Leadership turmoil
After World War II and into the early 1950s, King Sihanouk's politics became 
more nationalistic and he began demanding that the French grant the country 
independence and depart, echoing the sentiments of the other nations of 
Indochina, Vietnam and Laos. He went into exile in Thailand in May 1953 and 
refused to return until independence was granted. He returned when his 
overtures met with success and Cambodia became independent on November 9, 
1953.. On March 2, 1955, King Sihanouk abdicated in favor of his father, taking 
the post of prime minister a few months later. Following his father's death in 
1960, he gained election as head of state, but received the title of prince 
rather than king. In 1963, he forced a change in the constitution that made him 
head of state for life. While he had officially abdicated as king, he had 
created a constitutional office for himself that was exactly equal to that of 
the former kingship.
While the Vietnam War raged, Sihanouk promoted policies he claimed would 
preserve Cambodia's neutrality. Alternately taking sides with China, supporting 
the United States and espousing Third Way policies. In the spring of 1965, he 
made a deal with China and North Vietnam to allow the presence of permanent 
North Vietnamese bases in eastern Cambodia and to allow military supplies from 
China to reach Vietnam by Cambodian ports. Cambodia and Cambodian individuals 
were compensated by Chinese purchases of the Cambodian rice crop by China at 
inflated prices. He also at this time made any number of speeches calling the 
triumph of Communism in Southeast Asia inevitable and suggesting Maoist ideas 
were worthy of emulation. In 1966 and 1967, Sihanouk unleashed a wave of 
political repression that drove many on the left out of mainstream politics. 
His policy of friendship with China collapsed due to the extreme attitudes in 
China at the peak of the Cultural
 Revolution. The combination of political repression and problems with China 
made his balancing act impossible to sustain. He had alienated the left, 
allowed the North Vietnamese to establish bases within Cambodia and staked 
everything on China's good will. On March 18, 1970, while he was travelling out 
of the country, Lon Nol, the prime minister, convened the National Assembly 
which voted to depose Sihanouk as head of state and give emergency powers to 
Lon Nol. Prince Sisowath Sirik Matak, a royal prince who, in 1941, had been 
passed over by the French government in favor of his cousin Norodom Sihanouk's 
leadership role, retained his post as Deputy Prime Minister. Prince Sihanouk 
fled to Beijing and began to support the Khmer Rouge in their struggle to 
overthrow the Lon Nol government in Phnom Penh. After Sihanouk showed his 
support for the Khmer Rouge by visiting them in the field, their ranks swelled 
from 6000 to 50,000 fighters. Many of these new
 recruits for the Khmer Rouge were apolitical peasants who fought in support of 
the king, not for communism, of which they had little understanding. When the 
Khmer Republic fell to the Khmer Rouge in April 1975, Prince Sihanouk became 
the symbolic head of state of the new régime while Pol Pot remained in power. 
The next year, on April 4, 1976, the Khmer Rouge forced Sihanouk out of office 
again and into political retirement. During the Vietnamese invasion, he was 
sent to New York to speak against Vietnam before the United Nations. After his 
speech, he sought refuge in China and in North Korea.
The Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in December 1978 ousted the Khmer Rouge.. 
Although claiming to be wary of the Khmer Rouge, Prince Sihanouk was more than 
willing to again join forces with them in order to provide a united front 
against the Vietnamese. In 1982, he became president of the Coalition 
Government of Democratic Kampuchea (CGDK), which consisted of his own Funcinpec 
party, Son Sann's KPNLF, and the Khmer Rouge. The Vietnamese withdrew in 1989, 
leaving behind a pro-Vietnamese government under ex-Khmer Rouge cadre Hun Sen 
to run the People's Republic of Kampuchea (PRK).
Restoration
Peace negotiations between the CGDK and the PRK commenced shortly thereafter 
and continued until 1991 when all sides agreed to a comprehensive settlement 
which they signed in Paris. Prince Sihanouk returned once more to Cambodia on 
November 14, 1991 after thirteen years in exile.
In 1993, Sihanouk once again became king of Cambodia. During the restoration, 
however, he suffered from ill health and traveled repeatedly to Beijing for 
medical treatment.
Sihanouk's leisure interests include music (he has composed songs in Khmer, 
French, and English) and film. He has become a prodigious filmmaker over the 
years, directing many movies and orchestrating musical compositions. He became 
one of the first heads of state in the region to have a personal website, which 
has proven a cult hit. It draws more than a thousand visitors a day, which 
constitutes a substantial portion of his nation's Internet users. Royal 
statements are posted there daily.
King Sihanouk went into self-imposed exile in January 2004, taking up residence 
in Pyongyang, North Korea and later in Beijing, China. Citing reasons of ill 
health, he announced his abdication of the throne on October 7, 2004.. The 
constitution of Cambodia made no provision for such a move. Chea Sim, the 
President of the Senate assumed the title of acting Head of State (a title he 
has held many times before), until the throne council met on October 14 and 
appointed Norodom Sihamoni, one of Sihanouk's sons, as the new king.

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