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Less than zero: Michael O'Donnell on Pol Pot.


POL POT: ANATOMY OF A NIGHTMARE

BY PHILIP SHORT

NEW YORK New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
: HENRY HOLT. 537 PAGES. $30.

April 17, 1975, was one of the most bizarre and horrifying days in modern history. Single-file lines of expressionless soldiers, armed to the teeth and clad in black, marched into Phnom Penh, the capital of Cambodia, and began ordering its inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
 at gunpoint to evacuate the city. The soldiers, known as Khmers Rouges, summarily executed hundreds of government loyalists and then forced the capital's 2.5 million inhabitants into the countryside, where, over the next three and a half years, they became zombies Zombies

Companies that continue to operate even though they are insolvent. Also known as living dead.

Notes:
It's advisable to avoid investing in zombies at all costs their life expectancies are highly unpredictable.
, toiling in the rice fields and babbling babbling Neurology Quasi-random vocalizations in infants that precede language acquisition. See Lalling stage.  revolutionary doctrine. Some twenty thousand died on the journey out of the city; by some counts, as many as two million ultimately perished under the regime that seized power that day. It was the beginning of "the world's most radical revolution."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The riveting chapter on the fall of Phnom Penh alone makes Philip Short's biography of Pol Pot, the enigmatic Khmer Rouge leader who masterminded the evacuation and became Cambodia's dictator, worth reading. A former BBC BBC
 in full British Broadcasting Corp.

Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927.
 correspondent, Short published in 2000 what has been lauded as the authoritative biography of Mao Zedong, and he writes in the punchy punch·y  
adj. punch·i·er, punch·i·est
1. Characterized by vigor or drive: "He speaks in short, punchy sentences, using plain, populist words that excite" 
, confident tones of a journalist with a great scoop and the verve to tell it. In Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare, he has drawn on hundreds of hours of interviews with former Khmer Rouge leaders, as well as documents in Khmer, Chinese, Russian, French, and Vietnamese, to produce what is certainly one of the most important--and thoroughly readable--works on Pol Pot and modern Cambodian history.

Short moves briskly through Pol's boyhood as Saloth Sar, the son of well-off parents and a mediocre student, to his formative years at a French engineering college, where he was known as a bon vivant who was quick to smile. In Paris he met a host of progressive Cambodian students whose evening political discussions were at first unfocused un·fo·cused also un·fo·cussed  
adj.
1. Not brought into focus: an unfocused lens.

2.
 and divorced from reality--"rather muddled," in Short's polite British. But under the leadership of future Khmer Rouge foreign minister Ieng Sary, who was severe and disciplined, the Cercle Marxiste gradually found its purpose in unseating the hated French-collusionist regime of Prince Sihanouk in Phnom Penh.

Sar was not, however, in the vanguard of the revolutionary students at first: "If Saloth Sar remained inconspicuously in·con·spic·u·ous  
adj.
Not readily noticeable.



incon·spic
 in the background for his first two years in Paris, it was partly his character--as he put it many years later, 'I did not wish to show myself'--and partly because he had yet to find his role. He breathed the 'air of the times,' as the French expression has it, and was carried along, with little effort on his own part, by more assured, dynamic colleagues.... [H]e found [the circle] fascinating, but the discussions were often above his head."

"Something clicked," though, when in 1951 or '52 Sar discovered the writings of Stalin--less heady than Marx and Lenin, and more accessible for their pragmatic emphasis on an elite party leadership and constant vigilance against traitors. Sar became passionate for the first time in his life. He had found his purpose: "It was revolution." The nascent Khmer Rouge leadership returned to Cambodia and entered the jungle to study guerrilla warfare with the Vietnamese.

Over the next twenty years TWENTY YEARS. The lapse of twenty years raises a presumption of certain facts, and after such a time, the party against whom the presumption has been raised, will be required to prove a negative to establish his rights.
     2.
, the Khmers maintained an uneasy alliance with Vietnamese troops in a civil war against Sihanouk and his successor, Lon Nol, that was marked by barbarism bar·ba·rism  
n.
1. An act, trait, or custom characterized by ignorance or crudity.

