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Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare  
Author: Philip Short
ISBN: 0805066624
Format: Handover
Publish Date: June, 2005
 
     
     
   Book Review


From Publishers Weekly
Towards the beginning of this massive biography, Short cautions readers against dismissing the terror of Pol Pot's regime as the incomprehensible work of evil men. Instead, Short argues, the explanations for the Khmer Rouge regime, which resulted in the death of over one-fifth of Cambodia's population, or 1.5 million people, are "rooted in history." The book begins its search for these explanations in the early life of Saloth Sâr, a "mediocre student" whose political disengagement offered no hint of the ideological nightmare he would fashion under the name Pol Pot. As a student in Paris, Sâr's political philosophy slowly began to take shape, and the book deftly follows his political evolution abroad as a part of the "Cercle Marxiste" against the backdrop of the tumultuous history of Cambodia after the war. Short, a former BBC correspondent who has also written an acclaimed biography of Mao Zedong, moves between Sâr's personal story and the broader history with ease. By the time these two narratives converge in the lucid and harrowing description of the Khmer Rouge victory and subsequent evacuation of Phnom Penh city, the book has already laid the groundwork for the horrors that would follow. Occasionally, Short's attempts to understand Pol's psychology lapse into vast over-generalization, as when he attributes Pol's erratic behavior to "the perpetual Khmer tendency to take things to extremes." More often, though, Short expertly identifies the historical and ideological causes that generated the Khmer Rouge impulse to terror and that eventually led to the regime's collapse. Though daunting in length, Short's book offers a copiously well-researched and surprisingly accessible portrait of Pol that will prove indispensable to anyone interested in the subject. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com
When Pol Pot sat down in 1978 for his first-ever interview, the Yugoslav journalists conducting it asked him a simple question: "Comrade Pol Pot, who are you?" The man behind Cambodia's killing fields offered only some half-truths. A few months later, the Vietnamese invaded Cambodia and drove Pol Pot out of power and into the shadows. In the decades since, a handful of Cambodia scholars have tried to lift the shroud of mystery surrounding a tyrant who seemingly emerged from nowhere. True to form, the most detailed interview about his life came just six months before his death in April 1998, when an American reporter, Nate Thayer, tracked him down in a jungle hideaway near the Thai border. That interview and a handful of books (especially Ben Kiernan's How Pol Pot Came to Power and The Pol Pot Regime, as well as David P. Chandler's Brother Number One) have been the main sources of our knowledge about the man. But the Yugoslav journalists' question remained. Philip Short's 537-page book goes a long way toward telling us who Pol Pot was; unfortunately, it is marred by superficial generalizations about Cambodian culture and a bizarre attempt to exonerate the Khmer Rouge of genocide. Short, a veteran correspondent for the BBC and the author of a widely praised biography of Mao Zedong, does not claim any special expertise on Cambodia. Interviews with former members of Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge regime -- including such top officials as Ieng Sary, Pol Pot's foreign minister and brother-in-law -- were the most noteworthy tools of his research. "The aim," Short writes, "has been to tell the story of the Cambodian nightmare, to the extent that that is feasible, from the vantage point of those who created it, rather than solely from that of the victims." Indeed, victims' voices are rare here. Despite being supplemented by archival and published materials, the book essentially remains an account of Cambodia's darkest period as seen from the perspective of French-speaking Khmer Rouge cadres and their associates.Still, those interviews are valuable inasmuch as they allow Short to paint a vivid portrait of Pol Pot -- the nom de guerre for the man born as Saloth Sar -- in his formative years. From his life of a Buddhist novice in a Phnom Penh pagoda to his discovery of the Russian anarchist Peter Kropotkin's writings on uninterrupted revolution; from his double life in Phnom Penh as both society boy and clandestine revolutionary to his time as the unhappy sidekick of Vietnamese communists in the jungle; from survival under American bombs to the exhilarating 1975 meeting with Mao after taking the helm of Cambodia -- the author gives a nicely crafted account of Pol Pot's emergence. The story of the future dictator's political awakening and ascent, painted on the large canvas of France's waning colonial moment in Indochina and the rise of communism, makes fascinating reading. Moreover, Short shows us Pol Pot's mounting paranoia about the Vietnamese and demonstrates that his obsession with secrecy far predated his rise to power -- both points that go a long way toward explaining the murderous frenzy that later gripped the Khmer Rouge regime. After his recklessly utopian drive to build an imagined powerful, egalitarian, pure Cambodia collided with reality, Pol Pot's paranoia produced successive waves of purges. Those who were too tired or hungry to work, as well as squeamish or insufficiently enthusiastic Communist Party members, were denounced as Vietnamese agents and put to death by the thousands. Military setbacks at the hands of Vietnam fueled further killings of Cambodians thought to harbor sympathy for the enemy -- those with "Vietnamese minds in Khmer bodies." Curiously, the period covering Pol Pot's years in power (roughly a quarter of this