The world will reveal the second killing field of K5, Kor Pram.
Who did kill  khmer-Innocent s after the invasion of Yuon-Hanoi in 1979 ?
This time not any country had involved with this War Crimes against 
Humanity,accepted Yuon-Hanoi.
Take turn,take turn to be seated at International Courts. Pls wait & see it 
!.

Cheers,
Bun H.

>
> You continue to ignore the fact.
> No one is trying to excuse Vietnamese from invading Cambodia, nor they
> try to forgive what Vietnamese has done to Cambodia.
> Yet, Cambodians have been doing more destructive to Cambodia than
> Vietnamese has ever done. Actually, Cambodians are the most
> destructive force to their own nation with their own hands in their
> own country. What is wrong with that pictures?
> The problem is that Cambodians continue to IGNORE their own problems.
> And they even try to move that problem toward Vietnam. What is wrong
> with that picture?
>
>
> On Oct 28, 10:21 am, "Bopha Angkor" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Beside the evils who consent with the yuons Vietcong and want to clean 
>> yuon vietcong crimes from the late genocide against Khmer people, other 
>> people know that, yuons Vietcong didn’t only used Khmer and Khmer 
>> territory to lead war against USA but at time the yuon Vietcong planed 
>> the killing field inside Khmer territory since long ago to explode in 17 
>> april 75 till today by using the same killing tools (Khmer Vietminh or 
>> Khmer rouge) composed of yuon agents and people trained and brainwashed 
>> to hate Khmer and to kill Khmer for Yuons. This is nothing new in yuon 
>> political perspective but a well ancestral yuon expansionist and 
>> genocidal politics in its quest of new territory and natural resource for 
>> its people or race.
>>
>> Killing is a crime, leading a mass persecutions against other group of 
>> people, no matter its way or pretext, is called “crime against humanity” 
>> but unfortunately many, even among intellectuals ones prefer to stand 
>> with the killers and winners than to defend justice and the victims 
>> because it is more easy to stand with the evils and the winners than to 
>> lose with the losers. Those people no matter how high their intellectual 
>> title they are not less criminals or evils than the yuons Vietcong at 
>> all.
>>
>> http://devaraja.free.fr/Khmer-books/1khmerbook-page.htm
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: Ông-thu N
>> To: [email protected]
>> Sent: Saturday, September 27, 2008 12:23 AM
>> Subject: We lost the war!
>>
>> Cambodian–Vietnamese War
>> During the First Indochina War, when Vietnam and Cambodia allied against 
>> the French, Vietnamese forces had made great use of Cambodian territory 
>> in transporting weapons, supplies, and troops. This relationship lasted 
>> through the Vietnam War, and even after the war, people from both 
>> countries commonly crossed the border unhindered.
>>
>> Even before the Vietnam War had ended, the relationship between the Khmer 
>> Rouge and Vietnam was strained. Clashes between Vietnamese and Khmer 
>> Rouge forces began as early as 1974. The Khmer Rouge demanded that the 
>> Mekong Delta area be returned to Cambodia, and that all Vietnamese leave 
>> the area. The Vietnamese refused these demands since the Mekong Delta had 
>> been Vietnamese territory for nearly three centuries. In retaliation, 
>> thousands of Vietnamese were either executed or forced out of Cambodia, 
>> and villages along the border were attacked. This led to further 
>> escalation of the conflict and ultimately to the Vietnamese invasion and 
>> occupation of Cambodia..
>>
>> The war between Vietnam and the Khmer Rouge's Democratic Kampuchea began 
>> shortly after the fall of Saigon. On May 1, 1975, a team of Khmer Rouge 
>> soldiers raided Phu Quoc Island against little or no Vietnamese 
>> resistance, and then executed more than five hundred Vietnamese civilians 
>> on Tho Chu Island. Angered by the Khmer Rouge's aggression, Hanoi 
>> launched a counter-attack that resulted in the liberation of those 
>> islands by Vietnamese forces. The battle over Phu Quoc was a cause of 
>> concern for the newly-established Socialist Republic of Vietnam as the 
>> country was challenged by a new enemy at a time when relations with the 
>> People's Republic of China began to deteriorate due to Vietnam's 
>> ideological alignment with the Soviet Union. That concern was further 
>> strengthened by the presence of Chinese advisors to Pol Pot's regime and 
>> increasing shipments of military hardware to Kampuchea's armed forces.
>>
>> Following the raids on Phu Quoc and Tho Chu Islands the Khmer Rouge 
