KHMER ROUGE TAKEOVER OF CAMBODIA AND RELATED REPORTS: DISPATCHED BY SYDNEY H. SCHANBERG, THE NEW YORK TIMES, 9 MAY 1975.

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May 13, 1975
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Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA Khmer Rouge Takeover of Cambodia and Related Reports: Dispatches by - Sydney H. Schanberg, The New York Times, 9 May 1975. Attached are eyewitness accounts by Sydney H. Schanberg on developmen s in Cambodia, beginning with the 17 April takeover by the Khmer Rouge, whic was marked by widespread plundering by Can mist troops, arrests and repor ed executions of high-level members of the Lon Nol government. The principal dispatch covers the forced evacuation of millions of Cambodians, including the elderly and the sick and wounded, from the city to the countryside, exodus that some observers equate to genocide. This complete upheaval of life for the Cambodians, and the human grief and suffering it is causing are highly exploitable for replay and commentary. However, we feel they are mainly useful for discussions with, or for passing to, liaison, agents of - fluence and other influential local contacts who may not have read first- hand accounts of the Khmer Rouge takeover. The related articles are mainly human interest accounts that provide additional, graphic details on other aspects of the situation. Please note that the article entitled "Grief and Animosity in an Embassy Haven" is tor your background i orma ion on y. This issuance contains articles from domestic and foreign publications selected for field operational use. Recipients are cautioned that most of this material is copyrighted. For repub- lication in areas where copyright infringement may cause prob- lems payment of copyright fees not to exceed $50.00 is authorized per previous instructions. The attachment is unclassified when detached. 13 May 1975 LE-AI "EPv1ec:FQr7 eI4ase 1999/09/02: C1A-RDP79-01194A000100390001-3 Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100390001-3 7arnbodia Reds Are Uprooting Millions AsThey_Impose a `Peasant Revolution The writer of the following dispatch remained in Cam- hodia after the American evacuation and was among the foreigners who arrived in Thailand last Saturday. His dis- patches were withheld, under an agreement among all the confined correspondents, until the remaining foreigners were transported to safety yesterday. By SYDNEY H. SCHANBERG CPYRGHT special to The New Yort-mmn Thailand, ay 8 11 The victorious Cambodian Communists, who marched into[ Phnom Penh on April 17 and, ended five years of war in Cam- bodia, are carrying out a peas-, ant revolution that has thrown the entire country into upheaval. Perhaps as many as three or four million people, most of: them on foot, have been forced' out of the cities and sent on a' mammoth and grueling exodus into areas deep in the country-1 side where, the Communists say, they will have to,become peasants and till the soil. No one has been excluded- even the very old, the veryl young, the sick and the wounded have been forced out onto the roads-and some will clearly, not be strong enough to sur- vive. Old Economy Abandoned The old economy of the cities, has been abandoned, and for, the moment money means, nothing and cannot be spent. Barter has replaced it. All shops have either been looted by Communist soldiers' for such things as watches and transistor radios, or their goods have been taken away in an organized manner to be stored; as communal property. I Even the roads that radiate, out of the capital and that car-I ried the nation's commerce have been virtually abandoned, and', the population living along the! roads, as well as that in all l cities and towns that remained! under the control of the Amen- can-backed Government, has been pushed into the interior.! -Apparently the areas into w is the evacuees are being herded, are at least 65 miles from Phnom Penh. In sum the new rulers-be- fore their overwhelming victorythey were known as the Khmer Rouge-appear to be remaldng Cambodian society in the pew ant image, casting aside every. thing that belonged to the old system, which was generallt dominated by the cities and towns and by the elite and merZ chants who lived there. Foreigners and foreign aid are not wanted--at least not for now. It is even unclear hove much influence the Chinese and North Vietnamese will have, despite their considerable aid td the Cambodian insurgents against the Government of Marr shat Lon Nol. The new authori: ties seem determined to do things themselves in their own way. Despite the propaganda terminology and other trap- pings, such as Mao caps and Ha Chi Minh rubber-tire sandals; which remind one of Peking and Hanoi, the Communists seem fiercely independent and very Cambodian. Isolation From World Seen- Judging from their present actions, it seems possible thab they may largely isolate their country of perhaps seven mils lion people from the rest of the world for a considerable time--at least until the period of upheaval is over, the agrarian revolution takes concrete shape and they are ready to show their accomplishments to for- eigners. Old and Sick Included; Economy Is at Standstill Some of the party officials irl Phnom Penh alcn talkari ahnut changing the capital to a more traditional and rural town like Siem Reap, in the northwest. For those foreigners, includ- ing this correspondent, who stayed behind to observe the take-over, the events were an astonishing spectacle. In Phnom Penh two million people suddenly-.moved out of the city en masse in stunned silence -'tiralking, bicycling, pushing cars that had run out! of fuel, covering the roads like a human carpet, bent under; sacks of belongings hastily thrown together when the heav ily armed peasant soldiers came and told them to leave immedi- ately, everyone, dispirited and frightened by the unknown that awaited them and.many plainly! terrified because they were soft city people ind were sure ' the! trip would kill'them. Hospitals jammed with wounded