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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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Until 1970, the government of Cambodia was led by Prince Sihanouk, a former king who<br />

had stepped down from the throne to become prime minister. Despite his many<br />

limitations, Sihanouk was then, and remains today, the most viable symbol of the national<br />

unity and hope for sovereignty of Cambodia. Under Sihanouk, Cambodia had maintained<br />

a measure of stability and had above all managed to avoid being completely engulfed by<br />

the swirling maelstrom of the wars in Laos and in Vietnam. But during 1969, Nixon and<br />

Kissinger had ordered a secret bombing campaign against North Vietnamese troop<br />

concentrations on Cambodian territory under the code name of "Menu." This bombing<br />

would have been a real and substantive grounds for the impeachment of Nixon, and it did<br />

constitute the fourth proposed article of impeachment against Nixon submitted to the<br />

House Judiciary Committee on July 30, 1974. But after three articles of impeachment<br />

having to do with the Watergate break-ins and subsequent coverup were approved by the<br />

committee, the most important article, the one on genocide in Cambodia, was defeated by<br />

a vote of 26 to 12.<br />

Cambodia was dragged into the Indo-China war by the US-sponsored coup d'etat in<br />

Phnom Penh on March, 1970, which ousted Sihanouk in favor of Marshal Lon Nol of the<br />

Cambodian army, whose regime was never able to achieve even a modicum of stability.<br />

Shortly thereafter, at the end of April, 1970, Nixon and Kissinger launched a large-scale<br />

US military invasion of Cambodia, citing the use of Cambodian territory by the North<br />

Vietnamese armed forces for their "Ho Chi Minh trail" supply line to sustain their forces<br />

deployed in South Vietnam. <strong>The</strong> "parrot's beak" area of Cambodia, which extended deep<br />

into South Vietnam, was occupied.<br />

Prince Sihanouk, who described himself as a neutralist, established himself in Beijing<br />

after the seizure of power by Lon Nol. In May of 1970 he became the titular leader and<br />

head of state of a Cambodian government in exile, the Gouvernement Royal d'Union<br />

Nationale du Kampuchea, or GRUNK. <strong>The</strong> GRUNK was in essence a united front<br />

between Sihanouk and the Khmer Rouge, with the latter exercising most of the real<br />

power and commanding the armed forces and secret police. Sihanouk was merely a<br />

figurehead, and he knew it. He told Italian journalist Oriana Fallaci in 1973 that when<br />

"they [the Khmer Rouge] no longer need me, they will spit me out like a cherry pit."<br />

During these years, the Cambodian Communist party or Khmer Rouge, which had<br />

launched a small guerilla insurrection during 1968, was a negligeable military factor in<br />

Cambodia, fielding only a very few thousand guerilla fighters. One of its leaders was<br />

Saloth Sar, who had studied in Paris, and who had then sojourned at length in Red China<br />

at the height of the Red Guards' agitation. Saloth Sar was one of the most important<br />

leaders of the Khmer Rouge, and would later become infamous under his nom de guerre<br />

of Pol Pot. Decisive support for Pol Pot and for the later genocidal policies of the Khmer<br />

Rouge always came from Beijing, despite the attempts to misguided or lying<br />

commentators (like Henry Kissinger) to depict the Khmer Rouge as a creation of Hanoi.<br />

But in the years after 1970, the Khmer Rouge, who were determined immediately to<br />

transform Cambodia into a communist utopia beyond the dreams even of the wildest<br />

Maoist Red Guards, made rapid gains. <strong>The</strong> most important single ingedient in the rise of

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