:
Minutes of the CPK Standing Committee meetings of Mar. 11 and 13 1976 (Dossier D7562);’Speech by the Party Secretary to the Council of Ministers’, Apr. 22 1976 (Dossier D695), DC-Cam.
337
Fictitious
:
Far Eastern Economic Review,
June 25 1976. This was not, as has sometimes been suggested, a journalist’s error. Cambodia continued to deny that Pol Pot was Saloth Sâr until the regime fell. Y Phandara was told by the Ambassador to China, Pich Chheang, in the spring of 1978 that Saloth Sâr ‘had died during the war’; Chinese officials at that time repeated the same thing.
337
–8
If we lose . . . struggle
:
Nuon Chea,
Statement,
p. 31.
338
Always smooth
:
Ieng Sary, interview.
‘Seduced you’
:
Sihanouk,
Prisonnier,
p. 320.
Very likeable
:
Kong Duong, interview.
Parable:
Mey Mak, interview.
339
Complicated
:
Ieng Sary, interview.
[Pol] demanded . . . disgrace
:
Vandy Kaonn,
Cambodge,
p. 137; Chou Chet, confession, May 20 1978.
340
He would listen
:
In Sopheap,
Khieu Samphân,
pp. 95–6; I have condensed the citation, but without changing the sense. Sopheap, who gave a similar account from his own experience of attending meetings with Pol, said there was little real exchange of views after 1975 (interview).
Pol Pot liked
:
In Sopheap, interview.
341
‘Not what I expected’. . . monkhood
:
Becker,
Wlten the War,
pp. 424–5; In Sopheap, interview. See Martin Stuart-Fox,
Buddhist Kingdom, Marxist State,
White Lotus, Bangkok, 1996, p. 80, for the importance of the monks’ ceremonial fans in neighbouring Laos.
‘In the entire world’
:
‘Long Live the Marvellous Revolutionary Armed Forces of the Communist Party of Kampuchea’,
Tung Padevat,
Aug. 1975.
341
–2
Island of purity . . . learns from us
:
Pol Pot,
Report,
p. 188;’ Extraits de quelques textes du Bureau 870’, Doc. 32(N422)/T83i8,VA. Although Pol himself never publicly criticised China in these terms, in a speech to a closed Party meeting in August 1976 he paraphrased Mao’s remark to him the previous summer—that China was ‘a capitalist country with no capitalists’—asserting that China and North Korea ‘have socialism as a base, but they [are] not clear of the capitalist framework’ (
Four-Year Plan,
p. 107). Such views explain why Pol’s tribute to Mao during his visit to China in September 1977 was not re-broadcast by Radio Phnom Penh (Chandler,
Seeing Red,
p. 45).
342
Not using money . . . victory:
‘Extraits de quelques textes du Bureau 870’,
supra;
Henri Locard, untitled typescript, p. 11; Chandler,
Facing,
p. 231.
‘Growing capability’
:
David Morell and Chai-anan Samudavanija, ‘Thailand’s Revolutionary Insurgency: Changes in Leadership Potential’,
Asian Survey,
vol. 19, no. 4, Apr. 1979, p. 332.
343
‘Without precedent’
:
Ieng Sary,
Der Spiegel
interview, May 2 1977.
We do not have . . . any book
:
Pol Pot,
Yugoslav interview; Four-Year Plan,
pp. 46 and 49.
‘We want to . . .practical way’
: Ieng Sary,
Der Spiegel
interview,
supra; News from Kampuchea,
vol. i, no. 4, Oct. 1977, p. 35.
‘Certain [foreign] comrades’
:
Pol Pot,
Talk with Khamtan.
He may well have been thinking of members of Khamtan’s own party. David Chandler quotes Thai Communists as saying of the Khmers Rouges: ‘Their understanding of Marxism, of socialism and class analysis was terrible’; ‘[Theirs] was the revolution of the downtrodden, pure and simple’ (
Tragedy,
p. 280).
345
Inveigh against
:
Revolutionary Youths,
July 1976, pp. 17–31 and Nov. 1976, pp. 1—15.
347
Ieng Sary . . . sutras for her
:
Thion,
Pattern,
pp. 158–9; Becker,
Wlien the War,
p. 171; Nikán, interview. Thiounn Thioeunn (interview) gave a scathing assessment of the medical qualifications of Sary’s daughters.
Suddenly our driver
:
Sihanouk,
Prisonnier,
p. 263.
Mother-in-law
:
This is guesswork, but Madame Khieu fits Sihanouk’s description (see Ong Thong Hoeung,
Récit,
p. 3), the one difference being that she was then in her late seventies, rather than her sixties, as the Prince thought. Sihanouk insisted that the mysterious passenger was not Khieu Ponnary, whom he knew by sight, and it is difficult to think of anyone else who would have warranted such exceptional treatment.
348
Detailed reports
:
‘Report of the Eastern Zone Congress, July 17 1977’, Doc. 32(N442)/T8294,VA, which speaks of the dangers of’people starving and suffering, and losing confidence in the Party’. See also the regular telegrams on the economic situation in the regions in the ‘Khmer Rouge Communications File’, DC-Cam. By mid-1976, food supplies were deteriorating even in the Foreign Ministry in Phnom Penh. At the end of the year Laurence Picq and other Ministry workers were suffering from oedema caused by malnutrition (Picq,
Horizon,
pp. 67—8, 78 and 84).
