Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia

Year Zero: The Silent Death of Cambodia

1979, Military and War  -   32 Comments
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Ratings: 8.56/10 from 151 users.

Year Zero - The Silent Death of CambodiaPresident Nixon and Mr. Kissinger unleashed 100,000 tons of bombs, the equivalent of 5 Hiroshimas.

The bombing was their personal decision; they illegally and secretly, they bombed Cambodia, a neutral country, back to the Stone Age.

And I mean Stone Age in its' literal sense.

John Pilger vividly reveals the brutality and murderous political ambitions of the Pol Pot/Khmer Rouge totalitarian regime which bought genocide and despair to the people of Cambodia while neighboring countries, including Australia, shamefully ignored the immense human suffering and unspeakable crimes that bloodied this once beautiful country.

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Joel Breger
Joel Breger
6 years ago

Yes I just visited Phnom Penh last month and prison S21. This is a huge shock for our western way of life very far from this terror. What I don't understand it's why it took ages for western countries USA, UK, France , Sweden, Italy etc... to recognize this massacre and the new government installed with the Vietnamese. Worse during that time the Khmer rouge continues to be the only government to deal with them. And Pol Phot was in Thailand with refugees pouring peaceful days. This is completely immoral, hoping history books will take this into account and explain why western countries are culprit for this genocide and to complicity in failing to help a nation in jeopardy.

Ashdip
Ashdip
7 years ago

Just that, you have power doesnot give you the right to use them. F*** USA. They starts war everywhere. They dont think about the post-war situation.. how to contain it. Its not about winning/ losing. A war leaves a country scarred.

Ricardo Martins
Ricardo Martins
7 years ago

What a great documentary, a true and raw display of reality.
Still the people choose to breath the lies of psychotic murderers moved by power...
Have we all lost the feeling of empathy and compassion to the point that we allow such atrocities to happen?

Paul
Paul
7 years ago

3rd biggest genocide recorded. Lots of blame being thrown around at different countries but none ever seems to go on the people who actually carried out the acts of execution. Plus no remorse has been shown by any of them since. If your country was bombed would you smash babies heads off of trees in the name of a revolution?! There is blame to be issued to outside parties for certain atrocities but the Khmer Rouge are to blame for the genocide and nobody else and yet they are still free today! Or shall we just say it was Angkor's will and then that's fine?!

Vic Malik
Vic Malik
8 years ago

Spent 2 years working with orphans in Cambodia.... The country still needs our help...

ratko
ratko
8 years ago

Blaice, really? LBGT? That's a fraud. Another fake paradigm that US regime is trying to sell to your people.

Blaice
Blaice
8 years ago

I hope Nixon is rotting in hell. He is the American equivalent to Germany's Hitler.

coryn
coryn
9 years ago

The American People are, and have been brainwashed and manipulated from our earliest years, by the schools, the media, and the churches. And it's taken me a lifetime to understand that simple fact, and to see what America has in fact done, what misery it has created in the world. Please go to the documentaries PsyWar and Century of the Self to understand this. John Pilger, I thank you for your dedication, you are a true human being in the fullest sense of the word. We knew at the time that Nixon and Kissinger were liars, and I am thankful that Nixon, before he died, was revealed for who he really was. But nothing changes except the names and the faces. Today we have Rumsfeld and Cheney doing the dirty work, and together with George Bush, all of them lying daily about our relationships with Iraq and Iran and the rest of the world. We're being bought off with toys and cheap gasoline. Americans will be hated around the world for years to come..... So now look at the size of our military forces and the number of bases worldwide. We control land, air and seas, but we're a bankrupt country. How can that not lead to trouble in the future? Shame on these men!

spen4leeds
spen4leeds
9 years ago

theres still an equal amount of bombs dropped in germany unexploded lying in the mud in cambodia and laos killing people today, its the most bombed country in the world, america has commited so many crimes across the world it amazes me they continue to get away with it

spen4leeds
spen4leeds
9 years ago

i hate to say this but i really think the world one day is going to turn round and unleash hell on america and the uk and other allies, money needs taking out of politics in america and it needs to happen fast before theres another world war, presidents with any connection to massive companies like Halliburton needs to happen now, america needs to take its country back and us in the uk need to stop licking arse

PaulBraveheart
PaulBraveheart
11 years ago

I was in Cambodia and went to S-21 and the killing fields. Such a tragic and hard to put into words, horrific genocide. That country and it's people suffered so much and to know my country had played such a big part saddens me. To also know that the Vietnam war was started because of the Gulf of Tonkin Lie, never happened and is now declassified. So many million had of people had to die so a few rich families could get richer. After all that is all war really is. Really Rich people sending off sons of poor people to die so they can make a lot of money.

