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Khmer Republic

The Khmer Republic (Khmer: សាធារណរដ្ឋខ្មែរ, Sathéarônârôdth Khmêr; French: République khmère) was the Cambodian state during the United States-backed military dictatorship of Lon Nol from 1970 to 1975. Its establishment was formally declared on 9 October 1970, following the 18 March 1970 coup d'état which saw the overthrow of Norodom Sihanouk's government and the abolishment of the Cambodian monarchy.

Khmer Republic
សាធារណរដ្ឋខ្មែរ (Khmer)
Sathéarônârôdth Khmêr
République khmère (French)
1970–1975
Motto: 
  • សេរីភាព សមភាព ភាតរភាព វឌ្ឍនភាព និងសុភមង្គល (Khmer)
    Sériphéap, Sâmôphéap, Phéatârôphéap, Vôdthônôphéap nĭng Sŏphômôngkôl
  • Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité, Progrès et Bonheur (French)
  • "Liberty, Equality, Fraternity, Progress and Happiness"
Anthem: 
Capital
and largest city
Phnom Penh
Official languages
Religion
Buddhism (official)[1]
Demonym(s)
GovernmentUnitary presidential constitutional republic (de jure)[2]
Unitary semi-presidential constitutional republic under a military dictatorship (de facto)
President 
• 1970–1972
Cheng Heng
• 1972–1975
Lon Nol
• 1975
Saukam Khoy (acting)
• 1975
Sak Sutsakhan[a]
Prime Minister 
• 1970–1971
Lon Nol
• 1971–1972
Sisowath Sirik Matak
• 1972
Son Ngoc Thanh
• 1972–1973
Hang Thun Hak
• 1973
In Tam
• 1973–1975
Long Boret
LegislatureParliament
Senate
National Assembly
Historical eraCold War
18 March 1970
• Republic proclaimed
9 October 1970
• Constitution
12 May 1972
17 April 1975
Population
• 1975[3]
7,952,000–8,102,000
CurrencyRiel (៛) (KHR)
Time zoneUTC+07:00 (ICT)
Date formatdd/mm/yyyy
Driving sideright
ISO 3166 codeKH
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofCambodia

The main cause of the coup was Norodom Sihanouk's tolerance of North Vietnamese military activity within Cambodia's borders; Vietnamese communist forces had gained de facto control over vast areas of eastern Cambodia as a result. Another important factor was the dire state of the Cambodian economy, an indirect result of Sihanouk's policies of pursuing neutrality.[4][page needed]

With the removal of Sihanouk, the existing Kingdom of Cambodia became a republic, officially removing Sisowath Kossamak. The character of the new regime was far-right and militaristic;[5] most significantly, it ended Sihanouk's period of covert co-operation with the North Vietnamese regime and the Viet Cong, and aligned Cambodia with South Vietnam in the ongoing Second Indochina War. The Khmer Republic was opposed within the Cambodian borders by the National United Front of Kampuchea (Front uni national de Kampuchéa, FUNK), a relatively broad alliance between Sihanouk, his supporters, and the Communist Party of Kampuchea.

The insurgency itself was conducted by the CPNLAF, the Cambodian People's National Liberation Armed Forces: they were backed by both the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and the National Liberation Front (NLF, better known as the Viet Cong), who occupied parts of Cambodia as part of their ongoing war with the South Vietnamese government.

Despite the large quantities of military and financial aid from the United States, its Khmer National Armed Forces (Forces armées nationales khmères, or FANK) was poorly trained and unable to defeat either the CPNLAF or the Vietnamese forces of the PAVN and NLF. The Republic eventually fell on 17 April 1975, when the Khmer Rouge took Phnom Penh and briefly restored the Kingdom of Cambodia before renaming itself Democratic Kampuchea on 5 January 1976.

Political history

Coup

 
Prime Minister Lon Nol (2nd from left) and President Cheng Heng (far right) with US Vice President Spiro Agnew during his visit to Cambodia, September 1970.

Sihanouk himself claimed that the coup was the result of an alliance between his longstanding enemy, the exiled right-wing nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh, the politician Prince Sisowath Sirik Matak (depicted by Sihanouk as a disgruntled rival claimant to the Cambodian throne) and the CIA, who wished to install a more US-friendly regime.[6] There is in fact little if any evidence of CIA involvement in the coup, although it seems that sections of the US military establishment – notably the Army Special Forces – may have had some involvement in terms of offering support and training to the plotters after being approached by Lon Nol.[7]

While Sihanouk was out of the country on a trip to France, anti-Vietnamese rioting took place in Phnom Penh, during which the North Vietnamese and NLF embassies were sacked.[8] It seems likely that this rioting was at least tolerated, and possibly actively organised, by Lon Nol, the Prime Minister, and his deputy Prince Sirik Matak. On 12 March, the prime minister closed the port of Sihanoukville – through which weapons were being smuggled to the NLF – to the North Vietnamese and issued an impossible ultimatum to them. All PAVN/NLF forces were to withdraw from Cambodian soil within 72 hours (on 15 March) or face military action.[9]

