| 31 May | ||
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1973: US Senate stops Cambodia bombing The US Senate has voted to cut off funds for the bombing of Cambodia. The move is a serious blow to President Richard Nixon's South-East Asia policy and follows a similar resolution voted in by the House of Representatives on 10 May. The president's special adviser, Dr Henry Kissinger, had pleaded with the senate not to rebel against the government while he was still trying to negotiate a lasting settlement in Indo-China. He said if the communists in Vietnam realised there were divisions in Congress, he would find it impossible to hold them to the terms of the 28 January ceasefire. But it seems his argument held little sway with Congress. The amendment to an approprations bill was sponsored by Democrat Senator Thomas Eagleton and supported by many liberal Republicans.
The Senate majority leader, Mike Mansfield, said: "The only way to face up to our responsibilities, the only way to do it effectively is to cut the purse strings." There is also pressure to end the civil war in Cambodia from China -currently home to Prince Norodom Sihanouk, former leader of Cambodia deposed in a military coup three years ago. The Cambodian army are fighting a battle on several fronts - against Prince Sihanouk's guerrilla groups, the Khmer Rouge under Pol Pot and the North Vietnamese communists, the Vietcong, who have been taking a battering from US fighter bombers. The prince remains a personal as well as political enemy to Cambodia's President Lon Nol who has recently told William Sullivan, Dr Kissinger's assistant, that he was willing to start peace talks with the prince and his government in exile. |
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