>> conducted two major incursions into Vietnam. The first attack occurred in 
>> April 1977, when regular units of the Khmer Rouge army advanced 10 
>> kilometres (6 mi) into Vietnam, occupying some parts of An Giang Province 
>> where it massacred a large number of Vietnamese civilians. The second 
>> attack was in September of the same year. This time they were able to 
>> advance 150 kilometres (93 mi) into Vietnam. In retaliation, six 
>> divisions of the Vietnam People's Army invaded Cambodia on December 31, 
>> 1977. The Vietnamese army advanced as far as Neak Luong and later 
>> withdrew, taking with them some key Khmer Rouge figures, including future 
>> Prime Minister Hun Sen. The invasion was intended only as a "warning" to 
>> the Khmer Rouge. The Vietnamese offered a diplomatic solution to the 
>> border conflict that would require the establishment of a demilitarized 
>> zone along the border, but the offer was rejected by Pol Pot and fighting 
>> resumed.
>>
>> Meanwhile, as the fighting continued to rage in the border areas between 
>> Vietnam and Kampuchea, the Khmer Rouge leadership began to purge members 
>> of its own party, as well as military commanders who escaped from 
>> Vietnamese forces after the short offensive in September 1977. Undeterred 
>> by earlier defeats the Khmer Rouge launched another major offensive into 
>> Vietnam using two regular divisions. Once again the Khmer Rouge was able 
>> to occupy some townships in Vietnam, conducting clearing operations that 
>> included the massacre of civilians. In one notable event the town of Ba 
>> Chuc was raided by the Khmer Rouge forces; by the time it was over most 
>> of Ba Chuc's inhabitants were brutally slaughtered leaving only two 
>> survivors.
>>
>> Hanoi was now resolved to remove the threat of the Khmer Rouge 
>> permanently. The Vietnamese assembled a force of 10 divisions along the 
>> border with Kampuchea, with strong armour and air support they advanced 
>> into Khmer Rouge-held territory on December 25, 1978. The Kampuchean 
>> National United Front for National Salvation (KNUFNS), created with 
>> assistance from Hanoi, also went along with the military operation.
>>
>> The Pol Pot regime of Democratic Kampuchea was largely supported with the 
>> Peoples Republic of China, with both regimes based on closely associated 
>> Maoist ideologies. The Vietnamese attack on Cambodia on December 25, 1978 
>> was followed by massive amounts of troop deployments along the vast 
>> China-Vietnamese border. On the dawn of February 17, 1979, the People's 
>> Liberation Army moved into Vietnamese territory, at which point the 
>> Cambodian capital already had been captured by the Vietnamese and the Pol 
>> Pot regime toppled (see below), reportedly accusing the Vietnamese 
>> government of "revisionist" ideologies and the mistreatment of ethnic 
>> Chinese living in Vietnam. The Chinese kept moving into the north of 
>> Vietnam, reportedly advancing towards Hanoi at a high speed though not on 
>> good terms with their supply lines. The Chinese army captured Cao Bang on 
>> March 2 and Lang Son on March 4. The following day, however, the Beijing 
>> regime announced that it would not participate in further action moving 
>> more deeply into Vietnam, apparently after meeting fierce and unexpected 
>> harsh resistance by the well trained and experienced Vietnamese forces, 
>> supplied with American technology left behind earlier. With the Chinese 
>> support lost after Vietnamese recapitulation, Cambodia was left to the 
>> mercy of its destiny.
>>
>> The Khmer Rouge had prepared a force of 70,000 to resist the invasion, 
>> but was not able to prevent the Vietnamese from advancing to Phnom Penh, 
>> which was captured on January 7, 1979. The Khmer Rouge switched to a 
>> guerrilla campaign and began to attack the long and exposed line of 
>> communication of the Vietnamese forces. The Vietnamese used the pretext 
>> that none of their own troops were actually fighting but only supporting 
>> the KNUFNS in their struggle against the brutal Khmer Rouge. This was not 
>> the case: Vietnam had over 150,000 troops in Cambodia, while the KNUFNS 
>> force numbered only 20,000. For the remainder of the occupation, the 
>> Vietnamese and Khmer Rouge were locked in a bloody guerrilla war. 
>> Vietnamese forces held the cities while the Khmer Rouge controlled the 
>> rural areas, especially along the Thai border. The struggle did not end 
>> until Vietnam withdrew its troops in the late 1980s. The number of 
>> casualties is uncertain but is estimated at 30,000 on each side.- Hide 
>> quoted text -
>>
>> - Show quoted text -
> >
> 


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