Despite these actions, which directly contradicted Sihanouk's policy of partial tolerance of North Vietnamese activity, it appears that Lon Nol himself had great personal reluctance to depose the Head of State: he initially may merely have wanted Sihanouk to apply more pressure to the North Vietnamese. He initially refused to commit to the plan; to convince him, Sirik Matak – who appears to have had a coup in mind from the start – played him a tape-recorded press conference from Paris, in which Sihanouk threatened to execute them both on his return to Phnom Penh.[10] However, the Prime Minister remained uncertain, with the result that Sirik Matak, accompanied by three army officers, compelled a weeping Lon Nol to sign the necessary documents at gunpoint.

A vote was taken in the National Assembly on 18 March under the direction of In Tam, in which Sihanouk was stripped of his power: Lon Nol assumed the powers of the Head of State on an emergency basis. On 28 and 29 March there were large-scale popular demonstrations in favour of Sihanouk in several provincial cities, but Lon Nol's forces suppressed them with great brutality, causing several hundred deaths.[11] Lon Nol's brother Lon Nil was among a number of government officials who were murdered by demonstrators.

Foreign regimes were initially uncertain as to the level of support to give to the new government. The North Vietnamese continued to hold talks with Lon Nol regarding the reinstatement of the cancelled trade agreement, though subsequent events meant that these were soon to come to an end.

Declaration of the Khmer Republic and the formation of FANK

The most significant immediate effect of the coup was the Cambodian Campaign of April–July 1970, in which the South Vietnamese army (ARVN), backed by US troops, entered eastern Cambodia to attack North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces operating there. Despite this assault, many of the communist forces escaped westward, deeper into Cambodia, or to the rural areas of the north-east, where they would provide support for the insurgency against Lon Nol.

Lon Nol's immediate reaction was to condemn the action as a violation of Cambodian territory. He later informed Alexander Haig that his country had been placed in serious danger as a result. When Haig told him that American ground forces would not be used to assist the Cambodian army, and that (in accordance with the Nixon Doctrine) a programme of aid would be given instead, Lon Nol openly wept.[12]

 
American troops of the 11th Armored Cavalry enter Snuol, Cambodia, 4 May 1970.

On 9 October Sihanouk was condemned to death in absentia by a military court; his mother, Queen Kossamak – the symbolic representative of the monarchy under Sihanouk's regime – was placed under house arrest, and his wife Monique was sentenced to life imprisonment.[10] The new regime simultaneously declared the Khmer Republic, and a new constitution was eventually to be adopted in 1972. Sihanouk, in the meantime, had formed GRUNK, a Beijing-based government-in-exile incorporating the communists and dedicated to the Republic's overthrow; he declared Lon Nol to be a "complete idiot" and characterised Sirik Matak as "nasty, perfidious, a lousy bastard".[13]

The relatively small royal army, which at the time of the coup had around 35,000 troops (in accordance with Sihanouk's stated policy of neutrality), was greatly expanded. Reorganising as FANK, the republican army had grown to around 150,000 men as early as the end of 1970, mainly through voluntary enlistment as Lon Nol sought to capitalise on a wave of anti-Vietnamese sentiment.[14] The US also implemented its programme of structured military aid and assistance in training, and flew in several thousand Khmer Serei and Khmer Kampuchea Krom militia, trained in South Vietnamese bases. The Joint Chiefs insisted on massive expansion of FANK to over 200,000 men, despite concerns at the severe negative effect this would have on Cambodia's economy, while the Military Equipment Delivery Team, led by General Theodore C. Mataxis, demanded the 'Americanisation' of the army's French-influenced internal structures, in spite of the chaos this caused in the supply chain.[15]

Despite the US aid, FANK (commanded by General Sosthène Fernandez) was seriously handicapped by corruption, particularly by officers claiming salaries for non-existent troops, and military incompetence. Although one of the FANK commanders – the former rebel Prince Norodom Chantaraingsey, who was coaxed out of military retirement by Lon Nol to raise FANK's 13th Brigade – was to have considerable success in 'pacifying' the area around the strategic Highway 4 and the Kirirom Plateau, the majority of its generals had little military experience or ability. The large-scale FANK offensives against the Vietnamese, Operations Chenla I and II, ended in heavy defeat despite the conspicuous bravery of the individual Cambodian infantrymen.

