The
20th century's most disastrous drive for rural utopia
Pol
Pot's social experiment killed 20 percent of Cambodia
By
Clayton Jones
From
the February 01, 2005 edition – The Christian Science Monitor: http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0201/p15s01-bogn.html
Reading
the biography of a 20th-century tyrant takes courage. The tales of atrocities
can be numbing, the motives unclear, and the lessons uncertain. Evil seems like
a lurking character in such books, either in one man, the body politic, or
foreign players, and is eventually exposed as, well, a rather stupid mistake.
British
journalist Philip Short has already led readers through the prickly thicket of
one tyrant's murderous story with his acclaimed 1999 biography of Mao Tse-tung.
In "Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare," he probes deeply into the
background of a man who launched the world's most radical modern revolution by
taking the tiny nation of Cambodia where "no country in history has ever
gone before."
From
1975, when Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge rebels emptied Cambodia's capital of its
residents and declared the nation's history at "Year Zero," until he
himself fled before invading Vietnamese troops in 1979, the outside world knew
little of what horrors he had wrought on the nation's estimated 7 million residents.
The global silence over what was happening was similar to that during the
Jewish holocaust.
While
the 1984 movie "Killing Fields" and previous books on the Khmer Rouge
have kept memories of those horrors before the world's conscience, nothing
compares to the journalistic detail that Short provides here in 446 pages of
narrative and some 200 more of footnotes.
Compared
with Mao, Hitler, Stalin, and other 20th-century tyrants, Pol Pot comes out the
worst in causing the most deaths in proportion to his controlled population. He
was impatient to impose a weird sense of social justice and to regain the
nationalist grandeur of ancient Angkor. His harsh rule led to the deaths of an
estimated one in five Cambodians, either through execution, illness, overwork,
or starvation.
He
tried quickly to impose a communist rural utopia that excluded money, religion,
property, cities, law, even romantic marriage. Children were taken from their
parents at age seven. Anyone caught reading or wearing glasses was considered
an intellectual and probably killed.
The
author pins much of Pol Pot's actions on his warped notions of Buddhist
austerity, detachment, and the suppression of individuality, combined with his
ill-formed study of Marx in Paris as a young man and as a follower of Mao and
Stalin. Born with the name of Saloth Sar and later called Brother No. 1 by his
comrades, he was also jilted in an early love affair that may have left him
bitter.
Relying
on interviews with former Khmer Rouge leaders and the translation of thousands
of documents, Short's psycho-bio also tries to pin much of the blame on
Cambodian culture, where both peasants and kings have been historically brutal,
where the folk tales are grim and menacing, and where the people suffer from a
national inferiority complex.
He
also explains how Pol Pot's cause was helped along by the actions of French
colonizers, Vietnamese communists, United States bombing, Chinese meddling, and
former King Sihanouk. Much of this analysis echoes the explanations given by recent
scholars for the rise of Hitler within a German and international context. It
doesn't always succeed but, like geologists looking for roadcuts that expose
different strata of meaning, it's a search for patterns that might be useful to
prevent future tyranny.
The
illogical can't always be made logical, however, and the book falters in
overreaching generalizations such as this: "Like a cornered animal, which
turns instinctively to confront pursuing predators, Pol Pot viewed policy in
terms of a fight to the death. The alternative was to be devoured."
Still,
Short's contribution is in describing Pol Pot's Cambodia as a modern slave
state, as North Korea still is. Even today, Cambodia is ruled autocratically by
former minor Khmer Rouge leaders, despite the efforts of the United Nations to
bring democracy there. (Pol Pot's top men may face trial next year.)
Much
like slavery's demise, the Khmer Rouge's downfall was due largely to its
internal contradiction in denying each person's basic humanity. Its leaders
eventually turned on themselves in a paranoid purge that provided an opening
for Vietnam to invade Cambodia.
Just
before he died in 1998 in a jungle hideout - unrepentant and unpunished - Pol
Pot claimed in an interview that his conscience was clear and that he had done
it all for his country. Like other tyrants of his century, we may never know
enough about him to draw the right conclusions. Short's book, however, takes us
more than half way there.
•
Clayton Jones is the Monitor's chief editorial writer. He covered Cambodia for
the paper as the Southeast Asia bureau chief from 1986-1990.
Pol
Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare
By
Philip Short
Henry
Holt672 pp., $32.50