Early History to Independence
The Funan empire was established in what is now Cambodia in the 1st cent. A.D.
 By the 3d cent. the Funanese, under the leadership of Fan Shih-man 
(reigned 205–25), had conquered their neighbors and extended their sway 
to the lower Mekong River. In the 4th cent., according to Chinese 
records, an Indian Brahmin extended his rule over Funan, introducing 
Hindu customs, the Indian legal code, and the alphabet of central India.
In the 6th cent. Khmers from the rival Chen-la state to the north overran Funan. With the rise of the Khmer Empire, Cambodia became dominant in SE Asia. Angkor,
 the capital of the Khmer empire, was one of the world's great 
architectural achievements. After the fall of the empire (15th cent.), 
however, Cambodia was the prey of stronger neighbors. To pressure from 
Siam on the western frontier was added in the 17th cent. pressure from Annam
 on the east; the kings of Siam and the lords of Hue alike asserted 
overlordship and claims to tribute. In the 18th cent. Cambodia lost 
three western provinces to Siam and the region of Cochin China to the Annamese.
Intrigue
 and wars on Cambodian soil continued into the 19th cent., and in 1854 
the king of Cambodia appealed for French intervention. A French 
protectorate was formally established in 1863, and French influence was 
consolidated by a treaty in 1884. Cambodia became part of the Union of Indochina
 in 1887. In 1907 a French-Siamese treaty restored Cambodia's western 
provinces. In World War II, under Japanese occupation, Cambodia again 
briefly lost those provinces to Siam.
In Jan., 1946, France granted Cambodia self-government within the French Union;
 a constitution was promulgated in May, 1947. A treaty signed in 1949 
raised the country's status to that of an associated state in the French
 Union, but limitations on the country's sovereignty persisted. King 
Norodom Sihanouk campaigned for complete independence, which was finally granted in 1953. Early in 1954, Communist Viet Minh
 troops from Vietnam invaded Cambodia. The Geneva Conference of 1954 led
 to an armistice providing for the withdrawal of all foreign forces from
 Cambodia. An agreement between France and Cambodia (Dec., 1954) severed
 the last vestige of French control over Cambodian policy. Cambodia 
withdrew from the French Union in 1955 and was admitted into the United 
Nations later that year.
Cambodia under Sihanouk
King
 Norodom Sihanouk abdicated in Mar., 1955, in order to enter politics; 
his father, Norodom Suramarit, succeeded him as monarch. Sihanouk 
subsequently formed the Popular Socialist party and served as premier. 
After Suramarit's death in 1960, the monarchy was represented by 
Sihanouk's mother, Queen Kossamak Nearireak. Sihanouk was installed in 
the new office of chief of state. Throughout the 1960s, Sihanouk 
struggled to keep Cambodia neutral as the neighboring countries of Laos 
and South Vietnam came under increasing Communist attack (see Vietnam War). Sihanouk permitted the use of Cambodian territory as a supply base and refuge by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops while accepting military aid from the United States to strengthen his forces against Communist infiltration.
In
 1963, Sihanouk accused the United States of supporting antigovernment 
activities and renounced all U.S. aid. Following a series of border 
incidents involving South Vietnamese troops, Cambodia in 1965 severed 
diplomatic relations with the United States. Sihanouk remained on 
friendly terms with the Communist countries, especially Communist China,
 and established close relations with France. Economic conditions 
deteriorated after the renunciation of U.S. aid, and North Vietnamese 
and Viet Cong troops continued to infiltrate. In the spring of 1969 the 
United States instituted aerial attacks against Communist strongholds in
 Cambodia; these bombings, carefully kept secret from the American 
people, later became an important issue in U.S. politics. As Communist 
infiltration increased, Sihanouk began to turn more toward the West, and
 in July, 1969, diplomatic ties with the United States were restored. 
Relations with South Vietnam and Thailand, after years of border 
disputes and incidents, began to improve.
In Aug., 
1969, Lt. Gen. Lon Nol, the defense minister and supreme commander of 
the army, became premier, with Sihanouk delegating considerable power to
 him. Sihanouk began negotiating for the removal of Viet Cong and North 
Vietnamese troops, who now numbered over 50,000 and occupied large areas
 of Cambodia. His actions, however, were not enough to ease the growing 
concern of many army leaders. Discontent with Sihanouk's rule was 
further heightened by rising inflation, ruinous financial policies, and 
governmental corruption and mismanagement. On Mar. 18, 1970, while 
Sihanouk was in Moscow seeking help against further North Vietnamese 
incursions, premier Lon Nol
 led a right-wing coup deposing Sihanouk as chief of state. Sihanouk 
subsequently set up a government-in-exile in Beijing. Soon after the 
coup, Cambodian troops began engaging Communist forces on Cambodian 
soil.