As well as fighting the Cambodian Civil War against the pro-Sihanouk and communist insurgents and the North Vietnamese, the Khmer Republic faced considerable internal problems. Sihanouk's domination of political life during the 1950s and 60s meant that there were few confident or experienced Cambodian politicians. Almost from the start, the Republic was plagued by many of the same political divisions and infighting that had marked Sihanouk's regime; primary among these was a damaging power struggle between Lon Nol and Sirik Matak. Sirik Matak had been acting Prime Minister during the Republic's first year, when Lon Nol's health had been extremely poor, but had engendered considerable resentment due to his administrative style and royal connections; there was also growing frustration amongst young, urban Cambodians at the continued corruption and inefficiency of the regime.[16]

On Lon Nol's return from hospital in Hawaii in April 1971, he instigated a cabinet crisis by resigning, providing a means to dissolve the government, with the probable encouragement of his brother Lon Non (a figure of considerable influence, especially with the military). After much political squabbling, a new cabinet was formed, though Sirik Matak continued as acting premier with the title of "Prime Minister-Delegate". On 16 October 1971, Lon Nol took action to strip the National Assembly of legislative power, and ordered it to write a new constitution, claiming that these actions were necessary to prevent anarchy; this provoked a protest by In Tam and 400 Buddhist monks.[17]

1972: Removal of Sirik Matak

By 18 March 1972, Lon Nol and his brother had managed to drive Sirik Matak from power. After Sirik Matak had sacked Keo An, a dissident academic, Lon Non organised a series of vocal student demonstrations against him calling for his removal.[18] Sirik Matak resigned, and (ostensibly for his 'protection') was placed under effective house arrest.[19] Lon Nol used the crisis to oust the Head of State, Cheng Heng, and took over the role himself, appointing the veteran anti-Sihanouk nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh as Prime Minister.[20] Thanh, leader of the Khmer Serei, had recruited FANK reinforcements amongst the Khmer Krom of southern Vietnam, and the loyalty he commanded amongst these comparatively elite, US-trained troops meant that his support for the Republic's fragile government remained essential.[21]

Later that year, Lon Nol announced he would hold presidential elections, and was surprised when In Tam and Keo An – the latter a reputed Sihanoukist – not only announced that they would run, but then refused to withdraw.[22] The elections, despite an inevitable victory for Lon Nol, revealed considerable dissatisfaction with the government even though they had been rigged in Lon Nol's favour: had they been fair, it is likely that In Tam would have won.[22] The affair prompted In Tam to suggest that the Americans could now "stew in Lon Nol's juice".[21]

The political situation continued to unravel throughout 1972: both opposition parties (In Tam's Democratic Party and Sirik Matak's Republican Party) refused to contest the elections to the National Assembly held in September, leading to a sweeping victory for Lon Non's Socio-Republican Party (Sangkum Sathéaranak Râth). There were a growing number of terrorist attacks in the capital, one of which was directed at Son Ngoc Thanh.[23] Thanh – whose last political act was to ban Sirik Matak's newspaper – was then forced to resign, going back into South Vietnamese exile, and was replaced by the moderate leftist Hang Thun Hak.[24]

While the Khmer Republic's government was being weakened by infighting, North Vietnamese forces – who had previously carried out much of the fighting against FANK, as in Operation Chenla I and II – gradually and deliberately scaled back their presence within Cambodian borders, leaving mainly logistical and support staff. Their place was taken by native Cambodian communist forces of the CPNLAF, which had been greatly increased when Sihanouk gave his support to the insurgency, rural Cambodians remaining overwhelmingly pro-Sihanouk.

1973: Ceasefire and the suspension of the National Assembly

The Paris Peace Accords of early 1973 seemed to offer a temporary respite from the civil war; Lon Nol declared a unilateral ceasefire, despite FANK's very weak position on the ground. There were in fact a few contacts between some of the more moderate elements of the Khmer Rouge communists – notably Hou Yuon – and the Republic. The North Vietnamese pressured the Cambodian communists to accept the terms of the peace accords; their interests lay more in keeping the war active at a low level (tying down South Vietnamese troops in the process) than in an outright victory for the Khmer Rouge. The Khmer Rouge leadership, however, remained intransigent.

The fighting resumed on the night of 7 February 1973, when communist forces attacked the FANK perimeter around the besieged city of Kampong Thom.[23] By April, the Republic regime was in general disarray, with FANK troops refusing to fight and looting their own capital, and the CPNLAF advancing in many areas of the country. In response, the US finally threatened to cut off all aid unless Lon Nol acted to broaden the power base and support of the government – specifically, to reinstate the US ally Sirik Matak – and reduce the influence of his brother Lon Non.[25]

Accordingly, on 24 April, Lon Nol announced that the National Assembly would be suspended, and that a Political Council formed of himself, Sirik Matak, Cheng Heng, and In Tam, would effectively rule by decree. The CPNLAF advance on Phnom Penh was eventually halted by American bombing, which caused horrific casualty levels amongst the communist troops. Some commentators state that the experience is likely to have contributed to the brutality shown by the Khmer Rouge cadres in later events.[26]

1974: Fall of Oudong

By early 1974, the Political Council had been sidelined, and Lon Nol was once again ruling alone. The military situation, in the meantime, was deteriorating further. Communist forces came within shelling distance of Phnom Penh, and captured the former royal capital of Oudong in March: they 'evacuated' its population – shooting government officials and teachers – and destroyed or burnt much of the town. There was a brief improvement as the year progressed, however, as FANK retook Oudong, and was able to secure supply routes through Lake Tonlé Sap.

