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The Eyes of the Pineapple: Revolutionary Intellectuals and Terror in Democratic Kampuchea, by R. A. Burgler

Angkar has as many eyes as the pineapple. It sees everything and does not make mistakes.

Yes, the old Khmer Rouge adage also being the name of this blog too. But, with reading this again, and moving slightly away from the main theme of this very good book — the political use of terror — the below quotes are interesting in their challenging of the silly primitivist myth about the Khmer Communists. But it also reveals the knots they tied themselves up into, over what has been misinterpreted as the above and vulgarised into truth. That would be, more accurately, their moral tendency of social levelling, along with the Maoist-inspired attempt at dissolving intellectual-physical disparities and urban-rural contradictions: the store placed in an individual’s mental reconfigurability through manual labour. As well as the inward-looking and suspicious anti-foreign positions of the Pol Pot group, which had a lot to do with already-present nationalist sentiments (which can be present no matter the political colouration), and importantly the development of relations between Communists in the region during the First and Second Indochina Wars. Sensitivity over such issues as betrayal by “comrades”, which we won’t go into detail here today.

So where did they want to go with this “peculiar” policy of theirs? Well, of course that would be a future society built in such a way that an end would be brought to all social inequalities and contradictions, by rationally dissolving all differences into one single and universal subject position from which all people would identify. Or without the waffle: communism. And the path leading there was a closely interlocked process which involved the participation of non-workers and peasants in manual labour: unskilled human labour power the most plentiful resource available; their mentality changed through it, as already mentioned, in the country-wide (forced) cooperative system where most of the population was gathered; production through them, by way of working elan, was to be raised allowing the economy to further develop; capital input except for human was to be kept at a minimum, with exceptions about to be seen, helping to reinforce an attitude of self-reliance, eventually allowing all contradictions to be removed. That it went horribly wrong needs little mention; through a doctrinaire quasi-Leninist radicalism oriented toward the poorest of the poor, some could be redeemed, others lost to this process, which saw the rapid building of vast infrastructural works intended to act as the foundations for a future industrialised socialist state, built by the 1990s. So under the leadership of these modernisers, then, by a prodigious jump, a so-called backward Third World country, its backwardness made much worse by the awesome air strike power wielded by the military of an advanced country of the First World, would enter the transitional stage. There was much work to do, even though with tongue firmly placed in cheek it was once made known to a grateful Cambodia that “thanks to Angkar, every day is a holiday.”

One quote, with regard to the polarisation of town and country:

For the KR cities were the culmination of all evil, the focus of ‘foreign’ influences. People who had lived in cities had been exposed to and corrupted by these ‘foreign’ influences, thus forming a threat to the CPK’s [Communist Party of Kampuchea's] aims. Evacuation and integration into the co-operative system not only neutralised this threat, but effectively brought these people under KR control. The anti-urban sentiment of the KR was at least, if not influenced by, the peasantry. Towns belonged to the ruling class, to strangers. They meant extortion of surplus in all its multiformed ways and undesired interference with peasant life. KR fear and hatred of ‘foreignness’ sometimes took on fetishist forms, such as the destruction of furniture, TV sets and other electrical appliances, the burning of books and leaving cars to rust. ‘Foreign’ food and drinks were not to be had anymore, at least not by the ordinary people. [Laurence] Picq, French wife of a high Democratic Kampuchean official who returned to Cambodia from China in 1975 and worked at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs till the fall of the Pol Pot regime, mentions many instances of the KR’ anti-foreign, anti-urban attitude. At a certain moment, e.g., she is forbidden to practice acupuncture anymore, which she had learned in China and had put to good use in Phnom Penh a number of times. As a foreign practice it is an affront to Kampuchean pride. Kampuchea, she is told, can do everything better than others elsewhere. The abolishment of money might be defended as rational in the light of the KR’ autarkic development policy and their wish to control. But even foreign exchange was sometimes thrown away or destroyed by KR cadres. Slavko Stanic, one of the Yugoslav journalists who visited Democratic Kampuchea in 1978 remarked on this

‘irrational radicalism and (….) strange kind of ‘puritanicalism’ in the Kampuchean revolution. In the midst of shortage of essential consumer goods and raw materials, ‘frozen’ capital lies unused and left to decay (….) Unopened iron safes still lie in ruins of the former National Bank in Phnom Penh (….) Our hosts assured us that so far no one had even attempted to check on their contents, because the watchword is for the new society to be built by means of newly earned resources.’