were emptied, right down to the last patient. They, went - limping, crawling, on crutches, carried on relatives' backs, wheeled on their hospital beds. The Communists have few doctors and meager 'medical supplies; so many of these pa- tients had little chance of sur- 1 viving. On April 17, the day I this happened, Phnom Penh's biggest hospital had over 2,000' patients and there were several thousand more In other hos- pitals; many of the wounded were dying for lack of care. Silent Streets, Eerie Ughts A once-throbbing city became an echo chamber of silent streets lined with abandoned cars and gaping, empty shops. Streetlights burned eerily for a population that was no longer there. The end of the old and the start of the new be an earl in the morning or the e cable office the line went dead for mechanical reasons at 6 A.M. On the previous day, amid heavy fighting, the Com- munist-led forces had taken the airport a few miles west of the city, and during the night they had pressed to the capital's edges, throwing in rockets and shells at. will. Thousands of new refugees and fleeing soldiers were-filling the heart of the capital, wander-, ing aimlessly;:looking for shat- ter, as they awaited the city's' imminent collapse. Everyone--Cambodians and' foreigners alike-'.-thought this had to be -Phnom Penh's most miserable hour after long days of fear and ,privation as the, Communist forces drew closer. They looked ahead with hopeful relief to the collapse of the city, for they felt that when the Communists came and the war finally ended, at least the suf- fering would largely be over. All of us were wrong. That -view. of the future of Cambodia-as a possibly flex- ible place even under Commu nism, where changes would not! be extreme and ordinary folk; would be left alone-turned out to be a myth. Inadequate Descriptions American officials had de- scribed the Communists as in- decisive and often ill-coordi-! nated, but they turned out to' be firm, determined, well- trained, tough and disciplined. The Americans had also said' that the rebel army was badly' riddled by casualties, forced to fill its ranks by hastily impress- ing young recruits from the countryside and throwing them into the front lines with only' a few days' training. The thou- sands of troops we saw both in the countryside and in Phnom Penh while they in-' Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100390001-3 CPYRGHT cluded women sA roved militia, spme of om seemed no more than 10 years old, looked healthy, well organized, heavily armed and well trained. Another prediction made by the Americans was that the Communists would carry out a bloodbath once they took over-massacring as many as 20,000 high b-fficials and intel- lectuals. There have been un- confirmed reports of execu- tions of senior military and civilian officials,` and no one who witnessed the take-over doubts that top people of the old regime wilt be or have been. punished and perhaps killed or thit a large numher of people will die 5of the hardships on the march into'#he countryside. But none of this. will apparently bear any resemblance to theI mass execution%.that had been, predicted by Westerners. [In a news conference Tuesday President Ford re- iterated reports-he termed them "hard intelligence"- that 80 to 90 Cambodian of- ficials and, their wives had been executed.] Refugees Poured In On the first day, as the sun was rising, a short swing by automobile to the northern' edge of the city showed soldiers and refugees pouring in. The, northern defense, line had ob- viously collapsed. By the time I reached tie Hotel Le Phnom and climbed ~ the two flights of stairs to my room, the retreat could be clearly seen ;from my window, and small-atrils fire could be heard in the city. At 6:30 A.M. I wrote in my ? notebook: "The city is falling," .- Over the .. pent couple of hours there were periodic ex- changes,-of fire' as the Com- munists $ncot tered pockets resistangg But most Govern- ians. White flags suddenly sprouted frdtn housetops and) from armor personnel car-1 riers, which !?semble tanks. ! Some soldiery were takin?I the clips o of. their rifles; others werec anging into civil- ian clothes. ;Rome-Government office workers were hastily den- nine the black naiam;i-like clothes worn by Indochinese Communists. 1 Shortly before 9 A.M. thei first rebel ?.troops approached the hotel, coming from the north down Monivong Boule- vard. A crowd of soldiers and civilians, including newsmen, churned forth to greet them- cheering and, applauding and embracing and linking arms to form a phalanx as they came along. The next few hours saw quite a bit of this celebrating, though shooting continued here and I Communists had mari(ea ror .-..notedly: t`We would like'lyou I there, some of it only a few a cruel and sadistic imposition;. except for Lieut. Gen. Sirik 1ican people whn haw lt`14 ruuwed yaicia frum the hotel. of the law of the u le, in r n r wno. p rteo e ig W1 a _4 i Civilians and 1 p e* For ReFeas i#99SMffl2r: CIS ~ i1 ~r @3100"W nd to all le For eIe sen1OWO /O2e: CtAeRDR79t:Q1494AOOA10 900'01J3ench Embassy, around town-in? jeeps, atop seen throotigh the'.eyes of the where he had taken refuge. personnel carriers and in cars -shouting happily. % Most civilians stayed nerv- ously indoors, however, not yet sure what -was going on or who was who, What was the fight- ing inside the city all about? they wondered; was it between diehard Government troops and the Communists; or between rival Communist. factions fight- ing over the spoils? Or. was it mostly exuberance? Some of these questions, in- cluding the nature of the fac- tionalism, have still not been answered satisfactorily, but on that first day such mysteries quickly became academic, for within a few hours, the mood changed. The cheerful and pleasant troops we first' encountered- we came to call them the soft troops, and we learned later that they were discredited and disarmed, with their leader de- clared a traitor, they may not even have been authentic -were swiftly displaced by battle-hardened