The Patriotic and Democratic Front of the Great National Union of Kampuchea (Khmer: រណសិរ្សប្រជាធិបតេយ្យស្នេហាជាតិនៃមហាសាមគ្គីជាតិកម្ពុជា) (PDFGNUK) was a Kampuchean mass organization set up by the Communist Party of Kampuchea (popularly known as the Khmer Rouge) on August 21, 1979[1] after the fall of Democratic Kampuchea to Vietnamese troops and the subsequent proclamation of the People's Republic of Kampuchea. It was set up as a counterpart to the Kampuchean United Front for National Salvation that had been nurtured by the Vietnamese. Its purpose was to rally anti-Vietnamese nationalists to support the Khmer Rouge, as part of an effort to legitimize the discredited Democratic Kampuchea regime.[2] It was announced by Khieu Samphan, who was elected its provisional chairman.[3] The PDFGNUK can be seen as an attempt to revive the goals of the similar GRUNK coalition of the early 1970s, an organization that united the Khmer Rouge and pro-Sihanouk forces opposing the Khmer Republic.
Activities
editIn theory, the Union served as an interim organization fulfilling the conditions of a government in exile at the Kampuchean-Thai border until the formation of the Coalition Government of Democratic Kampuchea in 1982. Within a year the Front had published a draft of its political program. With Chinese backing it disowned some of the "errors" of the 1975-1979 period and announced that the ability to freely marry and to practice religion was to be respected,[4] while also calling for a "liberal democratic system" replacing the 1976 constitution[5][6] as it "renounced the building of socialism and communism for tens or hundreds of years in order to mobilize a broad national front to crush the Vietnamese enemy, the Lê Duẩn clique."[7] The Front promoted calls for free, contested elections with UN oversight after the expulsion of Vietnamese troops[8] and encouraged the development of private property along with the participation of hitherto persecuted Buddhist monks in the governing affairs of the country.[9] These activities however were widely seen as having ulterior and dishonest motives, with Prince Sihanouk denouncing the Front and its program as a "ploy," and "only a few responded to the Khmer Rouge's appeal for unity under the PDFGNUK," though despite this the Front formally continued to exist as of 1987 under the Party of Democratic Kampuchea.[10]
References
edit- ^ John S. Bowman (Ed.). Columbia Chronologies of Asian History and Culture. New York: Columbia University Press. 2000. p. 433.
- ^ Michael Haas. Genocide by Proxy: Cambodian Pawn on a Superpower Chessboard. New York: Praeger Publishers. 1991. p. 42.
- ^ Patrick Raszelenberg, Peter Schier & Jeffry G. Wong. The Cambodia Conflict: Search for a Settlement, 1979-1991. Institute of Asian Affairs. 1995. p. 31.
- ^ George Thomas Kurian. The Encyclopedia of the Third World Vol. I. Facts on File, Inc. p. 339.
- ^ Haas, p. 42.
- ^ Dennis Shoesmith. Cambodia: The Obstacles to Peace. Centre for Southeast Asian Studies. 1992. p. 47.
- ^ Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars Vol. 17 (1985). p. 62.
- ^ "Five-Point Programme for a Great National Union of Kampuchea Against the Vietnamese Le Duan Clique," contained in items-in-Indo-China (peninsula) - country files - Kampuchea International Conference on Kampuchea Archived 2011-07-28 at the Wayback Machine (PDF pages 89-90)
- ^ Bulletin of Concerned Asian Scholars, p. 61.
- ^ Russell R. Ross. Cambodia: A Country Study. Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division of the United States Library of Congress. 1987. p. 195, 204.