Civil War
In Apr., 1970, U.S. and South
 Vietnamese troops entered Cambodia to attack Communist bases and supply
 lines. U.S. ground forces were withdrawn by June 30, but South 
Vietnamese troops remained, occupying heavily populated areas. The 
actions of the South Vietnamese troops in Cambodia and the resumption of
 heavy U.S. air bombings in their support, with the inevitable 
destruction of villages and killing of civilians, alienated many 
Cambodians and created considerable sympathy for the Communists. The 
number of Cambodian Communists (known as the Khmer Rouge) increased from
 about 3,000 in Mar., 1970, to over 30,000 within a few years. Most of 
the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops were able to withdraw, leaving
 in progress a raging civil war fought by Cambodians but financed by the
 United States, North Vietnam, and Communist China.
On
 Oct. 9, 1970, the national assembly declared Cambodia a republic and 
changed the country's name to the Khmer Republic. By that time, however,
 the national government controlled less than one third of Cambodia's 
total land area: Phnom Penh, most of the provincial capitals, and the 
central plain S of Tônlé Sap. Despite extensive U.S. military aid, the 
Khmer Rouge retained firm control of the northeast provinces and most of
 the countryside. Eventually, more and more territory fell into 
Communist hands, despite intensive U.S. bombing attacks which persisted 
until the halt imposed by the U.S. Congress in Aug., 1973.
The
 government's military position became desperate, with government forces
 concentrating primarily on keeping communications open with an 
increasingly beleaguered Phnom Penh. In Sept., 1972, severe food 
shortages in Phnom Penh sparked two days of rioting and large-scale 
looting, in which government troops participated. Lon Nol, aided by his 
brother Lon Non, exerted an increasingly oppressive rule, with massive 
political arrests and newspaper seizures. The Khmer Rouge insurgents 
launched a large-scale attack against Cambodia's third largest city, 
Kompong Cham, in Sept., 1973, and shelled Phnom Penh in 1974 and 1975, 
inflicting heavy casualties.
The Khmer Rouge and After
In 1975, the Khmer Rouge, led by Pol Pot,
 seized control of Phnom Penh and overthrew the U.S.-backed government 
of Lon Nol. The Khmer Rouge renamed the country the Democratic 
Kampuchea, and established Pol Pot as the premier. Immediately following
 the takeover, Phnom Penh was evacuated, and the entire population of 
the country's urban areas was forced to move to rural areas and work in 
agriculture. Most of the country's vehicles and machines were destroyed 
because the new regime was opposed to technology and Western influence. 
It is estimated that about a million and a half people were executed by 
the Khmer Rouge over the next four years. Members of the upper, middle, 
or educated classes, as well as suspected enemies of the Khmer Rouge, 
were victims of the genocide.
In 1978, after Pol Pot 
refused offers of negotiation and international supervision, the 
Vietnamese army invaded and seized Phnom Penh in 1979. Prince Sihanouk, 
who had been imprisoned in his palace by the Khmer Rouge, again fled to 
Beijing. The Khmer Rouge was driven into the western countryside, but 
the Kampuchean People's Republic, led by Pol Pot, was still recognized 
by the United Nations as the country's legitimate government. Throughout
 the 1980s various guerrilla factions formed and skirmished with the 
Vietnamese and the Khmer Rouge. One such group was a coalition force led
 by Sihanouk, who was still recognized by many Cambodians as the 
country's true leader.
In 1987 talks began in Paris 
to try to settle the civil war, and in 1989, Vietnam announced plans to 
withdraw its occupying troops from Cambodia. A peace treaty was signed 
by all of Cambodia's warring factions (including the Khmer Rouge, Hun Sen's
 Vietnamese-supported government, and Prince Sihanouk's faction) on Oct.
 23, 1991. As agreed in the treaty, the United Nations assumed (1992) 
the government's administrative functions and worked toward democratic 
elections. However, provisions calling for disarmament of all factions 
were resisted by the Khmer Rouge, who resumed guerrilla warfare. 
