









After Vietnam had invaded Cambodia and set up a new government, the ousted Khmer Rouge leadership, including Pol Pot and Nuon Chea, retreated to the jungle along the Thailand-Cambodia border. Instead of becoming pariahs, they continued to play a significant role in Cambodian politics for the next two decades. The Khmer Rouge would likely not have survived without the support of its old patron China and a surprising new ally: the United States. Norodom Sihanouk, now in exile after briefly serving as head of state under the Khmer Rouge, formed a loose coalition with the guerillas to expel the Vietnamese from Cambodia. The United States gave the Sihanouk-Khmer Rouge coalition millions of dollars in aid while enforcing an economic embargo against the Vietnamese-backed Cambodian government. The Carter administration helped the Khmer Rouge keep its seat at the United Nations, tacitly implying that they were still the country's legitimate rulers. The U.S. government's refusal to recognize the new Cambodian government and its unwillingness to distance itself from the Khmer Rouge was motivated by several factors, primarily animosity toward its former foe, Vietnam, and Vietnam's Soviet backers. Additionally, the United States did not want to sour its improving relations with the Khmer Rouge's longtime patron, China. What started as a diplomatic decision to manipulate the Sino-Soviet split and isolate and punish Vietnam became a moral blunder that ensured the survival of the genocidal Khmer Rouge. Its people still traumatized by the massacres of the late 1970s, Cambodia entered a decade of brutal guerilla war between the Sihanouk-Khmer Rouge coalition and the Vietnamese-sponsored government. Hundreds of thousands of refugees fled their homes and sought refuge in Thailand and Vietnam. Between 1979 and 1989, almost 150,000 Cambodians came to the United States. The refugees' plight and the publicity received by genocide survivors led to a belated understanding among Americans of the legacy of the Khmer Rouge and the United States' role in Cambodia's troubles. NEXT - 1992-2002: MOVING AHEAD, LOOKING BACK

photo: Prime Minister Hun Sen at UN headquarters, 1997

credit: UN/OCPI Photo by James Bu photo: Cambodian Child at Refugee Camp - Thailand, July 1979

credit: United Nations/Photo by J.K. Isaac photo: Migrating Cambodian Refugees - November 1979

credit: United Nations/Photo by Saw Lwin photo: Cambodian Mother and Child at Refugee Camp - Thailand, July 1979

credit: United Nations/Photo by J.K. Isaac