soldiers. While some of these were occasionally friendly, or at least not hostile, they were also all business. Dripping with arms like overladen fruit trees- grenades, pistols, rifles, rockets -they immediately began clear- the city of civilians. Using loudspeakers, or sim- ply shouting and brandishing weapons, they swept through the streets, ordering people out of their houses. At first we thought the order only applied to the rich in villas, but we quickly saw that it was for everyone as the streets became clogged with a sorrowful ex- odus. Cars stalled or their tires went flat, and they were aban- doned. People lost their sandals in the jostling and pushing, so they, lay as a reminder of the throng that had passed. Nb Reasons Given In the days to follow, during the foreign colony's confine- ment in the Prench Embassy compound;:, we heard reports on international .pews broad- casts that the Communists rj- d. evacuated the city by tellli g people the United States-was about to bomb it. However, all the departing civilians I talked with said they had beet) given no reason except that the city had to be reorganized. They were told they had to go far from Phnom Penh. In almost every situation we encountered during the more than two weeks we were under Communist control, there was a sense of split vision-whether to look at events through West- peasant soldiers and revolu- Mr. Long Boret's eyes. wore' tionaries, the forced evacuation puffy and red, almost dow-i to of the-cities is a harsh necessi- slits. He had Probably beez+ p ty? Perhaps they are convinced, all night- and perhaps he ad that there is no way to build; been weeping. His wife d1 a new society for the benefit two children were also sti I in of the oitlinary" mean, hitherto the country; later they SO' L ht exploited, without literally refuge at 'the French Embe y, starting from the beginning;, only to be rejected as per; ns in such an unbending -view who might "compromise" he, people who represent the old rest of he refugees. ways and those considered Mr. Long Bonet, who adI weak or it and would be expendible'and would be weed- talked volubly and articula ly, ed out. Or was the policy both on the telephone the nigh: a-I cruel and ideological? fore, had difficulty spe;ng A foreign doctco; offeri'ad this coherently. He could o ly~ explanation. for the expulsion mumble yes; no and thank u,I of the sick and wounded from so conversation was in s-1 the hospital: "rfiey coul,a 41ot sibie. There is still no hard i . r-I cope with all the` patigmts - motion on what has ha pr, pr' they do not have the doctors--1 so they apparently decided to', to him. Most people who t ve j throw totem all out and blame talked with the Commis i sts; any deaths on the old regime, believe it a certainty th her That way they could start from will be executed, if indee,- he scratch medically." - execution has not air dy 'Pure and. Simple Genocide' - taken place. Some western observers con- One of the Communist d- sidered that the exodus ap- ers at the Information Mire try proached genocide. One of that day-probably a gel. al, them, watching from his refuge though his uniform bon no in the French Embassy com- markings and he decline 1 to pound, said: "They are crazyl give his name-talked s th- This -is pure and simple geng, ingly >tn the 50 prisoner: He cide.'They will kill more.people assure: them that there re this way than i'f there had only seven traitors and at' been hand-to-hand fighting inI other officials of the oi, re-' hecity'fi gime would be dealt with ui- Anot:her f0meftgn doctor, who tably. "There will be n? re- had- bjeery ford-.: at gunpointl prisals," he said. Their str.-i ed to abandon a seriously wound- faces suggested that ey ed patieift'in'midoperation. ad-i would like to believe hir but del in a dark voice: "They) (lid not. have not got a humanitar'an. As he talked, a ad thought in their heads!" crouched in combat-ready si- Whatever the Communists' tions around him, almost a if, pufpose, the exodus did note it was guarding him at a nst grow heavy until dusk, and harm. even then onlookers were slow ttf realize that the people were The officer who app- red no more than age 35, p ed being forcibly evacuated. I to chat with foreign new en.' For my own part, I had His tine was polite and e problem that preoccupied ma e that aftbrnoon: I with others, times he smiled, but even, ing was held tened with execut on, threa-1 he said foreigners, meant that nothi to After our release, we went! him and that our int. r stsf to the InfQrmation Ministry,! were alien to his. I because we had heard about a? Asked about the fate o' the! broadcast directing high offi- 20 or so foreign journ r istsl cials of the old regime to re- missing in Cambodia sine: the port there. When we arrived,) early days of the war, hF aid about 50 prisoners+,were stand-; he had heard nothing. Eked, ing outside the bugdis'r& among I if we would be permitt to l them Lon Non, the younger file from the cable offic , he! brother of President Lon Nol, smiled sympathetically and who went into exile on April 1,i said, "We will resolve all > ob- and Brig. Gen. Chim chhuon, )ems in their proper order." who yeas close to the fotmer Clearly an educated ma i of President. 