Modern technology and technological expertise were not despised per se, just most, if not all, that had been associated with the old pre-revolutionary society was to be cast aside. By levelling society down to the position of the most trusted social group of the Pol Potists — the poor and lower middle peasants — and who had been the most exploited in the old society and in whose name change was to be carried out. For their benefit would a new, just, abundant and modern Khmer society rapidly emerge. From scratch, and through a controlled process, this was to sprout out from a cooperative system that had developed from the KR’ own brand of “war communism.” Or to put it another way, the increasingly strict consumption-forgoing communalisation of agriculture that had taken place in parts of the country from the early 1970s, all for the war effort of the KR-FUNK. Its origins found in spotted attempts at altering social relations in the so-called liberated zones of Cambodia where the Communists had effective control during the war. Particularly in northern and southern areas of the country, where political and social change by fiat provided examples in embryo of what would be attempted country-wide after April 17. But the devastated countryside ravaged by heavy bombing, and where the cooperatives were situated, was not adequate enough to receive the urban evacuees, driven there at war’s end by black-clad soldiers.

Arrogant self-regard and the “correctness” and “clear-sightedness” of the CPK leadership was perhaps the manifestation of frustrations that had built up over the years but intensified during the war; their increasingly strained relations with the condescending sell-out Vietnamese Communists and their competing objectives. In this I refer you to the intense 1973 aerial bombing campaign which over a period of eight months transformed the central plain region of Cambodia into a smoking, pockmarked void. Following the Paris Agreements, much of the US air strike power concentrated in the region was reserved for the country next door. Who could blame the peasants for their hatred of the towns, places that had protected people dependent on those foreigners who had sent the planes? But when the brutal conflict had run its course the country’s entire urban sector was placed, along with the Lon Nol government and military, into the enemy camp, whether genuine urbanites, elitist, poor or rural refugees who were peasants themselves. And contrary to official written propaganda, the country’s small working class was sent to the fields with everyone else. Having hid like cowards in the towns, places surrounded and throttled during the war, these proletarians weren’t Angkar-approved. But the new authorities needed some of them to be recalled from their rural rebirth. Ordered to teach and train a new generation of pure Khmer peasant children how to operate the machines they had earned their livings with for years before.

As for their intellectual and assumed leaders vis-à-vis the Vietnamese, something happened akin to when a timid and quiet person, in an attempt to assert himself, suddenly bursts open with pent up, unexpressed emotion. But among their own also, there was the problem posed by the unadulterated quality of their ideas, never adequately challenged and forced to be rethought, moderated or diluted through debate with other outside and oppositional positions. Such things had been decided by physical force, later turned inwards on themselves.

But also, on the subject of partial autarky:

One gets the impression that the centre’s policy was strongly against obtaining machines and such from other countries. even their use was foresworn. This is intriguing for many official Democratic Kampuchea publications contain pictures depicting the use of machines of all types, including steamrollers, tractors and factories in operation. Most of the visitors to Cambodia mention seeing various types of machines being used, including dredgers and tractors, observations confirmed by refugee reports. Refugees and visitors also report how car and other engines had been rebuilt to be used for water pumps and rice husking machines. New factories were set up and in the course of 1977 and in 1978 production was resumed in some that had been closed due to war damage. There are testimonies of people who worked in factories all through the Democratic Kampuchea period. The Democratic Kampuchean authorities, in an October 1975 broadcast, called on the peasants to “use modern and scientific methods and technology.”

Besides the enormous amount of aid being given by China and North Korea, Democratic Kampuchea was also slowly and carefully putting out economic feelers to the outside world. Since August 1975 it had traded dried fish with Thailand for engine parts and corrugated iron, according to Ragos-Espinas, although official trading was only resumed in August 1976. In January 1976 Ieng Sari visited Belgrade, where the Yugoslavs promised him tractors and mechanical equipment worth $3 million, which were sent a year later. Stanic mentions seeing them during his 1978 visit. In October and November delegations were sent to Albania, Rumania and again to Yugoslavia. The Albanians exchanged tractors for rubber, coconuts and wood. At the same time the Reng Fung company was opened in Hong Kong to organize trade with non-socialist countries. In the last three months of 1976 $1 million worth of spare car parts and motor pumps were imported. In October 400 tons of DDT were imported from the USA through this company. Democratic Kampuchea also accepted anti-malaria equipment from a Quaker organization, the American Friends Service Committee, and bought 2 million francs worth of anti-malaria equipment from France. In the last three months of 1977 Reng Fung Co. bought $3 million worth of goods mainly from France, England and the USA. In March and April, Sari visited Malaysia, where he is said to have asked the Malaysian government to help Cambodia locate European outlets for its rubber. In that same year imports of industrial goods, materials for processing agricultural goods, spare parts for cars and machines and film equipment, totalled $19 million, whilst exports valued $680,000. This included rice, black pepper, kapok, dried fish and rubber. In the summer of 1977 four Thai concerns were officially given permission to trade with Cambodia.