End of the regime

Despite this, the Khmer Republic did not survive the 1975 dry season offensive. The Khmer Rouge had by this point surrounded the capital, whose population had been vastly increased by refugees from the fighting; Lon Nol, who was extremely superstitious, ordered that consecrated sand be spread around the city from helicopters to protect it. Though FANK was by this time fighting with extreme tenacity, and the Khmer Rouge soldiers were suffering from poor morale, malaria, and even higher rates of casualties than FANK, fresh supplies of arms and ammunition from China gave them the impetus to overrun the Republic's remaining outposts.[27]

Proposed peace negotiations repeatedly stalled as Sihanouk refused to deal with Lon Nol directly, requesting his removal as a precondition. A plan proposed by Étienne Manac'h, the French Ambassador to China, in which Sihanouk would return to Cambodia as the head of a national unity government (leading to the likely immediate defection of a large proportion of the Khmer Rouge's peasant soldiers), failed to materialise.

On 1 April 1975, Lon Nol resigned and fled the country into exile: FANK almost immediately disintegrated. While Sirik Matak, Long Boret, Lon Non and several other politicians remained in the capital in an attempt to negotiate a ceasefire, Phnom Penh fell to the Khmer Rouge on 17 April. Within a few days they had executed many representatives of the old regime, and the Khmer Republic had effectively come to an end. During its brief existence it had received almost exactly one million dollars of US military and economic aid a day.[28]

The final area held by the Republic in any form was the Preah Vihear Temple in the Dângrêk Mountains, which FANK forces still occupied in late April 1975.[29] It was finally taken by the Khmer Rouge on 22 May that year.

Armed forces

See also

Notes

References

  1. ^ "The Constitution of the Khmer Republic". Open Development Cambodia. 10 May 1972.
  2. ^ "The Constitution of the Khmer Republic". Open Development Cambodia. 10 May 1972.
  3. ^ Sharp, Bruce (1 April 2005). "Counting Hell: The Death Toll of the Khmer Rouge Regime in Cambodia". Retrieved 21 January 2013.
  4. ^ Milton Osborne, Sihanouk, Prince of Light, Prince of Darkness. Silkworm 1994. ISBN 978-0-8248-1639-1.
  5. ^ Path, Kosal (2017). Cambodia's Foreign Relations in Regional and Global Contexts. p. 15. ISBN 9789924913412.
  6. ^ Norodom Sihanouk, My War with the CIA, Pantheon (1972). ISBN 978-0-394-48543-0, p. 37
  7. ^ Kiernan, B. How Pol Pot came to power, Yale University Press (2004). ISBN 978-0-300-10262-8, p. 300
  8. ^ Shawcross, W. (1981). Sideshow: Kissinger, Nixon, and the Destruction of Cambodia. New York: Washington Square Books. p. 118. ISBN 0-671-23070-0.
  9. ^ Sutsakhan, Lt. Gen. S. The Khmer Republic at War and the Final Collapse Washington DC: U.S. Army Center of Military History, 1987, Part 1, p. 42. 12 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine See also Part 1 Part 2 21 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Part 3 21 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  10. ^ a b Marlay, R.; Neher, C. (1999). Patriots and tyrants. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-8476-8442-7.
  11. ^ Kiernan, p. 302
  12. ^ Shawcross, p. 163
  13. ^ Marlay, p. 166
  14. ^ Kiernan, p. 303
  15. ^ Shawcross, pp. 190–194. The US insistence on requisition forms being printed in English, rather than the dual French and Khmer forms previously used, meant that quartermasters had to be recruited from the Philippines.
  16. ^ Leifer, M. Selected Works on Southeast Asia, Institute of Southeast Asian Studies (no ISBN), p. 418
  17. ^ Sorpong Peou, Intervention and Change in Cambodia. MacMillan (2000). ISBN 978-0-312-22717-3, p. 52
  18. ^ Kiernan, p. 347
  19. ^ Kamm, H. Cambodia: report from a stricken land, Arcade (1998). ISBN 978-1-61145-126-9, pp. 110–112
  20. ^ Kiernan, p. 346
  21. ^ a b Kahin, G. Southeast Asia: a testament, Routledge (2003). ISBN 978-0-415-29975-6, p. 310
  22. ^ a b Clymer, K. J. (2004). The United States and Cambodia, 1969–2000. Routledge. p. 55. ISBN 978-0-415-32602-5.
  23. ^ a b Clymer, p. 65
  24. ^ Kiernan, p. 348
  25. ^ Clymer, p. 71
  26. ^ Shawcross, p. 293
  27. ^ Shawcross, p. 367
  28. ^ Kiernan, p. 413
  29. ^ Fenton, J. To the bitter end in Cambodia, New Statesman, 25-04-75