'Other generals land no more than 35, he al ost Cabinet' ministers were also Irertainly speaks French, the there--very nervous but trying lanr'uage of the nation hat 'to to appear untroubled. ruled Cambodia' for nea I al Premier Long Boret, who the century until the ninetet fif-! day before had made an offer, it;es, but he gave no hi;. of' of surrender with certain con- this colonial vestige, spe.r ing, ditions only to have it imme-j only in Khmer through a in diately rejected, arrived at the teroreter. ern eyes or through what we, ministry an hour later. He s In the middle of the cc> er-' eT ease v is message to the world." Purpose: End the War Noting that Congress had; halted aid.to the Phnom Penh Government, he said "The pus-j i~rOe was to- stop the war," but he quickly added: "Our s*ru,!oie would not have stopped even if they had given more aid." Attempts to find out morel about who he was and about political and military organiza-I tion led only to imprecision. The officer said: "I represent; the armed forces. There are many divisions. I am one of the many." Asked if there were factions, he said there was only one political organization and one government. Some top political and governmental leaders are not far from the city, he added, but they let the military enter first "to organize things." Most military units, he said, are called "rumdos," which means "liberation forces." Neither this commander nor any of the soldiers we talked with ever called themselves Communists or Khmer Rouge (Red Cambodians). They al- ways said they were liberation troops or nationalist troops and called one another brother or the Khmer equivalent of com- rade. The nomenclature at least is confusing, for Western intel- ligence had described the Khmer Rumdos as a faction loyal to Prince Norodom Sihan- ouk that was being downgraded by Hanoi-trained Cambodians and losing power. The Communists named the Cambodian leader, who was deposed by Marshal Lon Nol in 1970 and has been living in exile in Peking, as their figurehead chief of state, but none of the soldiers we talked with brought up his name. One over - all impression emerged from our talk with the commander at the Informa- tion Ministry: 'The military will be largely in charge cf the early stages of the upheavc.l, carrying out the evacuation, organizing the new agrarian program, searching for hidden arms and resstern, repairing damaged bridges. The politicians-or so it seemed from all the evidence during our stay-have for the moment taken a rear seat. No significant political or adminis- trative apparatus was yet visi- ble; it did not seem to be a government yet, but an army. The radio announced April; 28, that a special national.con- gress attended by. over 300' delegates was held in Phnom Penh from April 25 to 27. It was said to have been chaired by the Deputy Premier and ni eIeason1899/891O2 Samphan, who has emerged- at least in public annoimce- srrents-as the top leader. De- spite that meeting the military *tiU. seemed, to be running things as we emerged from Cambodia. on Saturday. One apparent reason is that politicians and bureaucrats are not equipped to do the dirty work and arduous tasks of the early phases of reorganizaton. Another is that the military, as indicated in conversations with Khmer-speaking foreign- ers they trusted somewhat, seemed worried that politicians 'Cr soft-living outsiders in their movement might steal the : ic- tory and dilute it. There could be severe power struggles ahead. After leaving the prisoners and the military commander at the ministry, we headed for the Hotel Le Phnom, where another surprise was waiting. ,The day before, the Red Cross ,turned the hotel into a protect- ed international zone and ,draped it with huge Red Cross flags. But the Communists were not interested. At 4:55 P.M. troops waving guns and rockets had forced their way into the grounds and ordered the hotel emptied with- in 30 minutes. By the time we arrived 25 minutes had elapsed. The fastest packing job in history ensued. I even had time to "liberate" a type- writer some one had abandoned, since the troops had "liberated" mine earlier. We were the last ones out, running. The Red Cross had abandoned several vshicles in the yard after removing the keys, so several of us threw our gear an the back of a Red Cross Honda pickup truck and started pushing it up the boulevard toward the French Embassy. . Several days before, word was passed to those foreigners who stayed behind when the Americans pulled out on April 12 that, as a last resort, one could take refuge at the embas- sy. France had recognized the new government, and it was thought that the new Cambo- dian leaders would respect the embassy compound as a sanc- tuary. As we plodded up the ro7d, big fires were burning on the city's outskirts, sending smoke clouds into the evening sky like a giant funeral wreath en- circlin the capital. The cmb ss,,, as only sever- al hundred yards away, but what was happen'ng on the road made it seem rnu'-h farth- er. All around us people were fleeing, for there was no refuge. for them. And coming into the city from the other directior- was a fresh battalion marchiifg in single file. They looked cur= L9u?1?P4~O1 OO49,~~Qt11 st need seed to QIA' ROPthem. vows y at In the 13 days of confinement, that followed, until our evacua-' tion by, military truck to ti, That border, we had only a peephole onto what was going on outside, but there were still many things that could be seen and many clues to the revol-- tion that was going on. We could hear shooting, sometimes nearby but mostly in other parts of the city. Often it sounded like shooting in the air, but at other tames it seemed- like small battles. As on the day of the city's fall we werE never able to piece together 'ii' satisfactory explanation of the': shooting, which died down aft,' ter about a week. We could see smoke from. the huge fires from time to time, and there were reports: from foreigners who trickled,. into the embassy that certain'- quarters were badly burned and, that the water - purificati4ii plant was heavily damaged. ~?, The foreigners who for var5- ous reasons came in later cart vied stories, some of therm eyem witness accounts, of suafl things as civilian bodies along the roads leading out of the' city - people who had ap? parently died of illness or ex" haustion on the march. Bttt each witness got only 'r- glimpse, and no reliable esti- mate of the toll was possibler Reports from roads to the south and southeast of Phnoib Penh said the Communists were breaking up families by dividing the refugees by sex and age. Such practices were not reported from other roads on which the refugees floodOd out of the capital. Executions Reported Reports also told of execur, tions, but none were eyewif- ness accounts. One such repoct said high military officers were executed at a rubber plantation a