerged. In very general terms, these groups espoused divergent
revolutionary lines. The prevalent "urban" line, endorsed by North
Vietnam, recognized that Sihanouk, by virtue of his success in winning
independence from the French, was a genuine national leader whose
neutralism and deep distrust of the United States made him a valuable asset in Hanoi's struggle to "liberate" South Vietnam.
Champions of this line hoped that the prince could be persuaded to distance himself from the right wing
and to adopt leftist policies. The other line, supported for the most
part by rural cadres who were familiar with the harsh realities of the
countryside, advocated an immediate struggle to overthrow the "feudalist" Sihanouk.
In 1959 Sieu Heng defected to the government and provided the
security forces with information that enabled them to destroy as much
as 90% of the party's rural apparatus. Although communist networks in
Phnom Penh and in other towns under Tou Samouth's jurisdiction fared
better, only a few hundred communists remained active in the country by
1960.
The Paris student group
During the 1950s, Khmer students in Paris
organized their own communist movement, which had little, if any,
connection to the hard-pressed party in their homeland. From their
ranks came the men and women who returned home and took command of the
party apparatus during the 1960s, led an effective insurgency against
Lon Nol from 1968 until 1975, and established the regime of Democratic
Kampuchea.
Pol Pot, who rose to the leadership of the communist movement in the 1960s, was born in 1928 (some sources say 1925) in Kampong Thum Province, northeast of Phnom Penh. He attended a technical high school in the capital and then went to Paris
in 1949 to study radio electronics (other sources say he attended a
school for printers and typesetters and also studied civil
engineering). Described by one source as a "determined, rather plodding
organizer," he failed to obtain a degree, but, according to the Jesuit priest, Father François Ponchaud, he acquired a taste for the classics of French literature as well as for the writings of Karl Marx.
Another member of the Paris student group was Ieng Sary, a Chinese-Khmer born in 1925 in South Vietnam. He attended the elite Lycée Sisowath in Phnom Penh before beginning courses in commerce and politics at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (more widely known as Sciences Po)
in France. Khieu Samphan, considered "one of the most brilliant
intellects of his generation," was born in 1931 and specialized in
economics and politics during his time in Paris. In talent he was rivaled by Hou Yuon, born in 1930, who was described
as being "of truly astounding physical and intellectual strength," and who studied economics and law. Son Sen, born in 1930, studied education and literature; Hu Nim, born in 1932, studied law.
These men were perhaps the most educated leaders in the history of
Asian communism. Two of them, Khieu Samphan and Hou Yuon, earned
doctorates from the University of Paris; Hu Nim obtained his degree from the University of Phnom Penh
in 1965. In retrospect, it seems unlikely that these talented members
of the elite, sent to France on government scholarships, could launch
the bloodiest and most radical revolution in modern Asian
history. Most came from landowner or civil servant families. Pol Pot
and Hou Yuon may have been related to the royal family. An older sister
of Pol Pot had been a concubine at the court of King Monivong.
Three of the Paris group forged a bond that survived years of
revolutionary struggle and intraparty strife, Pol Pot and Ieng Sary
married Khieu Ponnary and Khieu Thirith (also known as Ieng Thirith),
purportedly relatives of Khieu Samphan. These two well-educated women
also played a central role in the regime of Democratic Kampuchea.
The intellectual ferment of Paris must have been a dizzying
experience for young Khmers fresh from Phnom Penh or the provinces. A
number turned to orthodox Marxism-Leninism. At some time between 1949 and 1951, Pol Pot and Ieng Sary joined the French Communist Party, the most tightly disciplined and orthodox Marxist-Leninist of Western Europe's communist movements.
In 1951 the two men went to East Berlin
to participate in a youth festival. This experience is considered to
have been a turning point in their ideological development. Meeting
with Khmers who were fighting with the Viet Minh
(and whom they subsequently judged to be too subservient to the
Vietnamese), they became convinced that only a tightly disciplined
party organization and a readiness for armed struggle could achieve
revolution. They transformed the Khmer Students' Association (KSA), to which most of the 200 or so Khmer students in Paris belonged, into an organization for nationalist and leftist ideas.
