Expert witness Stephen Morris gives his testimony before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia yesterday on the outskirts of Phnom Penh. ECCC |
Expert says Vietnam tried, failed to control Khmer Rouge
Phnom Penh Post | 19 October 2016
Expert witness Stephen Morris took
the stand yesterday to testify on the subject of Vietnam’s 1979 invasion of
Cambodia, arguing that Vietnam desired to control the communist movements in
Laos and Cambodia.
Morris, who was
granted unprecedented access to Soviet communication files with the Vietnamese
during the Khmer Rouge period, published a book on his research in 1999.
Khmer Rouge leaders
Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan are on trial for various crimes against humanity,
including genocide against the Vietnamese, as well as internal purging of their
own officers. Defence teams have long argued that the purges were a reaction to
an attempt by Vietnam to overthrow the Cambodian government, and Morris
testified that Vietnam did indeed have imperial ambitions towards Cambodia.
“The history of
Vietnam is a history of a long march south,” Morris said. “Large parts of what
is now southern Vietnam used to be part of Cambodia.”
Morris also
testified that the Vietnamese wanted to use people who were loyal to them to establish
communist parties in other countries. He claimed the attempt to found an
Indochinese communist federation was really an attempt by Vietnam to assert its
authority in the region.
“The Vietnamese
conceived of Indochina as a place where they would be dominant over Laos and
Cambodia,” he said.
One of the
documents from the Soviet archives was a 1973 communiqué from the Vietnamese to
the Soviet ambassador which said Vietnam’s goal was “to replace the reactionary
regimes in Saigon, Vientiane, and Phnom Penh with progressive ones”.
While the communist
Khmer Rouge regime did take control of Phnom Penh soon after, Morris said
Vietnam had less control than anticipated. “The Vietnamese Communist Party
tried to control the entire communist movement in Indochina, but lost control
of the movement in Cambodia,” Morris testified, adding “Vietnamese communists
never fully understood what was going on in Cambodia”.
Morris also heavily
criticised fellow Khmer Rouge researcher Ben Kiernan accusing the author of The
Pol Pot Regime of having a “political agenda”.
The Australian
researcher said it was a “tragic mistake” by the US State Department to grant
Kiernan more than $1 million to research the Khmer Rouge. The prosecution has
previously used Kiernan’s writings in relation to charges of genocide committed
against the Vietnamese and Cham people.
Can and will Khmer [other than Hun Sen and his cronies] be able to capitalize on this?
ReplyDeleteIf Vietnam succeeded in controlling Khmer Rouge, Cambodia would not have suffered genocide in 1975-1978. Cambodia would have been much better under Vietnam's control.
ReplyDelete