Ask Brutalized Cambodians What They Think of Kissinger

BidenPresident

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Forty years after the American military attacked them, the people of Tropeang Phlong village in Cambodia were still traumatized.

Beginning around 1969, U.S. helicopters regularly strafed the village, according to survivors. The American choppers used the wind off their blades to blow the thatch roofs off homes, turned their machine guns on those who fled and on men and women working in the rice paddies and fired incendiary rockets that set houses ablaze. Aircraft dropped bombs and gleaming napalm canisters that tumbled end over end and bloomed into fiery explosions.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/international-world/kissinger-cambodia-war-legacy.html
 
Have you ever been to Cambodia, especially the Tuol Sleng genocide museum in Phnom Penh. Somehow I very much doubt it! The Kmer Rouge were total fucking psychopaths, sadly Pol Pot who was responsible for the deaths of over 2 million Cambodians, escaped justice for his crimes.

The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is the memorial site of the S-21 interrogation and detention centre of the brutal Kmer Rouge regime.

Located in the heart of Phnom Penh, it preserves a tragic period in history with the aim to encourage visitors to be messengers of peace.

https://tuolsleng.gov.kh/en/
 
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Have you ever been to Cambodia, especially the Tuol Sleng genocide museum in Phnom Penh. Somehow I very much doubt it! The Kmer Rouge were total fucking psychopaths, sadly Pol Pot who was responsible for the deaths of over 2 million Cambodians, escaped justice for his crimes.

The Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum is the memorial site of the S-21 interrogation and detention centre of the Khmer Rouge regime.

Located in the heart of Phnom Penh, it preserves a tragic period in history with the aim to encourage visitors to be messengers of peace.

https://tuolsleng.gov.kh/en/


Khmer Rouge regime was from 1975-79

Lasting for four years (between 1975 and 1979), the Cambodian Genocide was an explosion of mass violence that saw between 1.5 and 3 million people killed at the hands of the Khmer Rouge,
 
Forty years after the American military attacked them, the people of Tropeang Phlong village in Cambodia were still traumatized.

Beginning around 1969, U.S. helicopters regularly strafed the village, according to survivors. The American choppers used the wind off their blades to blow the thatch roofs off homes, turned their machine guns on those who fled and on men and women working in the rice paddies and fired incendiary rockets that set houses ablaze. Aircraft dropped bombs and gleaming napalm canisters that tumbled end over end and bloomed into fiery explosions.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/international-world/kissinger-cambodia-war-legacy.html

So you're trying to blame the Democrats' darlings, the Khmer Rouge, on Kissinger?


The left supported the communists in SE Asia theroughout the war, and ever since.
 
Guno צְבִי;5875394 said:
Khmer Rouge regime from 1975-79

Lasting for four years (between 1975 and 1979), the Cambodian Genocide was an explosion of mass violence that saw between 1.5 and 3 million people killed at the hands of the Khmer Rouge,


Here is the infamous tree in the courtyard where the guards used to bash babies' brains out.


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As you watch America and all of the West collapse remember this....this fucker was one of the main architects.
 
As secretary of state and national security adviser under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, Mr. Kissinger created U.S. war policy in Southeast Asia. His expansion and escalation of the Vietnam War into Cambodia killed, wounded or displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians. That legacy still reverberates, and not just in bombed and brutalized Cambodian villages. His disregard for civilian casualties in war established a blueprint for the projection of U.S. military power that would have deadly consequences for civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Syria, among other places.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/international-world/kissinger-cambodia-war-legacy.html
 
"Mr. Kissinger’s critics, including Ben Kiernan, former director of the Genocide Studies Program at Yale University, say he bears substantial responsibility for attacks in Cambodia that ultimately killed as many as 150,000 civilians."
 
"Mr. Kissinger spent decades ducking questions about the bombing of Cambodia and muddying the truth in public comments. “I just wanted to make clear that it was not a bombing of Cambodia, but it was a bombing of North Vietnamese in Cambodia,” he said of the secret U.S. airstrikes during his 1973 Senate confirmation hearings to become secretary of state. Mr. Kissinger estimated that U.S. attacks during his involvement in the war resulted in 50,000 Cambodian civilian deaths.
 
As secretary of state and national security adviser under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, Mr. Kissinger created U.S. war policy in Southeast Asia. His expansion and escalation of the Vietnam War into Cambodia killed, wounded or displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians. That legacy still reverberates, and not just in bombed and brutalized Cambodian villages. His disregard for civilian casualties in war established a blueprint for the projection of U.S. military power that would have deadly consequences for civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Syria, among other places.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/international-world/kissinger-cambodia-war-legacy.html

Americans didn't butcher millions of Cambodians; Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge did, you fucking idiot.
 
As secretary of state and national security adviser under Presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford, Mr. Kissinger created U.S. war policy in Southeast Asia. His expansion and escalation of the Vietnam War into Cambodia killed, wounded or displaced hundreds of thousands of civilians. That legacy still reverberates, and not just in bombed and brutalized Cambodian villages. His disregard for civilian casualties in war established a blueprint for the projection of U.S. military power that would have deadly consequences for civilians in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia and Syria, among other places.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/12/01/opinion/international-world/kissinger-cambodia-war-legacy.html

It's supremely ironic that it was the Vietnamese that finally kicked the Kmer Rouge out in 1979.

https://www.history.com/topics/cold-war/the-khmer-rouge
 
Guno צְבִי;5875394 said:
Khmer Rouge regime was from 1975-79

Lasting for four years (between 1975 and 1979), the Cambodian Genocide was an explosion of mass violence that saw between 1.5 and 3 million people killed at the hands of the Khmer Rouge,

so you admit kissinger was a trash war machine psychotic.
 
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