massive book) lacks the color and drama of the earlier phase. Pol Pot the man disappears, replaced by faceless quotes from his directives and dry analysis of party documents. Except for Short's account of the forced evacuation of nearly 3 million people from Phnom Penh, the rest of the narrative about the creation of what Short rightly calls "a slave state" is primarily theoretical, focused on the hardships of Khmer Rouge bureaucrats in the capital, who had to plant tomatoes in the streets and clean their own rooms. The 1975 fall of Phnom Penh, he observes, "was not marked by rivers of blood," while gliding past in the same paragraph the murders of 700-800 politicians and officials of the toppled regime. Elsewhere, he calls the death of 20,000 people during the mass evacuation appalling but not exceptional in the aftermath of a civil war -- as if the deportees were combatants, not helpless civilians. The author devotes no more than a few pages to the brutish and often short lives of millions in the countryside. This is an anatomy of the Khmer Rouge nightmare without the cries of its survivors.Pol Pot is also a biography that seems reluctant to face up to the enormities committed by its subject. Short writes that perhaps 1.5 million people perished (less than other experts' estimate of 1.7 million), a sizeable minority of whom were executed. (Others died of starvation and disease caused by malnutrition and back-breaking labor.) The outright slayings, he argues, constituted crimes against humanity for which the surviving Khmer Rouge leaders may "legitimately be convicted," but they should not be jailed "for genocide, of which they are innocent." The killing fields did not constitute a genocide, Short writes, because the Khmer Rouge did not set out to "exterminate a "national, ethnic, racial or religious group." But this quotation from the famous definition of genocide in the U.N. General Assembly's 1948 Genocide Convention is fragmented, omitting the document's key qualifying phrase: "in whole or in part." Moreover, decades of research -- and, indeed, information in Short's own book -- have clearly shown the racist motivation of the Khmer Rouge, including the now infamous call by Pol Pot himself "to crush" all of the Vietnamese. "In terms of numbers, [each] one of us must kill 30 Vietnamese," he wrote in a 1978 commentary for Radio Phnom Penh. "We need only two million troops to crush the 50 million Vietnamese and we will still have six million Cambodians left." Short does not even mention the systematic killing of an estimated 10,000 ethnic Vietnamese living in Cambodia. He also explains the Khmer Rouge's repression of Cambodia's Muslim Cham minority not as racially motivated but as the consequence of Cham resistance to abandoning their culture and religion, as demanded by Pol Pot's henchmen. Short does not see the displacement of 150,000 Chams as "racism in the normal sense of the term." Instead, he writes that the Khmer Rouge's "aim was uniformity," rather than "the suppression of a particular group" -- as if it were possible to make an omelet without breaking eggs. Moreover, Short does not really explain the mental processes driving Pol Pot and his colleagues to order mass murders. Instead he offers examples of how this was simply the thing to do in Cambodia. He writes that Khmer Rouge atrocities were rooted in the country's history and tradition -- in "pre-existing Khmer cultural models." He even calls Buddhism (whose most basic precept forbids the taking of any life) a factor because its "impersonal fatalism . . . erects fewer barriers against evil than the anthropomorphic God of Christianity or Islam who sits in judgement and threatens sinners with hell-fire." Among other exotic explanations, he implies that Pol Pot's hatred of cities had deep roots: "In Khmer thought, the fundamental dichotomy is not between good and evil, as it is in Judaeo-Christian societies, but between srok and brai, village and forest." By going to the maquis, the Khmer Rouge had moved to "to the jungles, the wild places, where dark, unknown forces roamed." Some of this book's conclusions were foreshadowed in a November 2000 essay Short wrote in the Phnom Penh Post. Published just before he sat down to interview Khmer Rouge leader Ieng Sary, that article argued that the Khmer Rouge leaders should not be tried because Pol Pot did not act alone. In the book's afterword, Short approvingly quotes a Buddhist leader (who said that "millions of Cambodians worked with" the Khmer Rouge) to argue that the best and brightest of Cambodia's intellectual elite bought into Pol Pot's hideous vision. A war crimes tribunal, Short suggests, would only help foreign powers whitewash their own less than honorable role in Cambodia's suffering; for instance, former secretary of state Madeleine K. Albright's call to try the surviving Khmer Rouge leaders for genocide "would allow the US to turn the page with honour and regain the moral high ground." A tribunal would also offer foreign governments an alibi for doing nothing about the current, thoroughly rotten Cambodian regime, which let a minister's wife go unpunished after disfiguring a young girl's face with acid -- a crime that Short likens to the Khmer Rouge atrocities. It would be more convincing to argue for a war crimes tribunal because Cambodia's current lawlessness cannot be curbed unless the mass murderers are brought to justice. (Imagine Germany in 1946 with Himmler walking free.) Short's muddled arguments against trials for the Khmer Rouge high command may be an apt end to his book. He is a talented writer, and he had truly unusual access to the perpetrators of the killing fields. It is a pity that this combination produced only an interesting but ultimately flawed history of one of history's great horrors.Reviewed by Nayan Chanda Copyright 2005, The Washington Post Co. All Rights Reserved.


