Còn LQD tiếp Phạm Văn Đồng, éo biết ai vênh ai ko vênh nhưng có 1 người từ khi đẻ ra nó đã luôn có nỗi sợ VN vượt mặt nó, vì thế nó ko ngần ngại viện trợ cho Pol Pot, còn ác hơn cả ISIS bây giờ, điều này được nhận luôn trong cuốn hồi ký! Năm 1993 Mỹ muốn bình thường hóa quan hệ với VN và chấp nhận chính quyền Hunsen thì người đó lại quay qua chửi Mỹ!
http://www.singapore-window.org/sw00/001002sc.htm
CAMBODIA'S genocidal Khmer Rouge andallied non-communist insurgentsreceived massive sums of largely covert aid from China, the United States, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand in the 1980s, according to Singapore Senior Minister Lee Kuan Yew.
As much as US$1.3 billion was spent supporting rebel groups fighting Vietnamese and allied Cambodian forces after Hanoi's invasion of Cambodia, which toppled the Khmer Rouge regime in 1979.
Mr Lee accused the United States of changing its stance on the Vietnamese puppet government after 1993 UN-sponsored elections, allowing Mr Hun Sen to muscle his way into government as co-premier despite having lost in the polls to the royalist party of Prince Norodom Ranariddh, the king's son.
ĐCM, làm DLV Thông này éo bao giờ ngán câu hỏi nào của đám "bên ấy". Nhưng đcm đừng có phịa nữa, thối lắm. Và trả lời đi, đcm, trong hoàn cảnh đó thì làm cái lol gì khác được?
In March 1970, Marshal Lon Nol, a Cambodian politician who had previously served as prime minister, and his pro-American associates staged a successful coup to depose Prince Sihanouk as head of state. At this time, the Khmer Rouge had gained members and was positioned to become a major player in the civil war due to its alliance with Sihanouk. Their army was led by Pol Pot, who was appointed CPK’s party secretary and leader in 1963. Pol Pot, born in Cambodia as Solath Sar, spent time in France and became a member of the French Communist Party. Upon returning to Cambodia in 1953, he joined a clandestine communist movement and began his rise up the ranks to become one of the world’s most infamous dictators.
Aided by the Vietnamese, the Khmer Rouge began to defeat Lon Nol’s forces on the battlefields. By the end of 1972, the Vietnamese withdrew from Cambodia and turned the major responsibilities for the war over to the CPK.
From January to August 1973, the Khmer Republic government, with assistance from the US, dropped about half a million tons of bombs on Cambodia, which may have killed as many as 300,000 people. Many who resented the bombings or had lost family members joined the Khmer Rouge’s revolution.
By early 1973, about 85 percent of Cambodian territory was in the hands of the Khmer Rouge, and the Lon Nol army was almost unable to go on the offensive. However, with US assistance, it was able to continue fighting the Khmer Rouge for two more years.
April 17, 1975 ended five years of foreign interventions, bombardment, and civil war in Cambodia. On this date, Phnom Penh, a major city in Cambodia, fell to the communist forces.
Mr Lee estimated that Singapore spent about US$55 million, Malaysia about US$10 million and Thailand a few million, in training, food and ammunition funnelled to the insurgents, he said in his memoirs, From Third World to First: The Singapore Story 1965-2000.
"This was dwarfed by China who spent some US$100 million on the non-communist forces . . . and 10 times that amount on the Khmer Rouge," he added.
He said China was the only country that had given direct aid to the Khmer Rouge in the form of cash and weapons.
The Vietnamese army captured Phnom Penh on January 7, 1979, forcing dictator Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge regime - blamed for the deaths of as many as 1.7 million people between 1975 and 1979 - into a jungle rebellion mainly in the border region with Thailand.
Hanoi installed a puppet regime of Khmer Rouge defectors that initially included current Prime Minister Hun Sen as foreign minister. The last Vietnamese troops did not pull out of Cambodia until a decade later.
"They must have been satisfied that Hun Sen wanted to be independent from Vietnam and were prepared to let him achieve power. The UN did not have the strength or will to install Ranariddh in power," Mr Lee said.
The United Nations and Cambodia agreed earlier this year to set up a joint genocide tribunal to try surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge, but the process has become bogged down, with new laws for a trial yet to be debated in parliament.
http://www.history.com/topics/pol-pot
When Pol Pot returned to Cambodia in January 1953, the whole region was revolting against French colonial rule. Cambodia officially gained its independence later that year. Pol Pot, meanwhile, joined the proto-communist Khmer People’s Revolutionary Party (KPRP), which had been set up in 1951 under the auspices of the North Vietnamese. From 1956 to 1963, Pol Pot taught history, geography and French literature at a private school while simultaneously plotting a revolution.
POL POT’S FINAL YEARS
Throughout the 1980s, the Khmer Rouge received arms from China and political support from the United States, which opposed the decade-long Vietnamese occupation.But the Khmer Rouge’s influence began to decrease following a 1991 ceasefire agreement, and the movement completely collapsed by the end of the decade. In 1997 a Khmer Rouge splinter group captured Pol Pot and placed him under house arrest. He died in his sleep on April 15, 1998, due to heart failure. To date, a United Nations-backed tribunal has convicted only a handful of Khmer Rouge leaders of crimes against humanity.
http://www.ppu.org.uk/genocide/g_cambodia2.html
The Khmer Rouge's links with China meant hostility between the Pol Pot government and Vietnam (soon to be briefly invaded by China for ill-treating Vietnam's ethnic Chinese). In 1978 Vietnam invaded Kampuchea and overthrew the Khmer Rouge. The guerrillas were driven into the western jungles and beyond to Thailand. Vietnam (now a communist republic forging links with the Soviet Union) set up a puppet government composed mainly of recent defectors from the Khmer Rouge. This new socialist government was comparatively benign, but found it hard to organise the necessary reconstruction programme: Pol Pot's policies had ruined the economy, there wasn't much foreign aid; all the competent professionals, engineers, technicians and planners had been killed.
The Khmer Rouge in retreat had some help from American relief agencies - 20,000 to 40,000 guerrillas who reached Thailand received food aid -and the West also ensured that the Khmer Rouge (rather than the Vietnam-backed communist government) held on to Cambodia's seat in the United Nations: the Cold War continued to dictate what allegiances and priorities were made.
The Khmer Rouge went on fighting the Vietnam-backed government. Throughout the 1980s the Khmer Rouge forces were covertly backed by America and the UK (who trained them in the use of landmines) because of their united hostility to communist Vietnam. The West's fuelling of the Khmer Rouge held up Cambodia's recovery for a decade.
Cái "người có tâm" mà bạn nói đó bị đầu độc chết thì chuyện gì xảy ra? Chờ thêm ~80 năm cho lòi ra "người có tâm" khác hả?
Tôi hỏi bạn tại sao vận mệnh 1 quốc gia và gần trăm triêu dân lại phải trông chờ vào 1 "người có tâm"?
Dân chủ chính là việc chia đều sự "có tâm" cho toàn dân trong 1 đất nước. Mỗi người dân phải có trách nhiệm với đất nước thể hiện qua là phiếu của họ. Trông chờ 1 minh quân chính là sự vô trách nhiệm, chối từ quyền công dân của mình.