^Obviously not imo. Not only did they fail, but it was an international humiliation for the US.
On April 17, 1790 American ambassador Benjamin Franklin died.
In 1969, Sirhan Sirhan was convicted of the assassination of Robert F Kennedy.
And on this day in 1975, Phnom Penh fell to the Khmer Rouge, ending the Cambodian war and ushering in an era of terror and systematic mass murder in Cambodia.
Less than 5 years later, the newly communist Vietnamese government invaded and removed the Khmer Rouge. Was this invasion justified? What were the real intentions of the Vietnamese, were they genuinely concerned the with atrocities taking place in Cambodia? Or did they simply want to install a regime that worked more closely with the Vietnamese government?
How easily could the Khmer Rouge have been manipulated to turn against the Vietnamese? The Khmer Rouge were an offshoot of the North Vietnamese, operated under a very similar system, and had a seat at the UN.
Agreed! +1Ooh, two questions!
I can't believe some people totally reject evolution. I'm sure those people feel the same way about those of us who totally reject creationism lol.
It's kind of scary that money is backed only by faith. I can see why they wanted to do away with the gold standard, but still.
Negatory, the Khmer Rouge was a US backed organization. They were a communist-like organization, but they were used by the US to combat the communist takeover of Vietnam as soon as the Khmer Republic was founded. So the two countries were at odds from the beginning. The Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia in the late 70s also prompted a (failed) Chinese invasion of Vietnam.
^In what way? Hitler had a mustache and Vlad is clean shaven. Hitler was Austrian, while Vlad is Russian![]()
The part about them being an offshoot of the north Vietnamese that operated under a similar system lol
LOL!
Leadership, ideals, political reign
They did work closely with the N. Vietnamese before being manipulated and corrupted by outside powers. The only reason they came to power was due to support from the N. Vietnamese. Pretty much every source out there supports this notion.
Relations between Cambodia and Vietnam have always been guarded. Thus, although the Khmer Rouge received aid from North Vietnam in their initial rebellion, the Khmer Rouge was hesitant about acknowledging ties between their party and the Vietnamese. They viewed Vietnam as their historical enemy.