External links

  • National anthem of the Khmer Republic
  • Lon Nol- The Khmer Republic
  • République Khmère 1970–1975 (07/15) (in French)
  • République Khmère 1970–1975 (15/15) (in French)

Coordinates: 12°15′N 105°36′E / 12.250°N 105.600°E / 12.250; 105.600

khmer, republic, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, october, 2. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Khmer Republic news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Khmer Republic Khmer ស ធ រណរដ ឋខ ម រ Sathearonarodth Khmer French Republique khmere was the Cambodian state during the United States backed military dictatorship of Lon Nol from 1970 to 1975 Its establishment was formally declared on 9 October 1970 following the 18 March 1970 coup d etat which saw the overthrow of Norodom Sihanouk s government and the abolishment of the Cambodian monarchy Khmer Republicស ធ រណរដ ឋខ ម រ Khmer Sathearonarodth Khmer Republique khmere French 1970 1975Flag Coat of armsMotto ស រ ភ ព សមភ ព ភ តរភ ព វឌ ឍនភ ព ន ងស ភមង គល Khmer Seripheap Samopheap Pheataropheap Vodthonopheap nĭng SŏphomongkolLiberte Egalite Fraternite Progres et Bonheur French Liberty Equality Fraternity Progress and Happiness Anthem ដ ណ រន ស ធ រណរដ ឋខ ម រ Khmer Damnaeur ney Sathearonarodth KhmerMarche de la Republique khmere French March of the Khmer Republic Capitaland largest cityPhnom PenhOfficial languagesKhmerFrenchReligionBuddhism official 1 Demonym s CambodianKhmerGovernmentUnitary presidential constitutional republic de jure 2 Unitary semi presidential constitutional republic under a military dictatorship de facto President 1970 1972Cheng Heng 1972 1975Lon Nol 1975Saukam Khoy acting 1975Sak Sutsakhan a Prime Minister 1970 1971Lon Nol 1971 1972Sisowath Sirik Matak 1972Son Ngoc Thanh 1972 1973Hang Thun Hak 1973In Tam 1973 1975Long BoretLegislatureParliament Upper houseSenate Lower houseNational AssemblyHistorical eraCold War Coup d etat18 March 1970 Republic proclaimed9 October 1970 Constitution12 May 1972 Fall of Phnom Penh17 April 1975Population 1975 3 7 952 000 8 102 000CurrencyRiel KHR Time zoneUTC 07 00 ICT Date formatdd mm yyyyDriving siderightISO 3166 codeKHPreceded by Succeeded byFirst Kingdom of Cambodia KampucheaGRUNKToday part ofCambodiaThis article contains Khmer text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Khmer script The main cause of the coup was Norodom Sihanouk s tolerance of North Vietnamese military activity within Cambodia s borders Vietnamese communist forces had gained de facto control over vast areas of eastern Cambodia as a result Another important factor was the dire state of the Cambodian economy an indirect result of Sihanouk s policies of pursuing neutrality 4 page needed With the removal of Sihanouk the existing Kingdom of Cambodia became a republic officially removing Sisowath Kossamak The character of the new regime was far right and militaristic 5 most significantly it ended Sihanouk s period of covert co operation with the North Vietnamese regime and the Viet Cong and aligned Cambodia with South Vietnam in the ongoing Second Indochina War The Khmer Republic was opposed within the Cambodian borders by the National United Front of Kampuchea Front uni national de Kampuchea FUNK a relatively broad alliance between Sihanouk his supporters and the Communist Party of Kampuchea The insurgency itself was conducted by the CPNLAF the Cambodian People s National Liberation Armed Forces they were backed by both the People s Army of Vietnam PAVN and the National Liberation Front NLF better known as the Viet Cong who occupied parts of Cambodia as part of their ongoing war with the South Vietnamese government Despite the large quantities of military and financial aid from the United States its Khmer National Armed Forces Forces armees nationales khmeres or FANK was poorly trained and unable to defeat either the CPNLAF or the Vietnamese forces of the PAVN and NLF The Republic eventually fell on 17 April 1975 when the Khmer Rouge took Phnom Penh and briefly restored the Kingdom of Cambodia before renaming itself Democratic Kampuchea on 5 January 1976 Contents 1 Political history 1 1 Coup 1 2 Declaration of the Khmer Republic and the formation of FANK 1 3 1972 Removal of Sirik Matak 1 4 1973 Ceasefire and the suspension of the National Assembly 1 5 1974 Fall of Oudong 1 6 End of the regime 2 Armed forces 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksPolitical history EditFurther information Cambodian Civil War Coup Edit Further information 1970 Cambodian coup d etat Prime Minister Lon Nol 2nd from left and President Cheng Heng far right with US Vice President Spiro Agnew during his visit to Cambodia September 1970 Sihanouk himself claimed that the coup was the result of an alliance between his longstanding enemy the exiled right wing nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh the politician Prince Sisowath Sirik Matak depicted by Sihanouk as a disgruntled rival claimant to the Cambodian throne and the CIA who wished to install a more US friendly regime 6 There is in fact little if any evidence of CIA involvement in the coup although it seems that sections of the US military establishment notably the Army Special Forces may have had some involvement in terms of offering support and training to the plotters after being approached by Lon Nol 7 While Sihanouk was out of the country on a trip to France anti Vietnamese rioting took place in Phnom Penh during