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George Bush: The Unauthorized Biography - Get a Free Blog

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9] Kissinger always pretends that the Khmer Rouge were a tool of Hanoi, and in his<br />

Memoirs he spins out an absurd theory that the weakening of Zhou and the ascendancy of<br />

the Gang of Four was caused by Kissinger's own inability to keep bombing Cambodia. In<br />

reality, Beijing was backing its own allies, the Khmer Rouge, as is obvious from the<br />

account that Kissinger himself provides of his meeting with <strong>Bush</strong>'s friend Qiao in<br />

October, 1973. [fn 10]<br />

Starting in the second half of 1974, <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong> was heavily engaged on this Sino-<br />

Cambodian front, particularly in his contacts with his main negotiating partner, Qiao.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong> had the advantage that secret diplomacy carried on with the Red Chinese regime<br />

during those days was subject to very little public scrutiny. <strong>The</strong> summaries of <strong>Bush</strong>'s<br />

dealings with the Red Chinese now await the liberation of the files of the Foreign<br />

Ministry in Beijing or of the State Department in Washington, whichever comes first.<br />

<strong>Bush</strong>'s involvement on the Cambodian question has been established by later interviews<br />

with Prince Sihanouk's chef de cabinet, Pung Peng Cheng, as well as with French and US<br />

officials knowledgeable about <strong>Bush</strong>'s activities in Beijing during that time. What we have<br />

here is admittedly the tip of the iceberg, the merest hints of the monstrous iniquity yet to<br />

be unearthed. [fn 11]<br />

<strong>The</strong> Khmer Rouge launched a dry-season offensive against Phnom Penh in early 1974,<br />

which fells short of its goal. <strong>The</strong>y tried again the following year with a dry season<br />

offensive launched on January 1, 1975. Soon supplies to Phnom Penh were cut off, both<br />

on the land and along the Mekong River. Units of Lon Nol's forces fought the battle of<br />

the Phnom Penh perimeter through March. On April 1, 1975, President Lon Nol resigned<br />

and fled the country under the pressure of the US Embassy, who wanted him out as<br />

quickly as possible as part of the program to appease Beijing. [fn 12]<br />

When Lon Nol had left the country, Kissinger became concerned that the open conquest<br />

of Phnom Penh by the Khmer Rouge communist guerillas would create public relations<br />

and political problems for the shakey Ford regime in the United States. Kissinger<br />

accordingly became interested in having Prince Sihanouk, the titular head of the<br />

insurgent coalition of which the Khmer Rouge were the leading part, travel from Beijing<br />

to Phnom Penh so that the new government in Cambodia could be portrayed more as a<br />

neutralist-nationalist, and less as a frankly communist, regime. This turns out to be the<br />

episode of the Cambodian tragedy in which <strong>George</strong> <strong>Bush</strong>'s personal involvement is most<br />

readily demonstrated.<br />

Prince Sihanouk had repeatedly sought direct contacts with Kissinger. At the end of<br />

March, 1975 he tried again to open a channel to Washington, this time with the help of<br />

the French Embassy in Beijing. Sihanouk's chef de cabinet Pung Peng Chen requested a<br />

meeting with John Holdridge, <strong>Bush</strong>'s deputy chief of station. This meeting was held at<br />

the French Embassy. Pung told Holdridge that Prince Sihanouk had a favor to ask of<br />

President Ford:<br />

"in [ Sihanouk's ] old home in Phnom Penh were copies of the films of Cambodia he had made in<br />

the sixties when he had been an enthusiastic cineaste. <strong>The</strong>y constituted a unique cultural record of<br />

a Cambodia that was gone forever: would the Americans please rescue them? Kissinger ordered

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