2.
a. The use of words, forms, or expressions considered incorrect or unacceptable.

b.
 on both sides. Meanwhile Sar moved up the ranks to become the leader of the resistance, changed his name to Pol Pot, and solidified the Khmer Rouge ideology. More influenced by the French Revolution than by 1917 Russia or 1949 China, and with "an unschooled, almost mystical approach to communism," he and his cohorts freely ignored fundamental tenets of Marxist orthodoxy. Cambodia's population largely consisted of peasants, and there was little industrial proletariat to speak of--the "landscape, and the lifestyle, were, and are still, closer to Africa than China"--but no bother. Pol's solution, amazingly, was to refuse to admit workers to his newly founded Communist Party and, drawing on his spiritual roots in Buddhism, to cultivate instead a "proletarian consciousness" in all Cambodians by making peasants of them. In one cadre's words: "Zero for him and zero for you--that is true equality."

At home, Pol turned daily life into a nightmare of collectivization col·lec·tiv·ize  
tr.v. col·lec·tiv·ized, col·lec·tiv·iz·ing, col·lec·tiv·iz·es
To organize (an economy, industry, or enterprise) on the basis of collectivism.
 and killing. All peasants were forced to wear black, as they labored to increase Cambodia's agricultural production while starving because of the meager mea·ger also mea·gre  
adj.
1. Deficient in quantity, fullness, or extent; scanty.

2. Deficient in richness, fertility, or vigor; feeble: the meager soil of an eroded plain.

3.
 rations served in communal barracks bar·rack 1  
tr.v. bar·racked, bar·rack·ing, bar·racks
To house (soldiers, for example) in quarters.

n.
1. A building or group of buildings used to house military personnel.
. Money, private weddings, memories of prerevolutionary life--even laughter, in some villages--were prohibited. Cambodians were subjected to a ruthless brainwashing brainwashing

Systematic effort to destroy an individual's former loyalties and beliefs and to substitute loyalty to a new ideology or power. It has been used by religious cults as well as by radical political groups.
 campaign, based on the principle that minds were "mental private property" and as such impeded true collectivization. Hundreds of thousands of Cambodians were branded enemies for flouting rules, or simply for being insufficiently joyful about their new life, and were executed with cudgels and pickaxes when a machine gun wasn't handy. It was not, however, a genocide, Short contends--a not altogether persuasive challenge to the conclusions of academics like Ben Kiernan and Samantha Power. For although certain groups, such as ethnic Vietnamese and Muslim Chams, "had special difficulty in accommodating to the new regime" (as Short puts it quite mildly), the goal was uniformity, not the extermination extermination

mass killing of animals or other pests. Implies complete destruction of the species or other group.
 of individuals based on their ethnicity or religious beliefs.

Abroad, Pol struggled from the outset with the Vietnamese Communists, who had designs on a unified Indochinese state but whose plans often came at the expense of their Cambodian little brothers. Pol's incendiary INCENDIARY, crim. law. One who maliciously and willfully sets another person's house on fire; one guilty of the crime of arson.
     2. This offence is punished by the statute laws of the different states according to their several provisions.
 anti-Vietnamese rhetoric led to clashes with Vietnamese troops and, eventually, a Vietnamese invasion that toppled the Khmer Rouge, in 1979. He spent the remainder of his life trying in vain to regain power.

The reader of Anatomy of a Nightmare will quickly recognize the author's expertise on Chinese politics, and the book benefits greatly from his knowledge on the subject. Indeed, Short is at his best when describing the historic meeting between Pol and Mao in 1975, in which the chairman's elliptical el·lip·tic   or el·lip·ti·cal
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or having the shape of an ellipse.

2. Containing or characterized by ellipsis.

3.
a.
 way of speaking and implied meanings were all but lost on Pol in the translation from Mao's halting English into Khmer. Mao was old and frail, Short writes, but his "mind was as nimble as ever. The Cambodian communists intrigued him.... The one idea that clearly did resonate, because afterwards Pol frequently repeated it, was Mao's injunction to his visitors not to copy indiscriminately the experience of China or any other country, but 'to create your own experience yourselves.'" Short also provides an especially lucid description of the precarious minuet minuet (mĭnyĕt`), French dance, originally from Poitou, introduced at the court of Louis XIV in 1650. It became popular during the 17th and 18th cent.  involving Cambodia, China, and Vietnam in the 1970s and '80s. China became Cambodia's patron in an effort to stem the tide Stem The Tide

An attempt to stop a prevailing trend. Sometimes referred to as "stop the bleeding."