which the North Vietnamese and NLF embassies were sacked 8 It seems likely that this rioting was at least tolerated and possibly actively organised by Lon Nol the Prime Minister and his deputy Prince Sirik Matak On 12 March the prime minister closed the port of Sihanoukville through which weapons were being smuggled to the NLF to the North Vietnamese and issued an impossible ultimatum to them All PAVN NLF forces were to withdraw from Cambodian soil within 72 hours on 15 March or face military action 9 Despite these actions which directly contradicted Sihanouk s policy of partial tolerance of North Vietnamese activity it appears that Lon Nol himself had great personal reluctance to depose the Head of State he initially may merely have wanted Sihanouk to apply more pressure to the North Vietnamese He initially refused to commit to the plan to convince him Sirik Matak who appears to have had a coup in mind from the start played him a tape recorded press conference from Paris in which Sihanouk threatened to execute them both on his return to Phnom Penh 10 However the Prime Minister remained uncertain with the result that Sirik Matak accompanied by three army officers compelled a weeping Lon Nol to sign the necessary documents at gunpoint A vote was taken in the National Assembly on 18 March under the direction of In Tam in which Sihanouk was stripped of his power Lon Nol assumed the powers of the Head of State on an emergency basis On 28 and 29 March there were large scale popular demonstrations in favour of Sihanouk in several provincial cities but Lon Nol s forces suppressed them with great brutality causing several hundred deaths 11 Lon Nol s brother Lon Nil was among a number of government officials who were murdered by demonstrators Foreign regimes were initially uncertain as to the level of support to give to the new government The North Vietnamese continued to hold talks with Lon Nol regarding the reinstatement of the cancelled trade agreement though subsequent events meant that these were soon to come to an end Declaration of the Khmer Republic and the formation of FANK Edit The most significant immediate effect of the coup was the Cambodian Campaign of April July 1970 in which the South Vietnamese army ARVN backed by US troops entered eastern Cambodia to attack North Vietnamese and Viet Cong forces operating there Despite this assault many of the communist forces escaped westward deeper into Cambodia or to the rural areas of the north east where they would provide support for the insurgency against Lon Nol Lon Nol s immediate reaction was to condemn the action as a violation of Cambodian territory He later informed Alexander Haig that his country had been placed in serious danger as a result When Haig told him that American ground forces would not be used to assist the Cambodian army and that in accordance with the Nixon Doctrine a programme of aid would be given instead Lon Nol openly wept 12 American troops of the 11th Armored Cavalry enter Snuol Cambodia 4 May 1970 On 9 October Sihanouk was condemned to death in absentia by a military court his mother Queen Kossamak the symbolic representative of the monarchy under Sihanouk s regime was placed under house arrest and his wife Monique was sentenced to life imprisonment 10 The new regime simultaneously declared the Khmer Republic and a new constitution was eventually to be adopted in 1972 Sihanouk in the meantime had formed GRUNK a Beijing based government in exile incorporating the communists and dedicated to the Republic s overthrow he declared Lon Nol to be a complete idiot and characterised Sirik Matak as nasty perfidious a lousy bastard 13 The relatively small royal army which at the time of the coup had around 35 000 troops in accordance with Sihanouk s stated policy of neutrality was greatly expanded Reorganising as FANK the republican army had grown to around 150 000 men as early as the end of 1970 mainly through voluntary enlistment as Lon Nol sought to capitalise on a wave of anti Vietnamese sentiment 14 The US also implemented its programme of structured military aid and assistance in training and flew in several thousand Khmer Serei and Khmer Kampuchea Krom militia trained in South Vietnamese bases The Joint Chiefs insisted on massive expansion of FANK to over 200 000 men despite concerns at the severe negative effect this would have on Cambodia s economy while the Military Equipment Delivery Team led by General Theodore C Mataxis demanded the Americanisation of the army s French influenced internal structures in spite of the chaos this caused in the supply chain 15 Despite the US aid FANK commanded by General Sosthene Fernandez was seriously handicapped by corruption particularly by officers claiming salaries for non existent troops and military incompetence Although one of the FANK commanders the former rebel Prince Norodom Chantaraingsey who was coaxed out of military retirement by Lon Nol to raise FANK s 13th Brigade was to have considerable success in pacifying the area around the strategic Highway 4 and the Kirirom Plateau the majority of its generals had little military experience or ability The large scale FANK offensives against the Vietnamese Operations Chenla I and II ended in heavy defeat despite the conspicuous bravery of the individual Cambodian infantrymen As well as fighting the Cambodian Civil War against the pro Sihanouk and communist insurgents and the North Vietnamese the