‘Paranoid’ Purges Undercut Khmer Rouge, Tribunal Hears
Cambodia Daily | 20 October 2016
Internal purges to eradicate suspected traitors among the Khmer
Rouge were the “paranoid” killings typical of revolutionary movements and
compromised the regime’s resistance to a Vietnamese takeover, an expert witness
told the Khmer Rouge tribunal on Wednesday.
Vietnam had attempted to take control of Cambodia’s communist
party following Lon Nol’s coup in 1970, Stephen Morris, a researcher and author
of the book “Why Vietnam Invaded Cambodia,” told the court during his second
day on the stand in the trial of Khmer Rouge leaders Nuon Chea and Khieu
Samphan.
Expert witness Stephen Morris testifies at the Khmer Rouge tribunal on Wednesday. (ECCC) |
The Khmer Rouge’s purge of officials thought to be associated with
Vietnam after they overthrew Lon Nol in 1975 undercut their own inferior
forces, he said.
“In the period of the war against the Lon Nol government, I think
it was true that there were agents of Vietnam within the Kampuchea communist
party and that Pol Pot was correct in thinking so,” he said.
However, “not all the Khmer-Viet men…turned out to be loyal to
Hanoi,” he said of the agents, adding that those who were loyal had largely
been killed by 1975.
“There was a sense, a frantic sense, of a need to go faster and to
create what the Democratic Kampuchea leaders thought would be the purest form
of communist revolution,” Mr. Morris told the court.
“A lot of the domestic policies of Democratic Kampuchea were in
fact modeled on the Great Leap Forward,” he said of Mao Zedong’s economic and
social campaign in the late 1950s and early 1960s, which historians believe led
to the death of tens of millions of Chinese people. “Taking people to the
countryside from the cities, an emphasis on manual labor as personal
liberation—these things were ideas of Mao Zedong.”
But as the Khmer Rouge attempted to make Cambodia uniform,
tensions were rising with its eastern neighbor.
In April 1977, Pol Pot launched attacks on civilians in southern
Vietnam. But, with his forces failing to gain the upper hand, Cambodia again
followed the Maoist model by starting internal purges —a “paranoid political
culture which permeates all revolutionary movements,” Mr. Morris said.
“It was a paranoid fantasy on the part of Pol Pot to think that
people within the party, who had been loyal to the party over a long period of
time, were in fact agents of Vietnam,” he said.
“It severely weakened Cambodia’s ability to engage in conflict with
any neighbor.”
Mr. Morris said the purges were also an attempt by Pol Pot to
account for Cambodia’s poor battlefield performance against Vietnam, which
eventually invaded and ran the Khmer Rouge out of power in January 1979.
In Pol Pot’s thinking, he said, “the people in the Eastern Zone
who took the brunt of the fighting of Vietnam…must have been traitorous in
order not to defeat Vietnam.”
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