Inside the KSA and its successor organizations was a secret
organization known as the Cercle Marxiste. The organization was
composed of cells of three to six members with most members knowing
nothing about the overall structure of the organization. In 1952 Pol
Pot, Hou Yuon, Ieng Sary, and other leftists gained notoriety by
sending an open letter to Sihanouk calling him the "strangler of infant
democracy." A year later, the French authorities closed down the KSA.
In 1956, however, Hou Yuon and Khieu Samphan helped to establish a new
group, the Khmer Students' Union. Inside, the group was still run by the Cercle Marxiste.
The doctoral dissertations written by Hou Yuon and Khieu Samphan
express basic themes that were later to become the cornerstones of the
policy adopted by Democratic Kampuchea. The central role of the
peasants in national development was espoused by Hou Yuon in his 1955
thesis, The Cambodian Peasants and Their Prospects for Modernization, which challenged the conventional view that urbanization and industrialization are necessary precursors of development.
The major argument in Khieu Samphan's 1959 thesis, Cambodia's Economy and Industrial Development,
was that the country had to become self-reliant and end its economic
dependency on the developed world. In its general contours, Khieu's
work reflected the influence of a branch of the "dependency theory" school, which blamed lack of development in the Third World on the economic domination of the industrialized nations
Path to power and reign
KPRP Second Congress
After returning to Cambodia in 1953, Pol Pot threw himself into
party work. At first he went to join with forces allied to the Viet
Minh operating in the rural areas of Kampong Cham Province
(Kompong Cham). After the end of the war, he moved to Phnom Penh under
Tou Samouth's "urban committee" where he became an important point of
contact between above-ground parties of the left and the underground
secret communist movement.
His comrades, Ieng Sary and Hou Yuon, became teachers at a new
private high school, the Lycée Kambuboth, which Hou Yuon helped to
establish. Khieu Samphan returned from Paris in 1959, taught as a
member of the law faculty of the University of Phnom Penh, and started
a left-wing, French-language publication, L'Observateur.
The paper soon acquired a reputation in Phnom Penh's small academic
circle. The following year, the government closed the paper, and
Sihanouk's police publicly humiliated Khieu by beating, undressing and
photographing him in public—as Shawcross notes, "not the sort of
humiliation that men forgive or forget."
Yet the experience did not prevent Khieu from advocating cooperation
with Sihanouk in order to promote a united front against United States
activities in South Vietnam. As mentioned, Khieu Samphan, Hou Yuon, and
Hu Nim were forced to "work through the system" by joining the Sangkum
and by accepting posts in the prince's government.
In late September, 1960, twenty-one leaders of the KPRP held a
secret congress in a vacant room of the Phnom Penh railroad station.
This pivotal event remains shrouded in mystery because its outcome has
become an object of contention (and considerable historical rewriting)
between pro-Vietnamese and anti-Vietnamese Khmer communist factions.
The question of cooperation with, or resistance to, Sihanouk was
thoroughly discussed. Tou Samouth, who advocated a policy of
cooperation, was elected general secretary of the KPRP that was renamed
the Workers' Party of Kampuchea (WPK). His ally, Nuon Chea
(also known as Long Reth), became deputy general secretary; however,
Pol Pot and Ieng Sary were named to the Political Bureau to occupy the
third and the fifth highest positions in the renamed party's hierarchy.
The name change is significant. By calling itself a workers' party, the
Cambodian movement claimed equal status with the Vietnam Workers' Party. The pro-Vietnamese regime of the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK) implied in the 1980s that the September 1960 meeting was nothing more than the second congress of the KPRP.
On July 20, 1962, Tou Samouth was murdered by the Cambodian
government. In February 1963, at the WPK's second congress, Pol Pot was
chosen to succeed Tou Samouth as the party's general secretary. Tou's
allies, Nuon Chea and Keo Meas, were removed from the Central Committee and replaced by Son Sen and Vorn Vet.