couple of miles north of the city. In the French Embassy coin. pound foreign doctors and re lief agency officials were pessi mistic about the survival chain ces of many of the refugees. "There's no food in the country- side at this time of year," an international official said. "What will they eat from now until the rice harvest in Noverpi ter?" The new Communist officials. in conversations with . United Nations and other foreign re- presentatives during our con- finement and in statemeJnf:s since, have rejected the of foreign aid. "whether it is military, political, economic, social, diplomatic, or whether it takes on a so-called humani- tarian foran." Some foreign o~)- servers wondered whether this included China, for they specyy- lated that the Cormunists served before we entered tht 'French compound continued fs' difficult to say. In any case, it is essential to understand who the Communist soldiers are to understand the behavior of some of them in disciplinary matters, particularly looting. They are peasant boys, pure sand simple - darker skinned than their city brethren, with gold in their front teeth. To them the city is a curiosity, an oddity, a carnival, where you visit but do not live. The .city means next to nothing in their scheme of things. One Kept, the Rest Given When they looted jewelry shops, they kept only one watch for themselves and gave the rest to their colleagues or passersby. Transistor radios, cameras and cars held the same toy-like fascination-something to play with, as children might, but not essential. From my airline bag on the day I was seized and threat- ened with execution they took only some cigarettes, a pair of boxer underwear shorts and a' handkerchief. They passed up a blue shirt and $9,000 in cash in a money belt. The looting did not really contradict the Communist im- age of rigid discipline, for Com- manders apparently gave no orders against the sacking 4'P shops, feeling, perhaps, that this was the least due their men. after five years of jungle fight-' ins. Often they would climb into, abandoned cars and find that, they would not run, so they would bang on them with their. rifles like frustrated children, or they would simply toot the horns for hours on end or keep. turning the headlights on and. off until the batteries died. One night at the French Ems bassy, I chose to sleep on the grass outside; I was suddenly awakened by what sounded. like. a platoon trying to smash down} the front gates with a battering ram that had bright lights and a loud claxon. It was only a bunch of soldiers playing with and smashing up the cars that had been left outside the, gates. Though these country soldiers 'broke into villas all over th' (city and took the curious thing they wanted-one walked past, the embassy beaming proudly. in a crimson-colored wool overt, coat that hung down to hiss Ho Chi Minh sandals-they never stayed in the villas. With big, soft beds empty, they slept: in the courtyards or the streetgw Almost without exceptioR- footsoldiers I talked with, when; asked what they wanted to,- do, replied that they only wan,-,,, ed to go home. Approved For Release 1999/09/02,,,: CIA-RDP79-01194AO00100390001-3 caries anti Anrmosr, InanEmbassyHaven CPYRGHT The following dispatch by Sydney H. Schanberg ac- companied his account of the upheaval in Cambodia. Special to The New York Times BANGKOK, Thailand, May 8 -For the 800 foreigners, in- luding this correspondent, who spent two weeks in the French Embassy in Phnom enh after the Communists ook over, the time seemed ike a chaotically compressed generation of life. A baby was born, another died. A dozen marriages were performed-all marriages of convenience to enable Cam- bodians to get French pass- ports so that they could es- cape the country and its peasant revolution. There were days of deep sorrow. Cambodians without foreign papers had to go on the trek into the countryside. Friends were torn apart. Families broken up as Cam- bodian husbands were separ- ated from their European wives. On those days sobbing could be heard in every cor- ner of the compound. And there were hopes rose, days rumors said that was imminent. days when when the evacuation emerged than the Heroes and knaves -more of the latter blankets, slept on the floor of a large living room- surrounded by humming air- ping water and food was and more and hardly an hour limited, and out of this grew went by without an ar- tween groups. compou, usually over some- and French civilians living in after which we had to rely the driveways and gardens on water tapped from our French and the Fre;ffh staff livered periodically in barrels of Calmette Hospital, who "y "" 8 __ 1___-There was never enough for foreigners, including the fa- Nothing Funny About It write targets - Americans With food limited and with than sharing. A minor exam- the evidence of which filled pie: Put a pack of cigarettes every walkway and gar- d th d e compoun . en to on a table for 10 seconds The compound was difficult and turn around, and it at times, but never as diffi- after 13 days in the embassy our situation was "more and lf more precarious." Sometimes .. _ h d .. ..- - a an says on use To Lam nnroved For It".e I' PQ/6 The forced evacuation as part of an apparent camp 'gn to make it clear to n Dyrac, the consul and se for French official at the emias- bassy, and , to everyone els in the compound that the ew Government, not foreign rs, was in charge-and unde its own rules. The first thing the Co u- nists did was declare at they did not recognize he compound as an em sy, simply as a regroupment n- ter for foreigners under t air control. This shattered he possibility of asylum for gh officials of the ousted re e who had sought sanctu ry. On the afternoon of A ril 20, in a gloomy driz le, Lieut. Gen. Sirik Matak, ho was among those marked or execution, and a few o tier leading figures were taken away in the back of a san ta- tion truck. Throughout our stay he Communists continued t eir campaign of proving t it primacy-refusing to le a French plane land with food and