The below two pieces of official DK film footage represent, of course, the polished ideal image of happy reconstruction, of Democratic Kampuchea “moving forward.” Not the actual situation in much of DK, of an irrational waste of old-society skills and expertise, costly (as in labour-intensive) building projects through trial and error, shortages of materials and cadre incompetency. Of political-ideological considerations overriding more practicable solutions to the problems of building their new society. Where they wanted to go was different to what was actually the case in their distorted Pharaonic endeavours. Personally, however, I do not believe that such things presented to the outside world were part of an elaborate con-trick, to fool others in both the old Capitalist and Communist world blocs, but then instead, to sneakily travel along a path toward a “primitive” agrarian communism. Or some other such similar rubbish. After all, as well as uniform rice paddies with a canal running down the centre, a factory complete with smoke stacks is seen in the background of Democratic Kampuchea’s national emblem. But, with that said, the Khmer Rouge were not concerned about what the people inside DK felt for the present reality; the ideal, never fully disclosed to them (this coarse material to be reshaped) would later work itself out. And in making their omelette quite a few eggs needed to be broken.

Another film which illustrates the modernising ambiitons of the DK government is Kampucija 1978, by sceptical Yugoslav journalist Nikola Vitorovic:

But anyway, here they are …

Like the music (recycled from a Chinese government film?):

Apart from young girls, too small almost to operate the large road rollers, we see high-ranking Khmer Rouge ministers Ieng Sary and Vorn Vet inspecting railroad repairs.

Textiles, from field to factory:

In a rather regimented fashion, the modernisation of textile production.

{ 12 } Comments

  1. Robespierre | October 8, 2009 at 12:37 pm | Permalink

    I will make a just world even if I have to kill everybody!

  2. Pineapple | October 8, 2009 at 11:54 pm | Permalink

    Very good.

  3. Salamander | October 9, 2009 at 6:23 pm | Permalink

    I think you’ve built a good argument that the Democratic Kampuchea regime did have a lot of development plans to expand industry, medicine and other things. They wanted their society to move forward, so they weren’t ideologically primitivist as are some factions of anarchists. As you point out, people were promoted for ideological reasons rather than their skills and they had unrealistic expectations for rebuilding their agriculture and providing the means to expand their economy. A lot of factors can leave a country in a primitive state, but few of these countries intended for that to happen. Your analysis on Democratic Kampuchea is very well researched.

  4. Pineapple | October 9, 2009 at 8:18 pm | Permalink

    Thank you for the thoughtful comment. The voluntarist contribution to “socialist” planning cannot be but attractive to these kinds of people. After all, societies that don’t fit some classical European scheme are not static, and conflict does and will continue to happen. So for these people a way has to be found in order to change undesirable conditions, whether it be internal exploitation or foreign domination. And even under some degree of centralisation and concerted effort, mobilising hitherto untapped potential and resources, peasant smallholdings are perhaps not the best base on which to build a high degree of industrialisation.

  5. lb | October 12, 2009 at 12:33 pm | Permalink

    You can revise your ‘loyal’ readeship to about five; fascinating (and perceptive) stuff.

    The music in the first clip is great.

  6. Pineapple | October 13, 2009 at 1:57 am | Permalink

    Thanks.

  7. SuperJohnny | November 6, 2009 at 2:28 am | Permalink

    This movie Kampuchea 1978, I cannot find any information about it yet I read so much about Yugoslavian journalists visiting Cambodia in 1977. Any hints or links? Is it possible to see/buy it anywhere?

    Pineapple, thank you for your blog!!! It’s awesome!

  8. Pineapple | November 7, 2009 at 8:57 am | Permalink

    You a graduate, or a layperson like me?

  9. Tong Reasathea | November 12, 2009 at 5:02 am | Permalink

    Found “eyes of pineapple” very boring. It’s good for compilation but little for original source of information. Currently reading J’ai cru aux KR with the French English dictionary. Original insight. Finished “Stay alive my son”. There’s tons of books to read yet. Glad to see your website with many original video, found it through the search for Vorn Vet. I am able to understand Khmer a little so it was a pleasure to watch Socialist construction.

