A convicted terrorist contributing money to the National Republican
Congressional Committee and invited to sit on the group's Business
Advisory Council.  

WOW!  Some kind of war on terror...

David Bier

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cambodian3
jun03,0,6591613.story?coll=la-home-local

Man Indicted in Phnom Penh Attacks Active in GOP Causes
Long Beach accountant Yasith Chhun, whose group is labeled a terrorist
organization, raised funds to elect Republicans.
By David Pierson
Times Staff Writer

June 3, 2005

Yasith Chhun often boasted to newspapers and magazines about
masterminding an attack on government buildings in Cambodia and his
plans to overthrow the Southeast Asian country's communist regime.

The U.S. State Department declared the group he headed, the Cambodian
Freedom Fighters, a terrorist organization in 2001.

But that label didn't stop Chhun, 48, from gaining friends among GOP
stalwarts, such as Rep. Dana Rohrabacher of Huntington Beach and the
National Republican Congressional Committee, which raises funds for
electing Republicans to Congress.

Before his federal indictment this week on charges of plotting to
overthrow the Cambodian government, the Long Beach accountant had
raised $6,550 for the National Republican Congressional Committee and
was invited to sit on the group's Business Advisory Council, which has
tens of thousands of members nationwide, said Carl Forti, a spokesman
for the committee.

Rohrabacher said he was aware of the State Department's concerns about
the Cambodian Freedom Fighters but remained a supporter of Chhun and
his allies because of their passionate efforts to topple the Cambodian
government led by Prime Minister Hun Sen.

"The State Department quite often will worship at the altar of
stability and not consider liberty and justice as part of the
equation," the congressman said in a phone interview. When "you talk
about a dictator like Hun Sen, you don't want stability, you want
change. Let's hope our State Department is not condemning anybody who
would act to eliminate Hun Sen."

But Rohrabacher said he would not support activities that cost
civilian lives.

Chhun attended the annual meeting of the National Republican
Congressional Committee's business advisory council in Washington,
D.C., last year. Forti said the committee did not know Chhun's group
had been designated a terrorist organization, saying it was impossible
to do background checks on all its members.

"At this point, the gentleman hasn't been convicted of anything,"
Forti said. If he is a terrorist, "it's something we need to look at.
Clearly, we wouldn't want any leader of a terrorist organization being
members of our business advisory council."

Chhun, a U.S. citizen, has never made a secret of his role in the 2000
attack on several government buildings in the capital, Phnom Penh. He
spoke openly about it to newspapers and magazines, where he was
portrayed as a would-be revolutionary who ran his resistance movement
out of his tax office in Long Beach.

Federal prosecutors allege that Chhun raised money in the U.S., then
provided weapons to Cambodian Freedom Fighter members. The attacks
killed three of Chhun's group members and injured at least eight
government officials.

He spoke to Time magazine from a hideout in Thailand shortly after the
failed coup attempt, saying: "We're definitely going to try again.
There will be more operations. It won't be long."

He later repeated the assertion to the Los Angeles Times and the New
York Times. He told the New York Times last year that the FBI had
questioned him about the attacks but that he told the agents he
planned more violence. "We won't stop. We'll have more plans in the
future," he said.

"Next time," he said, "we will attack the whole country."

There is no indication that Cambodian Freedom Fighters carried out
additional attacks.

Chhun's lawyer, Leonard Matsuk, said Thursday that his client was a
fundraiser for the organization and not its mastermind. Chhun and
other members want to see freedom in their country "like Cubans wanted
Fidel Castro out of their country," Matsuk said.

Experts say it is not uncommon for staunch anti-communist immigrants
to align themselves with the Republican Party, which has gained large
support among the Vietnamese in Orange County and the Cubans in
Florida.

"It's strictly ideological. The Republicans are seen as
anti-communist, mainly because of [President] Reagan," said Frank
Gilliam, a professor of political science at UCLA. "The party's
underlying themes of individualism, self-reliance, freedom from
government intervention naturally plays to those victimized by
state-sanctioned redistribution of property and limitations of
individual freedoms."

Sakphan Keam, an English-Khmer translator in Long Beach, said many of
the city's Cambodian Americans equate the Republican Party with reform
overseas, a belief that was strengthened by President Bush's invasion
of Iraq.

"Any Cambodian who lives here thinks the Republican Party supports
change in Cambodia," Keam said.

Gilliam said that despite Chhun's public pronouncements, he was
probably too obscure for the National Republican Congressional
Committee to recognize him as a potential terrorist.

"You have to be very careful where the money comes from," he added.
"The less you know, the more due diligence you need to do. The
mainstream knows less about these [ethnic] communities."

The indictments, which were returned by a federal grand jury Tuesday
in Los Angeles, allege that Chhun formed his group in 1998 "for the
purpose of staging a violent overthrow of the Hun Sen regime." He is
charged with attempting to kill the prime minister, attack government
buildings and launch small-scale attacks on karaoke bars and fuel
depots in an effort to galvanize opposition to the Phnom Penh
government.

The indictments allege that Chhun raised money for the overthrow
effort in California, including two fundraisers on the Queen Mary in
Long Beach. The U.S. attorney's office believes that Chhun collected
between $100,000 and $200,000.

Chhun could face up to life in prison if convicted of attempting
murder in a foreign country, three years if convicted of attempting to
overthrow a friendly foreign government and 25 years if convicted of
conspiracy to damage foreign property.

Federal prosecutors also allege that Chhun defrauded members of Long
Beach's Cambodian American community. Chhun and his wife, Sras Pech,
39, were charged with recruiting Cambodian Americans who were on
welfare and other government assistance programs to file fraudulent
tax returns to obtain tax refunds.

Chhun's group is well known in Cambodia, where 38 of its members,
including at least two U.S. citizens, were convicted of participating
in the 2000 attack on government buildings in the capital. Chhun
evaded capture but was convicted in absentia.

Chhun, like many in Long Beach, fled Cambodia because of famine,
disease and civil war brought forth by Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge.
Nearly 2 million people died at the hands of the communists during the
1970s.

Long Beach has become a central migration point for Cambodians. The
neighborhood north of downtown is considered a Little Phnom Penh, with
restaurants, shops and a temple lining the streets. This is where
Chhun operated his tax preparation business and where some of his
anti-government activities were based.

Chhun is a more controversial figure within his own community. Though
many praised his opposition to the government, they questioned his
means. Some community leaders said they considered Chhun more of a
fringe figure.




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