Pol Pot Research Paper

Words: 1572
Pages: 7

Many dictators pop up through time, some without an effect and some that change the course of history forever. Here the focus will be put upon a small country which made a huge impact in millions of people’s lives.Seen here as Cambodia struggles through the reign of Pol Pot, “For two decades the Cambodian people have suffered from war and totalitarian tyranny on a scale unprecedented in modern history” (Article 3). All dictators have come through a revolution, such as ours. Revolutions usually bring positive outcomes, such as the American Revolution of 1776, however Cambodia’s was not so positive. In 1975 Pol Pot came to power, him and the Khmer Regime controlled the country through war and violence.
Born in 1925 in Prek Sbov, Cambodia, about
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Pol Pot and his revolutionaries had a full on war against the current government, eventually killing all or most of the supporters and politicians of the former government.
Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge took complete control in 1975, they expressed their control by mass murders. They killed anyone who was intellectual or was a skilled worker. All in all about one and a half million people were murdered in cold blood, this includes those who were killed before their complete control and those who were starved to death.
The newly established government was called the “Democratic Kampuchea”, however it was communist. The Khmer Rouge, ran by Pol Pot, were in complete control of the people, commanding them to do whatever they pleased. Soon after their coming to power they begin work on the government. “The new government carried out a radical program of evacuating cities, closing schools and factories, and herding the population into collective farms.” The new government can also be considered a totalitarian tyranny, since the country was mostly ran by one man, Pol Pot. However, Pol Pot was also responding to the Khmer Regime making it more of a communist government with a totalitarian