“Vietnam didn’t simply overthrow the regime; they occupied the country for 10 years and tried to create a regime in their own image in Cambodia.”
Expert witness Stephen Morris gives his testimony before the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia yesterday during Case 002/02. ECCC
Purges culled the loyal: expert
Phnom Penh Post | 20 October 2016
Expert witness Stephen Morris offered
a nuanced view of the Cambodian-Vietnamese conflict during the Khmer Rouge era
yesterday, reiterating his belief that Vietnam intended to control the
Cambodian communist movement, but also noting that Cambodian forces antagonised
the Vietnamese prior to the 1979 invasion.
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
a legitimate attempt by Vietnam to overthrow the Cambodian government.
While Morris once
again testified yesterday that the Vietnamese had hoped to control communism in
Indochina in the 1970s, he also maintained that the Khmer Rouge purges had
largely targeted loyal party members.
“The Vietnamese set
up Cambodian communist structures, which they tried to dominate with their own
Khmer Viet Minh agents, but Pol Pot and other leaders were aware of this
strategy,” Morris said.
By around 1975, the
researcher continued, almost all of these Vietnamese agents had already been
removed from power.
“The purges and
terror campaigns which took place after 1975 branded people who were loyal
members of the system,” Morris said, calling Pol Pot “paranoid” and accusing
him of conducting a “campaign of terror within party leadership”.
Morris, who was granted
unprecedented access to archives of Soviet communications with Hanoi, testified
that Vietnamese communists had hoped Nuon Chea would help overthrow the Khmer
Rouge, with Vietnamese General Secretary Le Duan going so far as to refer to
him as “our man” and a “personal friend”.
Morris also
testified that Vietnam had a far superior military and could have easily
crushed the Khmer Rouge much earlier than 1979, but instead tried to negotiate
with the regime, even while Khmer Rouge soldiers were slaughtering Vietnamese
civilians.
Communications from
the same Soviet archives between Le Duan and the Soviet ambassador seem to
confirm this desire.
In October 1977 –
just two weeks after a Cambodian raid into Vietnamese territory – Le Duan noted
that Vietnam had the capability to “rout” Khmer Rouge forces, but that their
response was to display patience and attempt to find a peaceful resolution.
Morris also said
that one of the primary reasons Vietnam did not invade Cambodia earlier is
because it was “impossible politically”.
When they finally
did take Phnom Penh in 1979, he added, Vietnam went far beyond what the
international community desired.
“Vietnam didn’t
simply overthrow the regime; they occupied the country for 10 years and tried
to create a regime in their own image in Cambodia.”
Excellent documents for the Khmer people!
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