350
Our principle . . . agents’
:
‘Minutes of meeting between Ieng Sary and Chinese Ambassador’, undated but apparently early 1976, Doc. 32(N422).T8188,VA.
We must heighten
:
‘Directive No. 32 of the Party Standing Committee of the Eastern Zone’, Sept. 5 1976, Doc. 2.5.06 in De Nike et al., pp. 385–6. The timing is important. Pol had said in late July: ‘We don’t use old workers, because if we [did] there would be many complications politically’ (
Four-Year Plan,
p. 47). But that had been the position since late 1975. The Central Committee directive on which the Eastern Zone document was based—extending the prohibition to intellectuals—was presumably issued in the last days of August or the very beginning of September. Ong Thong Hoeung and at least thirty colleagues were sent to the factories at precisely that moment and withdrawn a month later.
Is the possession . . . learn it fast
:
Tung Padevat,
Sept-Oct. 1976, pp. 1–32; Pol Pot,
Talk with
Khamtan;
Preliminary Explanation,
p. 160.
352
Between a third and a half
:
Although there is no way of proving it, I tend to agree with Michael Vickery that between a half and two-thirds of the population were, at least in relative terms, reasonably fed until 1978 (
Themes,
p. 131).
354
Soth
:
Minutes of the CPK Standing Committee meeting, Mar. 8 1976, Dossier D684, DC-Cam.
354
–5
At the end . . . Long killed
:
Hu Nim, confession, May 28 1977, in Chandler et al.,
Pol Pot Plans,
pp. 289 and 293–6.
355
Evidence emerged
:
Hu Nim, confession, May 28 1977, in Chandler et al.,
Pol Pot Plans,
p. 295. Doeun, in his confession, insisted that he did pass on the information to Pol Pot, but without making clear how quickly he did so.
At about 4 a.m. . . . Vietnam
:
This account is based on Long Nârin, interview, and Kiernan,
Regime,
pp. 321–3. While I do not agree with Kiernan’s interpretation, he provides a useful summary of the known facts.
356
In public
:
See Nuon Chea, letter to Pham Hung, May 23 1976, quoted in
Kampuchea Dossier,
vol. 1, pp. 130–1.
357
But there were . . . lackeys or not
:
‘Talk between Ieng Sary and Sunao Sonoda, Foreign Minister of Japan, in Tokyo, June 12 1978’, Doc. 32(N442)/T8297,VA. Kiernan gives an account of the negotiations which is much more sympathetic to Vietnam (
Regime,
pp. 115–20), based on his interpretation of the minutes of the CPK Standing Committee, May 14 1976.
‘Sacred feeling’
:
Pol Pot,
Tran Thanh Xuan interview
.
Zhang Chunqiao
:
These details were furnished by a Chinese historian who wishes to remain anonymous.
357
–8
In it, he used . . . servants
:
Pol Pot,’Keynote opinions of the Comrade delegate of the Party Organisation at the [Western] Zone Assembly’,
Tung Padevat,
June 1976, pp. 14–65.
358
S-21
:
The following account draws on Chandler,
Voices,
and on Deuch, interview with Nate Thayer, Battambang, April 1999.
First time
:
According to Ney Sarann (confession, Sept. 30 1976), Chhouk joined the CC at the CPK’s Fourth Congress in January 1976.
Pol’s former cook
:
Moeun, interview.
Rule of thumb
:
Suong Sikoeun, interview; Picq,
typescript,
p. 222.
359
Shortly afterwards . . . destroy us
:
Dossiers L01373, Aug. 2, L01374, Aug. 3 and L01442, Sept. 2 1976, DC-Cam; and Pol Pot,
Preliminary Explanation
(Aug. 23 1976), p. 161.
Tracts . . . those we suspect
:
Dossier L01445, Sept. 9 1976. According to Son Sen, seditious pamphlets were discovered on at least five occasions that year, in April, June, July and August/September.
360
–1
There is a sickness
:
Pol Pot,
Report,
pp. 183–5.
362
Resignation
:
BBC SWB FE5323/B/1. Pol’s resignation, announced by Radio Phnom Penh on Sept. 27, was backdated to the 20th, the day of Ney Sarann’s arrest. It was allegedly approved by a cabinet meeting that day, but whether in fact such a meeting ever took place is unclear. Twenty years later, neither Nuon Chea nor Mok had any recollection of these events (interviews with Nate Thayer). Ieng Sary, however, did remember, which, as David Chandler has noted, tends to confirm that it was linked to a foreign policy issue (
Brother,
p. 180 n.44). Had Pol really been ill—or had it been an internal manoeuvre to turn the tables on political opponents—the last thing he would have done would be to have the news broadcast by Radio Phnom Penh.
November 1976
:
The following account is drawn from Phi Phuon (interview), who named the members of Pol’s delegation and his interlocutors identically in separate conversations, several months apart. Pich Chheang confirmed that the visit took place, but was unable to remember the details (interview). The delegation stayed at Diaoyutai, a well-guarded walled estate, west of the Forbidden City, containing villas for high-level visitors.