From Booklist
*Starred Review* As the evil genius who presided over the political maelstrom that, from 1975 through 1979, killed 1.5 million of Cambodia's 7 million inhabitants, Pol Pot well deserves his place--alongside Hitler and Stalin-- in the bloody modern pantheon of ideological monsters. With this harrowingly detailed biography, readers come to understand how a once-obscure schoolteacher earned that spot in infamy. Surprisingly, the man who oversaw the torture and bloodletting on his country's notorious Killing Fields enters Short's narrative quite innocently--just one more Khmer village boy, playing with siblings and friends. But during the course of his education, first in Phnom Penh and then in Paris, Pot first changes his name (originally Saloth Sar) and then resolves to radically change his native land by pouring the grim amorality of Khmer mythology into the grimmer doctrines of radical egalitarianism. Thus, the boy once entranced by tales of menacing wizards and sorcerers becomes the man enamored of the edicts of Robespierre and Stalin. The chronicle becomes truly horrifying when Cambodia--long a pawn of Vietnam and France, China and the U.S.--falls under the sway of this metamorphosed fanatic. With the willing assistance of a black-clad, communist army, Pot turns the entire country into a huge slave camp--and cemetery. Deeply unsettling, Short's probing analysis reveals how the loftiest of political ideals can become the justification for the cruelest brutality. A chilling portrait. Bryce Christensen
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


Review
"A superb, authoritative account of the man and the madness that transformed Cambodia, almost overnight, into hell on earth" --William Grimes, New York Times"Readable and capacious...the most thorough-going, most closely argued study of the Khmer Rouge to appear to date." -David Chandler, Far Eastern Economic Review"Vividly drawn . . . Short's text sparkles with shrewdly plausible inferences mortared into a compelling narrative." -William T. Vollman, New York Times Book Review"A well-written narrative possessing both shocking detail and thoughtful analysis. Highly recommended." -starred Library Journal"A superbly wrought, richly nuanced study in evil." -starred Kirkus Reviews"Broaden[s} the inquiry to the point where serious history begins, and serious judgments can be made." -Justin Wintle, Financial Times"Philip Short's Pol Pot is an almanac of extermination that achieves the near impossible feat of translating madness into logic. This biography is a tour de force."-David Levering Lewis, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of W. E. B. DuBois"An intelligent and compassionate account of the Cambodian nightmare."-The Spectator"Extraordinary and brilliant... This hugely impressive book is more than just the life story of an individual. It is also the biography of a nation... Short has exposed secrets, knitting together a story which it once seemed would never be told. The result is horrific, but it must be read."-The Scotsman"Unerringly broadens the enquiry to the point where serious history begins and serious judgments can be made."-Financial Times"A comprehensive and eloquent biography...This is a long, dark and necessary book.."-Literary Review, London"Short is a gifted biographer who knows his communists. [His account] is the most definitive yet."-Time [Asian edition]"Short's most valuable contribution is to bring clear thinking to the question of blame... He is brisk about the cynical policy of Vietnam... and also indicts the Chinese, who have largely escaped censure for their complicity with the Khmer Rouge."-Sunday Times, London"A brilliantly detailed account and a salutary one."-Sunday Herald, Glasgow