medical supplies, re s- ing to allow us to be eva u- ated in comfort by air inst ad of by rutted road in he back of military trucks, a d, finally, shutting down lie embassy radio transmit er, our only contact with he outside world. At the same time t key did not physically harass or abuse us-fthe only time ur baggage was searched as by Thai customs offici is when we crossed the border -and they did event illy provide us with food and water. The food was usua ly live pigs, which we had to butcher. Another Point of View Though the new rulers w re obviously trying to Inflict a certain amount of diseomf rt -they kept emphasizing at they had told us in r o a foreign newsman watching broadcasts to get out of e him, he forced a smile, "Our city before the final assa It morale is up," he said. "It and that by staying we ? d must be up. Today is the delibe~rabely gone against th it CI Approved For Release 4299/019/02 : CIA P1 O1oi8 10039 in- me. All Cambodians here thought that when the Khmer Rouge came it would be all welcomes and cheering and bravo and the war would be over and we would be- come normal again. Now we are stunned, stunned." There was nothing funny for Mrs. Praet, a Belgian whose Cambodian husband was being forced to leave her and join the march. As she wept into her handkerch- ief he embraced her gently. "Courage, ma cherie. Cou- rage, ma cherie," he whis- peerd. She could not control herself and her small body shook with her weeping as their two little girls looked on uncomprehending. There was nothing funny for a Government officer who cannot be named here who vainly took refuge in the embassy. Soon he and his large family had to leave. years, wounded several times, he was reduced to hopelessness and was crying like a child. 'Could Have Gotten Out, empl9Ye? who sat sobbing all Cambodians wit out under a tree on the morning foreign passports or pa ers, of April 19. Her mother and which forced about 500 father were missing, and in peope to take to the rod. two days she would be Family or not. we all lost forced to take her young someone close to us, and son and go into the country- when the Cambod ans side herself. trudged through the gat we "I was an optimist," she foreigners stood in the f ont said as the tears coursed yard, weeping unasham ly. down her cheeks. "Not only Emphasizing Primary a , bodians left The hgspl al'S Though some people man- : sheep, tethered to a tiack. aged not to fare too badly, was bleating mournfully no for most of those in the one paid any attention. compound the situation was At one time, about 300 far more than a series of people were living in the annoyances; there was noth- attractivel landscaped om- ipg funny about it. pound, which is 200 y rds *them was nothing funny by 250 yards or so. hen for Mrs. Nha, an Air France the Communists ordered out "I could have gotten out of the country 10 days ago," he said "but I believed the UnitNd States would come and help, do something for us. If you get out. please write about this. Tell the world what is happening here." Some Cambodian women, realizing that their infants could not survive the long trek, earfully gave theirs to French families for foster care or adoption. "My first baby, my only baby! a mother in shock shrieked. "Save him! Save him! You can do it." In a corner a young Cam- bodian who Is a Roman Cath- olic was reading a passage from his Bible: "It is necessa- ry to entirely renounce one- self to obtain freedom of CPYRGHT air point of viq~pprt~ar~ed FO O A ng fed and h much because he was too drunk tter than their foot soldiers had an epileptic seizure. The ere and should not com- lain. But complain we did - bout the food, about each ther, about the fact that em- assy officials were dining on hicken and white wine while e were eating plain rice and asking it down with heavily hlorinated water. Though there were excep- ons, constructive figures ho worked hard to make the ompound run smoothly, our . quabbling and our refusals share and cooperate pre- ented a spectacle that may 1 ave reinforced the Commu- i ists' notion of us as people selfish and egotistical to I ve a less than affluent Asian iety. Outside the gates of the mpound soldiers were liv- i g in simple fashion.-s'.eep- i t; on the ground and sub- sting on rice and salt, with an occasional chicken or iece of pork. Among the embassy deni- s, even in the midst of the t ars and heartache, a search f r the appearance of nor- alty went on. Blossoms and Bridge A Frenchwoman picked ange-colored blossoms from bush and twined them in I er laughing child's hair. Gosta Streijffert, a former ?.vedish Army officer from a 1 atrician family who is a ed Crers official sat erect i a straight-backed chair he I ad carried outside and read British news phagaz.ine with is monocle fixed. At a table nearby a United ations official and a Scot- i sh Red Cross medical team l laved bridge and drank hisky; someone carped I udly about the way his artne" conducted the bid- i ng. In the midst of all this an merican airplane mechanic ho did not leave Cambodia -Red Crass doctors carried him on the run to the build- ing where the hospital staff was quartered with their equipment. The American recovered slowly. His case interrupted the staff's dinner-steak. We were envious, and they seemed embarrassed and an- gry when journalists made notes about their full larder. Why was there not more sharing, more of a commu- nity spirit? What made us into such acquisitive, self- protective beings? Why did all the Asians live outside, in the heat and rain, while many of the Cauca- sians. like my group, lived inside, with air-conditioning?