AMERICAN POLICY: AID KHMERS, BUT DON'T RILE THAIS

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP80B01554R003300120070-0
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RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
2
Document Creation Date: 
December 19, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 22, 2005
Sequence Number: 
70
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
June 26, 1980
Content Type: 
NSPR
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PDF icon CIA-RDP80B01554R003300120070-0.pdf161.74 KB
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Approved Folease 2005/09/28: CIA-RDP80B015003300120070-0 Tape 28 Side A, 4 1/2 - 4 9/16 NOTE FOR: Gary FROM: DCI ,I JUL 19' I'd like to talk to you about retrieving some material from the Reflections Folders. yj,,~-t, 6- -,&V Approved For Release 2005/09/28 : CIA-RDP80BO1554R003300120070-0 ARTICLE ON PAGE. For ReleasA: 10B01554R003300120070-0 26 JUNE 1980 By Rod Nordland fnq &frer Sip Wnfsr . - - ~' ? ? ' t BANGKOK US. policy; here has been to support Thailand.arid the other? non communist." Southeast Asian countries in their=efforts to, find.. a diplomatic solution to the Cambodian problem;-, 17% . - Most officials. ?would+ agree with a . remark made by Rep Elizabeth Holtz man (D-N.Y.) shortly after she visit ed Phnom Penh' last November. "The. ultimate solution to. the.Cambadian problem? I think it will have to-be political solution if. there are any people left by then,'. she said .:. ' ' The U.S. refugee coordinator, Vi' for Palmieri;. has urged that cross border feeding operations and other relief programs be continued; ? And the United States, has- pledged to underwrite one-third of the, costs- of the total relief efforts on the part: of the internationalcommunity. But Palmieri- and,=other officials., have quietly assented to the policy of. not resettling Cambodian refugees in third countries:-.'except for those with; immediate family abroad. And U.S.. officials have never sought an ry`;of. diplomatic.?:visits by,-top+V1 t- Lucrca iu ruzukrjee quvia:rivproriue on-going debate in Thailand on the for the resettlement of Cambodians Years of rule, from 1975 to early 1979. have a refugee aove ey impact, And it might'' The U.S. Refugee Office in the U.S. The Khmer Rouge has retained the l also official also negative embassy here has, however; set up a Cambodian seat in the United Na Thai government' responset to on the any- . s' i Khmer Emergency Group, which has ,t lions, and the United States, Thailand: new influx of Khmer," Palmieri said. monitored. the circumstances of and. the other ASEAN (S)utheast Given those immediate concerns,. Cambodian refugees and .often: lob. Asian non-communist).' nations con; U.S. officials- have, made' no initia- bied for better treatment of the refu.= gees by the. Thais. , And the embassy along with Inter. nationat ?,'agencies .-has. quietly. brought- considerable. pressure to bear on, the Thai government to shel- -ter Cambodians, and.' not, repatriate them. Thailand Is-a firm U.S. ally and the recipient of'iarge_ foreign aid grants and military arms. US. refugee officials have pushed to, have Cambodian#.refugees consid- ered' as candidates: for: resettlement within the existing. US._. quotas of 14,000 refugees . a month.'. But, Thai land and the U,N,,High. Commission-- er for Refugees.. (UNhiCR).:have unwilling-to-negotiate the issue; and_ refused to cooperate, unless .the Quo- tas are- increased.. They argue that other refugee groups already in Thai .land must be resettled first. US. officials regard the Cambodian- refugee issue asan impasse that will not. be: broken``until, there is; some. sort' of diplomatic settlement of the issue of the Vietnamese presence in Cambodia.. ?:-Vietnamese troops invaded in December 1978 and,now occupy the country. The rationale given for the invasion- was that the Chinese- backed regime of Pol Pot had. threat- ened- Vietnam's -security, and that Vietnam bad come into- the. country at the invitation of the. government of Heng..Samrin,. who is generally regarded asaclient ruler for Hanoi. On Nov. 14, the United Nations, in a resounding defeat: for. Vietnam, de- clared the occupation unwarranted and called for Vietnam's withdrawal, .The, United Nations:.continues to recognize the Pol, Pot regime as ..Cambodia's-?legitimate government although most member nations de- plored. the atrocities committed by tinue-to recognize that government r Lives - at:'least:publicly toward : The ASEAN position; supported by arranging for resettlement o? refu the United States;-.is that the Hanoi gees from Cambodia : . government.. should withdraw its, `i-The current. refugee intakestands, troops and the United Nations should at a total of 231;700 refugees for, fiscal sponsor. free elections with the aim- year 1980, and the Carter administrao of"establishing a neutral Cambodia. tion has proposed keeping the figure' Presumably, under such - a -settle-- at that level for next year: This total' meat, a large proportion of the refu- includes 168,000 Indochinese refu-. gees, or 14,000 per month, and the: gees would be~ willing to return to , ,their,homeland. administration has sought to keep U.S. intelligence sources say the occuPa ton o am la, an ne continued _zLierri l warfare with the Khmer Rouge are costing titetnam's sponsor the3ovtet union, 5f mil{tan a ay in mi itary aid. And Vietnam has plenty of its own problems, with post-war. reconstruc- tion and. a food shortage as the result's of several :years of poor- crops, that i tnighj recline it toward a solution. r. Pending any kind- of diplomatic breakthrough, U.S. policy on the Cambodian refugees has centered on assuring Thailand that it will main- taro its commitment to take the early: Vietnamese and, Laotian refugees, -.and to continue a high level of finan- cial support.. m ny. 'Arguing- before Congress 'against: any cutbacks in U.S. quotas, Palmieri, the U.S. coordinator for refugees,. warned that. Thailand - as.well as. .other countries. in the region - "would view a cutback as'a breach of our repeated assurances. of"support? and they might feel that there.is no- ..recourse but to refuse asylum to new arrivals, as they-did last spring. 'Lessening of. international and' particularly United. States support ..could have an adverse effect on the. "But Efanotas declared the situa well.". or in Cambodia "irreversible," The balance of the US refugee refusing to withdraw. its troops as intake will -be made up,;of refugees ii `"long as.it' believes that China.repre largely from communisr'.countries, supplying arms to the Pot Potguerril- las, K, b - r T(~r1 But Haaot ,has nor showti: itself Approved For Ri?M i with 19,500 from Cuba and 38,000. from the Soviet Union and Eastern s Europe. U.S. officials say it would be...unreal istic to. expect an increase in those totals to provide for resettlement of` Cambodians in theUnited States, ands B1i$5DC911~t01X@~~ the US'. le_ that'policy- ,k.