Book Description
A gripping and definitive portrait of the man who headed one of the most enigmatic and terrifying regimes of modern times

In the three and a half years of Pol Pot's rule, more than a million Cambodians, a fifth of the country's population, were executed or died from hunger. An idealistic and reclusive figure, Pol Pot sought to instill in his people values of moral purity and self-abnegation through a revolution of radical egalitarianism. In the process his country descended into madness, becoming a concentration camp of the mind, a slave state in which obedience was enforced on the killing fields.

How did a utopian dream of shared prosperity mutate into one of the worst nightmares humanity has ever known? To understand this almost inconceivable mystery, Philip Short explores Pol Pot's life from his early years to his death. Short spent four years traveling throughout Cambodia interviewing the surviving leaders of the Khmer Rouge movement, many of whom have never spoken before, including Pol Pot's brother-in-law and the former Khmer Rouge head of state. He also sifted through the previously closed archives of China, Russia, Vietnam, and Cambodia itself to trace the fate of one man and the nation that he led into ruin.

This powerful biography reveals that Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge were not a one-off aberration but instead grew out of a darkness of the soul common to all peoples. Cambodian history and culture combined with intervention from the United States and other nations to set the stage for a disaster whose horrors echo loudly in the troubling events of our world today.



About the Author
Philip Short has been a foreign correspondent for The Times (London), The Economist, and the BBC in Uganda, Moscow, China, and Washington, D.C. He is the author of the definitive biography of Mao Tse-tung, and lived in China and Cambodia in the 1970s and early 1980s, where he has returned regularly ever since. He now lives in southern France with his Chinese wife.



Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
From Pol Pot:
There were many causes of the egregious tragedy that befell Cambodia in the last quarter of the twentieth century, and many actors amongst whom responsibility must be shared. The over-confidence of the country's new leaders, above all of its principal leader, the man who would become Pol Pot, was but one element among them, and at the time of the Khmer Rouge victory, one that was skillfully dissembled.

Another full year would pass before the reclusive figure who had directed the war on the communist side would emerge from clandestinity and take the name by which his compatriots, and the rest of the world, would remember him.

Even then, he did so reluctantly. For two decades he had operated under multiple aliases: Phouk, Hay, Pol, "87," Grand-Uncle, Elder Brother-to be followed in later years by "99" and Phem. "It is good to change your name," he once told one of his secretaries. "The more often you change your name the better. It confuses the enemy." Then he added, in a phrase which would become a Khmer Rouge mantra: "If you preserve secrecy, half the battle is already won." The architect of the Cambodian nightmare was not a man who liked working out in the open.





Pol Pot: Anatomy of a Nightmare

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"Philip Short observed Pol Pot at close quarters during the one and only official visit he ever made abroad. It was China, 1977, two years after the reclusive Cambodian had seized power. Short was struck with Pol Pot's charm and charisma, his detachment and self-abnegation, which seemed more appropriate to a Buddhist monk than to the leader of a feudal nation-state." "Yet Pol was the architect of one of the most radical and ruthless experiments in social engineering ever undertaken. His egalitarian utopia released a reign of terror whose purpose was nothing less than to obliterate old thoughts and old ideas where necessary - by exterminating all those who held them. The country descended into madness; in three years one in every five Cambodians - more than a million people - had perished in the killing fields or from hunger." How did it happen? How did an idealistic dream of justice and prosperity mutate into one of humanity's worst nightmares? To answer these and other questions about one of the most terrifying regimes of modern times, the author traveled the length and breadth of Cambodia.

FROM THE CRITICS

William T. Vollmann - The New York Times Sunday Book Review

No doubt some people will be offended by this book, not only for its indiscretions, but also for its restraint. Wasn't Pol Pot a monster pure and simple? How dare Short imply otherwise! This attitude, understandable though it is, hinders our apprehension of reality. The truth is that even now you can find poor people in Cambodia who -- no matter that they lost relatives in the Pol Pot time -- wish for the return of the Khmer Rouge.