- We explained it by saying the living arrangements were up to the embassy, but this was clearly not an answer. Was our behavior and our segre- gation a verdict on our way of life? Some Exceptional Behavior Amidst the generally dis- appointing behavior of the Westerners therewere excep- tions-people who rose above the squabbling and managed to hold things together. There was Francois Bizot, a Frenchman who worked for many years in the coun- tryside restoring ancient temples and ruins. He lost his Cambodian wife and mother-in-law, who were forced on the march. Yet his relationship with the Com- munists was strong and they trusted him, for he had met some in his wont in the in- terior and he speaks Khmer fluently. It was Mr. Bizot who, in the early days of our con- finement, was allowed to scout for food and water. And it was he who successfully argued the twos of some Asians whose papers were not in perfect older. A num- 2: C1Q1QG;W'%T0U 01 their futtirls to h18L Thera were, others who performed coifetructdve roles, among them Douglas A. Sap- per 3d, an American with a Special Forces background who was Involved in a pri- vate airline company. Sapper, as everyone calls him, organized our group's kitchen and food rationing to make sure supplies would last. His ranger training-and his colorful language, none of which can be reproduced here -kept us eating regularly and kept pilferers out of the larder. Disappointing Behavior These special people not- withstanding, the general level of behavior remained disappointing throughout our stay. We held constant group meetings and made endless lists of who was supposed to perform what chores, and we were constantly going through the movements of organizing, but we never really got organized. Lassitude and depression set in as the days dragged on. People lay dozing on t makeshift beds through the day, waiting only for the next meal. One journalist slipped into a torpor in which he had energy only to lift his aeresol insecticide can and spray away flies. Occasionally, however, there was an occurence dramatic enough to break this morphic aura-such as the sighting of a Chinese plane on April 24 coming in for a landing at the airport,' possibly carrying high Cam- bodian and Chinese officials from Peking. There was also the unex- pected arrival the day before of the seven Russians who had been holding out at the Soviet Embassy. They had been desperately trying to make friendly contact with the new Cambodian laadwra 000?A0e'b?ance"Chines in- ence. But it was the Chinese nd not the Russians who ad been supplying the Khner Rouge with arms. The Ckm- bodian Communists robe ed the Soviet overtures, fir a rocket through the se nd floor of their embassy, 1o ted the building and ordered the Russians to the French nn- pound. The Russians, ha ing failed in their mission, l cod gloomy. They did not ap re- ciate any of the jokes a out assignment to Siberia or he salt mines. Veritable Stotsboase The Russians seemed to console themselves by ing a veritable storehou of food, including large e of tinned meat and v a. They shared none of it ith anyone either in the c m- pound or on the trip to ai- land-which occasioned arguments and also some ther jokes about the - geoisie and the revisionist in- fluences that seemed to h ve crept into Soviet Commun' m. The Russians did not ap ciate those either. This phase came to an nd for us In the early hours on April 30 when-after an e fling of sipping champs e "borrowed" from emba sy stocks and singing d minedly hardy traveling so g's such as "It's a Long Wa to Tipperary," we were aw k- ened as scheduled, afte a few hours' sleep, and told to board the trucks. As we stepped into he pleasantly cool air with ur sacks and suitcases, we co d see in the night sky the li is of many planes coming fr m the direction of South V t- nam and heading west. ai- gon was falling, and So th Vietnamese pilots, carryng their families and other o- gees, were making their o n evacuation journey to ai- land. American's Brief Brush With Arrest and Death -Some of the foreigners This dispatch was also writ- % iters, the car ho stayed behind after the ten by Sydney H. Schanberg. money, `it y weredrus into an merican evacuation of nompenh learned quickly driver, Sarun, we had gone armored personnel carrier, d at first hand that the to look at conditions in the slamming the hatch and rear ommunist-led forces were largest civilian hospital, door shut. We thought we it the happy - go - lucky Preah Keth Mealea. Doctors were finished. troops we had seen in the and surgeons, out of fear, But Mr. Dith Pran saved i itial stage of the Commu- had failed to come to work st take-over. and the wounded were bleed- I had my first experience our lives, first by getting ing to death in the corridors. into the personnel carrier with the tough Khmer Rouge As we emerged from the with us and then by talking ps early in the afternoon operating block at 1 P.M. soothingly to our captors for? the first day of the take- and started driving toward two and a half hours and 'er. the front gate, we were con- finally convincing them that m With Dith Pran. a local fronted by a band of heavily we were not their enemy Wit pioye of The New York armed troops just then com- but merely foreign newsmen es, ion Swain of the Sun- ing into the grounds. They covering their victory. Times of London, Alan We are still not clear why y put guns to our heads and , ockoff, a freelance Amen- shoutin angrily, hre they were to angry, but we during a journey on which photographer,AlYorffed For ~ asen14 t~002,: 1C t, t 0 01( in tot odians were CPYRGHT the hospital at that time to remove the patients and were startled to find us, for they wanted no foreign witnesses. At one point they asked if any of us were Americans, and we said no, speaking French all the time and let- ting Mr. Dith Pran translate into Khmer. But if they had looked into the bars they had confiscated, which they did not, they wotild have found my passport and Mr. Rockoff's. Officers Also Picked Up We spent a very frightened half-hour sweating in the CPYRGHT Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : CIA-RDP79-01194A000100390001-3 ,igh military officers and ho were, if that is possible, ;en more frightened than Then followed two hours the oven under guard at bile Mr. Dith Pran pulled ff his miracle negotiation with our captors as we .atched giddy soldiers pass- ng with truckloads of looted loth, wine, liquor, cigarettes nd soft drinks, scattering ome o f the booty to soldiers refugees leaving the c y. we thought they were People who had fled into the city from the near outskirts in the last days of the fighting and were now returning home. We did not yet realize that people were being for- cibly evacuated. We were finally released at 3:30 P.M., but the two Combodian military men were held. Onewaspraying softly. Few Stowaways Joined_Long_Convoy A GAMBODIANS ABLE TO EFFECT ESCAPE Travelers See How Rulers Have Organized Rural Life -Troops Along the Way, The following dispatch was also written by Sydney. H. Scftanberg. .