From then on, Pol Pot and loyal comrades from his Paris student days
controlled the party center, edging out older veterans whom they
considered excessively pro-Vietnamese.
In July 1963, Pol Pot and most of the central committee left Phnom Penh to establish an insurgent base in Ratanakiri
Province in the northeast. Pol Pot had shortly before been put on a
list of 34 leftists who were summoned by Sihanouk to join the
government and sign statements saying Sihanouk was the only possible
leader for the country. Pol Pot and Chou Chet were the only people on
the list who escaped. All the others agreed to cooperate with the
government and were afterward under 24-hour watch by the police.
From enemy to ally: Sihanouk and the GRUNK
The region Pol Pot and the others moved to was inhabited by tribal minorities, the Khmer Loeu, whose rough treatment (including resettlement and forced assimilation)
at the hands of the central government made them willing recruits for a
guerrilla struggle. In 1965, Pol Pot made a visit of several months to
North Vietnam and China.
He received some training in China, which had enhanced his prestige
when he returned to the WPK's liberated areas. Despite friendly
relations between Norodom Sihanouk
and the Chinese, the latter kept Pol Pot's visit a secret from
Sihanouk. In September 1966, the party changed its name to the
Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK).
The change in the name of the party was a closely guarded secret.
Lower ranking members of the party and even the Vietnamese were not
told of it and neither was the membership until many years later. The
party leadership endorsed armed struggle against the government, then
led by Sihanouk. In 1967, several small-scale attempts at insurgency
were made by the CPK but they had little success.
In 1968, the Khmer Rouge forces launched a national insurgency across Cambodia (see also Cambodian Civil War).
Though North Vietnam had not been informed of the decision, its forces
provided shelter and weapons to the Khmer Rouge after the insurgency
started. Vietnamese support for the insurgency made it impossible for
the Cambodian military to effectively counter it. For the next two
years the insurgency grew as Sihanouk did very little to stop it. As
the insurgency grew stronger, the party finally openly declared itself
to be the Communist Party of Kampuchea (CPK).
The political appeal of the Khmer Rouge was increased as a result of the situation created by the removal of Sihanouk as head of state in 1970. Premier Lon Nol, with the support of the National Assembly, deposed Sihanouk. Sihanouk, in exile in Beijing,
made an alliance with the Khmer Rouge and became the nominal head of a
Khmer Rouge-dominated government-in-exile (known by its
French acronym,
GRUNK) backed by the People's Republic of China.
Sihanouk's popular support in rural Cambodia allowed the Khmer Rouge
to extend its power and influence to the point that by 1973 it
exercised de facto control over the majority of Cambodian
territory, although only a minority of its population. Many people in
Cambodia who helped the Khmer Rouge against the Lon Nol government
thought they were fighting for the restoration of Sihanouk.
The relation between the massive carpet bombing of Cambodia by the
United States and the growth of the Khmer Rouge, in terms of
recruitment and popular support, has been a matter of interest to
historians. In 1984 Craig Etcheson of the Documentation Center of Cambodia
argued that it is "untenable" to assert that the Khmer Rouge would not
have won but for U.S. intervention and that while the bombing did help
Khmer Rouge recruitment, they "would have won anyway."
Conversely, some historians have cited the U.S. intervention and
bombing campaign (spanning 1965–1973) as a significant factor leading
to increased support of the Khmer Rouge among the Cambodian peasantry.
Historian Ben Kiernan
and Taylor Owen have used a combination of sophisticated satellite
mapping, recently unclassified data about the extent of bombing
activities, and peasant testimony, to argue that there was a
correlation between villages targeted by U.S. bombing and recruitment
of peasants by the Khmer Rouge.
In his 1996 study of Pol Pot's rise to power, Kiernan argued that
foreign intervention "was probably the most significant factor in Pol
Pot's rise."
By 1975, with the Lon Nol government running out of ammunition, it
was clear that it was only a matter of time before the government would
collapse. On April 17, 1975 the Khmer Rouge captured Phnom Penh.