Khmer Republic faced considerable internal problems Sihanouk s domination of political life during the 1950s and 60s meant that there were few confident or experienced Cambodian politicians Almost from the start the Republic was plagued by many of the same political divisions and infighting that had marked Sihanouk s regime primary among these was a damaging power struggle between Lon Nol and Sirik Matak Sirik Matak had been acting Prime Minister during the Republic s first year when Lon Nol s health had been extremely poor but had engendered considerable resentment due to his administrative style and royal connections there was also growing frustration amongst young urban Cambodians at the continued corruption and inefficiency of the regime 16 On Lon Nol s return from hospital in Hawaii in April 1971 he instigated a cabinet crisis by resigning providing a means to dissolve the government with the probable encouragement of his brother Lon Non a figure of considerable influence especially with the military After much political squabbling a new cabinet was formed though Sirik Matak continued as acting premier with the title of Prime Minister Delegate On 16 October 1971 Lon Nol took action to strip the National Assembly of legislative power and ordered it to write a new constitution claiming that these actions were necessary to prevent anarchy this provoked a protest by In Tam and 400 Buddhist monks 17 1972 Removal of Sirik Matak Edit By 18 March 1972 Lon Nol and his brother had managed to drive Sirik Matak from power After Sirik Matak had sacked Keo An a dissident academic Lon Non organised a series of vocal student demonstrations against him calling for his removal 18 Sirik Matak resigned and ostensibly for his protection was placed under effective house arrest 19 Lon Nol used the crisis to oust the Head of State Cheng Heng and took over the role himself appointing the veteran anti Sihanouk nationalist Son Ngoc Thanh as Prime Minister 20 Thanh leader of the Khmer Serei had recruited FANK reinforcements amongst the Khmer Krom of southern Vietnam and the loyalty he commanded amongst these comparatively elite US trained troops meant that his support for the Republic s fragile government remained essential 21 Later that year Lon Nol announced he would hold presidential elections and was surprised when In Tam and Keo An the latter a reputed Sihanoukist not only announced that they would run but then refused to withdraw 22 The elections despite an inevitable victory for Lon Nol revealed considerable dissatisfaction with the government even though they had been rigged in Lon Nol s favour had they been fair it is likely that In Tam would have won 22 The affair prompted In Tam to suggest that the Americans could now stew in Lon Nol s juice 21 The political situation continued to unravel throughout 1972 both opposition parties In Tam s Democratic Party and Sirik Matak s Republican Party refused to contest the elections to the National Assembly held in September leading to a sweeping victory for Lon Non s Socio Republican Party Sangkum Sathearanak Rath There were a growing number of terrorist attacks in the capital one of which was directed at Son Ngoc Thanh 23 Thanh whose last political act was to ban Sirik Matak s newspaper was then forced to resign going back into South Vietnamese exile and was replaced by the moderate leftist Hang Thun Hak 24 While the Khmer Republic s government was being weakened by infighting North Vietnamese forces who had previously carried out much of the fighting against FANK as in Operation Chenla I and II gradually and deliberately scaled back their presence within Cambodian borders leaving mainly logistical and support staff Their place was taken by native Cambodian communist forces of the CPNLAF which had been greatly increased when Sihanouk gave his support to the insurgency rural Cambodians remaining overwhelmingly pro Sihanouk 1973 Ceasefire and the suspension of the National Assembly Edit The Paris Peace Accords of early 1973 seemed to offer a temporary respite from the civil war Lon Nol declared a unilateral ceasefire despite FANK s very weak position on the ground There were in fact a few contacts between some of the more moderate elements of the Khmer Rouge communists notably Hou Yuon and the Republic The North Vietnamese pressured the Cambodian communists to accept the terms of the peace accords their interests lay more in keeping the war active at a low level tying down South Vietnamese troops in the process than in an outright victory for the Khmer Rouge The Khmer Rouge leadership however remained intransigent The fighting resumed on the night of 7 February 1973 when communist forces attacked the FANK perimeter around the besieged city of Kampong Thom 23 By April the Republic regime was in general disarray with FANK troops refusing to fight and looting their own capital and the CPNLAF advancing in many areas of the country In response the US finally threatened to cut off all aid unless Lon Nol acted to broaden the power base and support of the government specifically to reinstate the US ally Sirik Matak and reduce the influence of his brother Lon Non 25 Accordingly on 24 April Lon Nol announced that the National Assembly would be suspended and that a Political Council formed of himself Sirik Matak Cheng Heng and In Tam would effectively rule by decree The CPNLAF advance on Phnom Penh was eventually halted by American bombing which