- spetiai to The Nc : YeY Times BANGKOK, Thailand, May 8 "'As refugees beginning our evicuation journey to Thailand, wp left the French Embassy in PI'knom Penh on April 30 in vir? tullly the same chaos in which we had entered it 13 days earlier. In the predawn darkness there was milling and confu- siort in the embassy yard as rnlore than 500 of us clambered into 26 Soviet, Chinese and Aiuerican military trucks for the 250-mule journey. There were supposed to be 2OTpersons per truck, but dark- nos and confusion cover a mul- titude of things and somestow- avgays managed to sneak aligard. There were five: Asian wires of westerners whose papers were incomplete but who wee fiercely determined to get out; a child of one of them and a , German television corre- s N1 of them, for reasons that cannot be fully told here, got onto my truck, which contained, among other passengers, some Americans, Swedes, Bulgarians ,rod seven Russians from their embassy. with a mammouth load of luggage and food. The German newsmen sat up- right but the other stowaways slipped under our legs and we covered them with towels, bush hats and other oddments. Some- how the officials who were checking the convoy never noticed them. At 6 A.M., with the sun just coming up, the convoy moved out. As it did we saw a frosh battalion of troops marching single file into the city from, the north-a mirror image of the l battalion that marched in on the evening of April 17 when we entered the French Embassy. New Images on tehe Way Then the scene changed and we met new images. The street light burned casting their arti- ficial rays along the boulevards of a deserted city. Abandoned cars and assorted trash marked the'trail of the missing popula- tion. In the courtyard of the Hotel Le Phnom soldiers stood in morning formation. Another battalion formation was lined up down the street in front of the railway station; similar formations were visible on ad- joirtmg streets. The soldiers stood with heads bowed, their weapons at their feel:, as if in prayer. An anthem Was being played; it appeared to be some kind of morning "thought session." Every shop had been broken open and looted. Not a single civylian was visible-oily sol- diers camping in the shops and on the sidewalks. There were Large numbers of them. We suddenly turned right- that is, west-down the road to the airport, and this was puzzling because we were sup- posed to be heading north an northwest toward the Thai frdntier. Our journey gave us a br!ef but revealing glimpse into the covert spy system and com- munally organized countryside of the Communists-a glimpse that, as far as is known, no Westerners had ever before gotten. Covert Supply System We traveled on some of the well-defended dirt roads they had built by hand and used as cla,ndestine supply routes dur- ing the five years of the war, that ended with their seizure of Phnom Penh on April 17. None of these roads show on maps of Cambodia, yet some were only half a mile or so from the main highways. We saw resevoirs, dikes, bridges-all built with hand tools. No machines or earth- mgving equipment were visible. We also saw boy militia units on patrol everywhere and male4emale work crews repair- in~ roads. s we passed many of the villagers and soldiers stared at! us'wonderingly, as if they had never seen a white man before! -which is possible. From what we could deter mine it seemed that these areas! had been developed and organ-1 ized over a long period and' that they had remained un- touched sanctuaries throughout, the war. There, were no signs that either American planes or planes of the old Phnom Penh government had bombed here,) nor were there any signs that+I troops of the old Government had tried to mount a ground as- sault sault against those areas. The trees bore no marks of bullet holes, as they always do when there has been ground fighting. The over-all impression was n ~ Some V1 Me 11 reiiervoirs, for example, had al terraced system that channel water into an agricultural irri-i gation system. The supply network that wel got the best look at snakedi through thick forest and swampy ponds along a line that ran generally parallel to and west of Route 5. It cov- ered approximately 40 miles, running from near the town.of Oudong to the province capital of KEmtpond Chhang. One got the feeling as we traveled along these dirt roads, which were occasionally wide but often so narrow that tree branches along the isdes thwacked against our trucks, that the village and country- side organization was much stronger than anyone on the other side had imagined. Yet while this organizational system was impressive, when we traveled on other roads we 1 saw some depressing sights. Refugees forced out of Phnom Penh and other places were l still plodding along, pushing carts and carrying heavy sacks of belongings over their shoul- ders as they headed for the interior areas, where the Khmer rouge say they must now be- come peasants and *row rice. Abandoned and stripped cars littered some highways: appar- ently city people had started out in them and jetisoned when they ran out of fuel. There wasl other detritus too--steel hel-1 mets and other military equip- ment and weapons discarded on the run by the routed troops. Here and there were bodies. but it was difficult to telt if they were people who had suc- cumbed to the hardships of the march or simply civilians and soldiers killed in the last battles. Approved For Release 1999/09/02 : IA-RDP79-01194A000100390001-3