Sihanouk denounced the Khmer Rouge, aligned himself with Premier Hun 
Sen, and again became head of state.
Cambodia's 
first-ever democratic elections were held in May, 1993, supervised by a 
large UN peacekeeping mission. Royalists won the largest bloc of 
national assembly seats (58 out of 120); Hun Sen's party came in second,
 and a coalition government with co-premiers—Prince Norodom Ranariddh 
and Hun Sen—was formed. The government administration remained populated
 largely by bureaucrats who had operated under the Hun Sen regime. The 
Khmer Rouge, who had boycotted the elections, continued armed 
opposition, retaining control of substantial territory in the N and W 
parts of the country. A new constitution reestablished the monarchy, and
 in Sept., 1993, Sihanouk became king. Attempts at mediation with the 
Khmer Rouge failed, and fighting continued.
In 1996 
the Khmer Rouge split into two factions, one of which made an accord 
with the government. Pol Pot was ousted and imprisoned by the remaining 
Khmer Rouge in 1997 and died in 1998; the Khmer Rouge subsequently lost 
most of its remaining power and support. Following fighting in July, 
1997, between the factions of Hun Sen and Prince Ranariddh, Hun Sen's 
forces declared victory and Ranariddh fled the country; he was replaced 
as first premier by Ung Huot. Prince Ranariddh returned to Cambodia in 
Mar., 1998, and became an opposition candidate in the legislative 
elections held in July. Hun Sen's party (the Cambodian People's party) 
was the official winner of the disputed election (with 64 seats out of 
122), and he became the sole premier. Prince Ranariddh became the 
president of the national assembly, but Hun Sen further consolidated his
 control of the country.
Cambodia joined the 
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 1999. Elections in 
July, 2003, failed to give Hun Sen's Cambodian People's party (CPP) the 
two-thirds majority needed to govern without a coalition, but the 
liberal and royalist opposition parties denounced the results, rejected a
 two-party coalition, formed the Alliance of Democrats, and insisted 
that the alliance be the cornerstone of a three-party coalition. The 
deadlock remained unresolved until June, 2004, when Prince Ranariddh's 
party agreed to a renewed coalition with the CPP. A 186-member cabinet, 
the seats in which were reportedly sold for large sums in the 
expectation that they would yield corrupt profits, was formed.
The king abdicated in Oct., 2004, in favor of his son Norodom Sihamoni,
 despite the fact that the constitution made no provision for 
abdication. In Feb., 2005, the national assembly lifted opposition 
leader Sam Rainsy's parliamentary immunity, subjecting him to potential 
defamation lawsuits from the governing coalition, which he had accused 
of corruption. He fled Cambodia, and was subsequently convicted of 
defamation. Other members of his party also were tried and convicted in 
trials that international human-rights groups said were shams, and 
subsequently independent human-rights activists were arrested.
A
 political truce in early 2006, due in part to pressure from 
international aid donors, resulted in a pardon for Sam Rainsy and others
 and in Rainsy's return to Cambodia. In Mar., 2006, the constitution was
 amended so that future governments could be formed with the support of a
 majority of the members of parliamemt instead of two thirds of the 
members. Evidence of corruption led the World Bank to suspend funding 
for three Cambodian development projects in mid-2006. In July, 2006, a 
tribunal staffed by both Cambodian and international judges was formed 
to try former Khmer Rouge leaders; the event marked the culmination of 
nearly nine years of negotiations concerning such trials. The first 
suspects were detained in August and Sept., 2007. In Oct., 2006, Prince 
Ranariddh was ousted as leader of the royalist party while he was out of
 the country. He was subsequently convicted (2007) in absentia of fraud 
in the sale of the party's headquarters; Ranariddh denounced the 
conviction as politically motivated.
Tensions flared 
between Cambodia and Thailand in July, 2008, over the Preah Vihear (Khao
 Pra Vihar) temple on their border. Claimed by both nations but awarded 
to Cambodia in 1962, it became a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2008. 
Thai government support for that distinction became a Thai domestic 
political issue, sparking strong nationalism in both nations and 
creating a crisis between them. The reinforcement of troops along the 
border near the temple also led to concern over possible fighting. 
Cambodian parliamentary elections the same month resulted in a landslide
 with for Prime Minister Hun Sen, whose party received nearly 60% of the
 vote. International observers termed the election flawed but the result
 largely valid; Cambodian opposition parties, however, denounced the 
result as manipulated.
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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