    My blog about building a new human. I use a lot of information taken from the DK experience just to underline some of the ideas. Bashing “Mac-Lenin”, as they called in Vietnamese is necessary. Founding a new human is a difficult way, communists try to confuse regular people with their Talmudic philosophy, thus it’s a 50 % anti-communist and 100 % anti-intellectual.

    Hardly anyone reads what I write as it quiet unreadable. Most of people prefer to cling to their old marxism-leninisms, then to accept something new. Plus it’s in Russian.

    Anyways, I will re-read your page, I glad that I found a person who is obsessed with DK as I am.

    Chum reab lea mit.

  10. Pineapple | November 12, 2009 at 6:06 pm | Permalink

    Yes, it relies on other research and is a little dry, but it is a good source of information.

    On the subject of anti-intellectualism, the source of this could possibly be the experience of other Communist Parties, such as the French, and in relation to that the ICP. With regard to “proletarianisation” of the organisations. Workers and peasants finding it easier to join the Party, and those of intellectual background having to go through a process of longer probation until deemed trusted enough to enter into meaningful activity. The French-educated group of Communists, of which Sar was a part, had to go through this, probably in their eyes, humiliating experience. Cleaning latrines and doing the cooking isn’t what they would have expected. With not being trusted or seen as a threat by other, non-intellectual Communists of the old Khmer Viet Minh, prior to their taking leadership of the Cambodian movement. These younger Communists would find other allies who were probably more suspicious of intellectuals than the Communists they resented. Small-town rebels like Ta Mok. Into the DK period, anti-intellectual sentiments were in part influenced by the Communist’s main constituency — the poor peasantry. It wasn’t about complete antipathy, however, but what they in turn would see as a threat to their own power. The blank slate policy of their regime would, in theory, later create new Khmer, inculcated with the “correct” mental outlook in a modern socialist society. Better than anything produced in the old.

  11. Tong Reasathea | November 14, 2009 at 4:33 am | Permalink

    It’s against my views now that poor peasantry could influence anyone. It rather was Pol Pot who was influenced by poor peasantry and who brought up anti-intellectualism as a part of his new belief. Somebody had to be behind all this, could it just master play of a singular man? He tended to break with everyone. In the end of his life Ieng Sary and Son Sen. Probably he had reservations about them for a while, there, if I believe some confessions who implicated Ieng Thirith. And Son Sen. Purges stopped by 1979 but, were they intended to be stopped in 1979?

    And interesting info about Ta Mok. I didn’t know that his father spent 20 years in monastery before he married and before Ta Mok was born. Ta Mok, himself spent 8 years studying Pali and Buddhist classics. He wasn’t that much of an intellectual contrary to usual perception.

  12. Pineapple | November 14, 2009 at 4:30 pm | Permalink

    I am unsure as to whether the poor-peasantism once unleashed by them, was too powerful for the younger generation of Communists to control, and to paraphrase Michael Vickery, that the intellectuals were pulled along with it. Or if it was more so the intellectuals who were the source of it, projecting their own ideas of what they thought the poor peasantry actually was, putting into practice their own romantic abstractions. But they had to find their way out of an impasse before winning power. To find a way around the popularity of Sihanouk, imbued with an ancient legitimacy as well as his less than wafer-thin “socialist” clothes, dressed on an old and corrupt system. And to scrub out the smell of the Vietnamese from the Cambodian movement, which had led them to police repression, involving harassment, imprisonment and murder by the Sangkum, and strike out on their own.

    Becoming a monk for a period of time was/is considered a rite of passage into full adulthood is it not? I believe this was a source of resentment for poor peasant teenagers, whose families could not afford for their sons to be away from working in other people’s fields., tending to other people’s animals, and so were excluded from this. No wonder the leftist propaganda sessions skilfully disguised as basic education lessons carried out by sympathetic teachers in rural schools had an effect on them, showing them something to be confident about in matters of self-respect and a wider awareness of social injustice beyond their own experience. Monks or former monks have had involvement with revolutionary politics. The old Khmer Viet Minh leader Son Ngoc Minh was a bonze. I may have confused my facts, but I think a former and popular monk going by the name of Achar Kres, as well as being a veteran of the First Indochina War, was involved in the Samlaut rebellion, with a price put on his head by the Lon Nol military.

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