Notes:
If a stock is continually falling, stemming the tide would be an attempt to halt the free fall and change its direction.
See also: Reversal, Trend
 of Vietnamese--and hence Soviet--communism, supplying arms and even going so far as to take up fighting on behalf of the Khmer Rouge during the Vietnamese onslaught.

China was not, of course, the only powerful nation to use Cambodia as a proxy for cold-war advantage. While the United States pulled itself out of Vietnam, President Nixon ordered more than seventy thousand US and Vietnamese troops into Cambodia and dropped five hundred thousand tons of ordnance on Viet Cong and Khmer Rouge outposts, killing a half-million people. During the '50s, the US government tacitly approved Vietnamese attempts to assassinate as·sas·si·nate  
tr.v. as·sas·si·nat·ed, as·sas·si·nat·ing, as·sas·si·nates
1. To murder (a prominent person) by surprise attack, as for political reasons.

2.
 Prince Sihanouk, and from 1970 to 1975 it propped up Lon Nol's corrupt regime as a bulwark against the jungle Communists. After the Khmer government fell, the United States lobbied at the United Nations for the Khmer Rouge to maintain Cambodia's seat while Pol bled the Vietnamese in a simmering war to regain control. While Pol was in power, though, the United States closed its eyes. The Ford and Carter administrations were unwilling to return to Southeast Asia, and American leftists like Noam Chomsky, convinced that the United States and not the Khmer Rouge was the source of Cambodia's problems, shamefully downplayed the horrifying stories of Cambodians who escaped into Thailand, emphasizing "the extreme unreliability of refugee reports."

One of Short's weaknesses is that his focus on Cambodian politics and history, rather than Pol's daily life, makes it feel at times unlike a biography at all. But this is explained, at least in part, by Pol's extraordinary penchant for secrecy. For evidence of this, look no further than the photographs in Pol's biography--most of them are of other people, as only several grainy grain·y  
adj. grain·i·er, grain·i·est
1. Made of or resembling grain; granular.

2. Resembling the grain of wood.

3. Having a granular appearance due to the clumping of particles in the emulsion.
 shots from the first half of his life exist. The book brims with other examples of Pol's elusiveness. Over the years, he made several important strategic decisions in concert with Prince Sihanouk (an improbable ally after his fall from power in 1970), but he always did so using intermediaries or ghost names, so that years later, when Sihanouk learned that Pol had been involved, the deposed prince was flabbergasted flab·ber·gast  
tr.v. flab·ber·gast·ed, flab·ber·gast·ing, flab·ber·gasts
To cause to be overcome with astonishment; astound. See Synonyms at surprise.



[Origin unknown.
. The Cambodian people were not even aware that their new overlords were part of a Communist government for almost a year and a half after the Khmer Rouge had seized power.

What made Pol a monster? Short describes a tableau of factors. Perhaps foremost was the influence of Buddhism, starting with a strict year for Pol in a Phnom Penh monastery when he was a boy. With its emphasis on absolute obedience and the stamping out of individuality, Theravada Buddhism directly influenced the nightly "criticism and self-criticism" sessions in which peasants confessed their daily unrevolutionary acts and pointed out others' shortcomings A shortcoming is a character flaw.

Shortcomings may also be:
  • Shortcomings (SATC episode), an episode of the television series Sex and the City
, systematically breaking down all ties to the personal and the private. Short also explores a culture in Cambodia that has long stomached shocking acts of brutality in daily life, as well as the country's perpetual humiliation at the hands of other nations. But there can be no simple explanation for the descent into madness that was Pol's apogee. Anatomy of a Nightmare makes for chilling reading. Would that Short could chronicle all our tyrants.

Michael O'Donnell is a writer living in Chicago.
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Title Annotation:Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare
Author:O'Donnell, Michael
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Apr 1, 2005
Words:1652
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