Dean Thompson
Dean Thompson
11 years ago

man that was some heavy s***. I went to Cambodia a few years ago. You see amputees and f--ked up people everywhere still, a generation later.

Nishan
Nishan
11 years ago

i couldn't finish the whole video...**** US AND ITS ALLIES

trlrprkcon
trlrprkcon
12 years ago

What a one sided load of pap. For a peaceful, quiet, unassuming people they certainly perfected the art of savage killing very quickly.
I'm curious, where did the murderers get the AMTRACKS, RPG's mortars, machine guns and all the rest of their weapons from? The USA? I also love the part where the documentary leaves out any mention on the Ho-Chi-Mien trail and makes the impression we carpet bombed the entire country. It sure looked like Pheom-Pene was undamaged.
Bottom line, WHO created and supported Pol-Pot and his regime of terror?

audiophile
audiophile
13 years ago

@ Keith Rogers:
I can tell that you probably have something interesting and relevant to say but I'm having a hard time understanding you or following your ideas. Try to ease up on the prose and take the time to proofread what you write. Complete sentences, accurate punctuation and functional segue would do wonders in conveying your idea and maintaining your credibility.
Please don't take this personal, I'm not trying to insult you. I just see a lot of people ranting on things that are relevant but the way they make their point ends up so disjointed and flakey that they end up coming across as unballanced or just stupid. We all know that with right wing conservatives running around with their bullhorns spreading misinformation and malfeasance, the last thing we need is to be written off because of semantics. Just think of hippies..... generally they have some fundamentally good philosophy but they loose their credibility talking, um the way they talk...... I mean, really, who takes hippies seriously? Just watch the documentary "Butterfly" and you'll see what I mean.
Take care

ItIsI
ItIsI
13 years ago

I Phisically had pain in my heart looking at this

Elias
Elias
13 years ago

US is a war sick criminal..starting war whenever they like..aids not provide n UN is stupid enough..rules r dead..y they dun jus aid ti cambodians immed..waiting 4 votes n taking thier own sweet time when ppl r dead

Nikola
Nikola
13 years ago

Horrible. Simply horrible. What a massacre. And H. Kissinger got a Nobel prize for this massacre???!!!
John Pilger, the best journalist ever.

karl jansson (sweden)
karl jansson (sweden)
14 years ago

re: Robert Haley.
I've lived in Cambodia, i've seen the places from this documentary. this is not propaganda, it's fact, if you fly from Saigon to Phnom penh you can still se bomb craters in the cambodian countryside. I recomend you to watch the documentary "trials of Kissinger" to ge an idea of the foreign policies of the Nixon administration during the 70's. Norodom Sihanouk was overthrown by the us backed general Lon Nol 1970. Sihanouk was living in exil in China. from China he went out on the radio urging the khmers to "go to the jungle and join the guerilla, the khmer rouge", he belived they could help him defeat Lon Nol and restore his power. the US bombed a neutral country, it's a war crime, and thus makes Kissinger and Nixon war criminals, the UN should put them on trial at the warcrime tribunal in Haag, but sadly the UN didnt behave that nice during this era either. the khmer rouge were allowed to keep their seat at the UN till 1989, even though the world knew of their crimes. And the khmer rouge didn't take Phnom penh in september 1975, they took phnom penh on april 17th 1975, and the vietnamese took phnom penh from the khmer rouge 7 january 1979 (bhramphal makhara). this is a good documentary, not propaganda.

robert haley
robert haley
14 years ago

No. It's propaganda. At least the beginning is. I haven't seen the whole thing yet. US bombing of Cambodia ended on August 17th of 1973! The Khmer Rouge took Pnom Pehn in Sept. of 1975. The bombing ended two years before year zero, and over two years before any starvation began. He fails to mention that. In fact, it appears that his mis-impression is quite deliberate. Tying Nixon and Kissinger to the Cambodian genocide is completely gratuitous.

Tyler
Tyler
14 years ago

This was very enlightening. I've read "The Killing Fields," which was a nonfiction book about these events, but watching this has been refreshing. It's hard to believe that people can be capable of committing such atrocities.

Der Oberst
Der Oberst
14 years ago

Great documentary because its basis is solid journalism.

****Starts

Regards,
Der Oberst