William Grimes - The New York Times

"Money, law courts, newspapers, the postal system and foreign telecommunications - even the concept of the city - were all simply abolished," Philip Short writes in his superb, authoritative account of the man and the madness that transformed Cambodia, almost overnight, into hell on earth. "Individual rights were not curtailed in favor of the collective, but extinguished altogether. Individual creativity, initiative, originality were condemned per se. Individual consciousness was systematically demolished."

The New Yorker

Pol Pot once remarked that the Cambodian authorities in the nineteen-fifties “knew who I was; but they did not know what I was.” Short, in his attempt to explain how a young man known for his bland amiability came to preside over the deaths of a million and a half people, follows the dictator from a childhood spent partly among palace concubines through his student days in Paris (where he read Stalin because Marx was over his head) to his imposition of a “slave state.” Short does a good job on the political context of Pol Pot’s rise, on his Buddhist influences, and on his gift for subterfuge. He remained almost invisible until the moment he took power. Later, busy killing his aides, he hid a Vietnamese invasion from his Army—then lived on for two decades, drinking whiskey and reading Paris-Match at his jungle base, before dying peacefully in his own bed.

Library Journal

One and a half million Cambodians died at the hands of Pol Pot during his brief rule. More than a biography of the Cambodian leader, this work provides an informative political history of Cambodia over the past 50 years. A journalist with 25 years of reporting experience with the BBC, Short (Mao: A Life) has crafted a well-written narrative possessing both shocking detail and thoughtful analysis. The incredible history of murder and death by starvation and disease is widely known, but its origins are not. Short points to the influence of Cambodia's medieval past, the interplay of the tenets of Theravada Buddhism, and the insidious political roles played by the West. For example, he outlines how the United States helped maintain Pol Pot in office as a pawn to be used against the Soviet Union and Vietnam. Short extends his interpretation to demonstrate parallels in the breakdown of the Cambodian civilization with that of Hitler's Germany, Stalin's Soviet Union, and Mao's China. At times, the horrible nature of the subject elicits a haunting feeling when one contemplates the future of civilization. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Alert, LJ 10/1/04.]-John F. Riddick, Central Michigan Univ. Lib., Mt. Pleasant Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

"He was very likeable, a really nice person. He was friendly, and everything he said seemed very sensible." But he was also one of history's most accomplished mass murderers, as this portrait shows. The man born Saloth Sar in 1925 was something of an accidental communist, suggests former Beijing BBC correspondent Short (Mao: A Life, 2000). As a young foreign-exchange student in 1950 Paris, Sar had the chance to go camping for a month in Switzerland but, unable to afford the $70 fee, instead took a free work-study trip to Yugoslavia. A revolutionary was thus born, though it appears that Sar was pushed hard to the left by the intransigent, newly installed Prince Norodom Sihanouk, who suppressed the democratic reform movements of the time. As a guerrilla living among the Montagnard people in Cambodia's eastern highlands, Sar slowly elaborated a city-dweller-hating ideology that, Short writes, would form the basis of a modern slave state: farmers outside the zone of urban corruption were the vanguard of a nativist revolutionary movement; urbanites were first in line to be imprisoned and executed. He adopted his new name (the Pols had been royal slaves) in 1970, the year the American invasion of Cambodia swelled the ranks of the Khmer Rouge. Pol Pot's peasant cadres drove the Americans away and, once the foreigners were gone, turned their weapons on their own people-often, Short writes, cannibalizing their victims. As many as 1.5 million Cambodians died from 1975 to 1978, when a Vietnamese invasion ended the terror. (Pol fled, dying 20 years later, still "chillingly unrepentant.") Yet, Short argues, recent attempts to try the surviving Khmer Rouge leadership for genocide are legally inexactand in all events seem intended to disguise America's role in the bloodbath, as well as the involvement of still-powerful figures like Sihanouk, who only recently abdicated. A superbly wrought, richly nuanced study in evil, though more likely to attract discussion for its controversial conclusion than its careful rendering of its murderous subject. Agent: Jacqueline Korn/David Higham Associates

     



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