caused horrific casualty levels amongst the communist troops Some commentators state that the experience is likely to have contributed to the brutality shown by the Khmer Rouge cadres in later events 26 1974 Fall of Oudong Edit By early 1974 the Political Council had been sidelined and Lon Nol was once again ruling alone The military situation in the meantime was deteriorating further Communist forces came within shelling distance of Phnom Penh and captured the former royal capital of Oudong in March they evacuated its population shooting government officials and teachers and destroyed or burnt much of the town There was a brief improvement as the year progressed however as FANK retook Oudong and was able to secure supply routes through Lake Tonle Sap End of the regime Edit Despite this the Khmer Republic did not survive the 1975 dry season offensive The Khmer Rouge had by this point surrounded the capital whose population had been vastly increased by refugees from the fighting Lon Nol who was extremely superstitious ordered that consecrated sand be spread around the city from helicopters to protect it Though FANK was by this time fighting with extreme tenacity and the Khmer Rouge soldiers were suffering from poor morale malaria and even higher rates of casualties than FANK fresh supplies of arms and ammunition from China gave them the impetus to overrun the Republic s remaining outposts 27 Proposed peace negotiations repeatedly stalled as Sihanouk refused to deal with Lon Nol directly requesting his removal as a precondition A plan proposed by Etienne Manac h the French Ambassador to China in which Sihanouk would return to Cambodia as the head of a national unity government leading to the likely immediate defection of a large proportion of the Khmer Rouge s peasant soldiers failed to materialise On 1 April 1975 Lon Nol resigned and fled the country into exile FANK almost immediately disintegrated While Sirik Matak Long Boret Lon Non and several other politicians remained in the capital in an attempt to negotiate a ceasefire Phnom Penh fell to the Khmer Rouge on 17 April Within a few days they had executed many representatives of the old regime and the Khmer Republic had effectively come to an end During its brief existence it had received almost exactly one million dollars of US military and economic aid a day 28 The final area held by the Republic in any form was the Preah Vihear Temple in the Dangrek Mountains which FANK forces still occupied in late April 1975 29 It was finally taken by the Khmer Rouge on 22 May that year Armed forces EditMain article Khmer National Armed ForcesSee also EditKhmer National Armed Forces FANK Cambodian Civil War Khmer Republic at the 1972 Summer OlympicsNotes Edit as Chairman of the Supreme CommitteeReferences Edit The Constitution of the Khmer Republic Open Development Cambodia 10 May 1972 The Constitution of the Khmer Republic Open Development Cambodia 10 May 1972 Sharp Bruce 1 April 2005 Counting Hell The Death Toll of the Khmer Rouge Regime in Cambodia Retrieved 21 January 2013 Milton Osborne Sihanouk Prince of Light Prince of Darkness Silkworm 1994 ISBN 978 0 8248 1639 1 Path Kosal 2017 Cambodia s Foreign Relations in Regional and Global Contexts p 15 ISBN 9789924913412 Norodom Sihanouk My War with the CIA Pantheon 1972 ISBN 978 0 394 48543 0 p 37 Kiernan B How Pol Pot came to power Yale University Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 300 10262 8 p 300 Shawcross W 1981 Sideshow Kissinger Nixon and the Destruction of Cambodia New York Washington Square Books p 118 ISBN 0 671 23070 0 Sutsakhan Lt Gen S The Khmer Republic at War and the Final Collapse Washington DC U S Army Center of Military History 1987 Part 1 p 42 Archived 12 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine See also Part 1 Part 2 Archived 21 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine Part 3 Archived 21 February 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Marlay R Neher C 1999 Patriots and tyrants Rowman amp Littlefield p 165 ISBN 978 0 8476 8442 7 Kiernan p 302 Shawcross p 163 Marlay p 166 Kiernan p 303 Shawcross pp 190 194 The US insistence on requisition forms being printed in English rather than the dual French and Khmer forms previously used meant that quartermasters had to be recruited from the Philippines Leifer M Selected Works on Southeast Asia Institute of Southeast Asian Studies no ISBN p 418 Sorpong Peou Intervention and Change in Cambodia MacMillan 2000 ISBN 978 0 312 22717 3 p 52 Kiernan p 347 Kamm H Cambodia report from a stricken land Arcade 1998 ISBN 978 1 61145 126 9 pp 110 112 Kiernan p 346 a b Kahin G Southeast Asia a testament Routledge 2003 ISBN 978 0 415 29975 6 p 310 a b Clymer K J 2004 The United States and Cambodia 1969 2000 Routledge p 55 ISBN 978 0 415 32602 5 a b Clymer p 65 Kiernan p 348 Clymer p 71 Shawcross p 293 Shawcross p 367 Kiernan p 413 Fenton J To the bitter end in Cambodia New Statesman 25 04 75External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khmer Republic National anthem of the Khmer Republic Lon Nol The Khmer Republic Republique Khmere 1970 1975 07 15 in French Republique Khmere 1970 1975 15 15 in French Coordinates 12 15 N 105 36 E 12 250 N 105 600 E 12 250 105 600 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khmer Republic amp oldid 1144152714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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