[SEA] VIET/CAMB - Terror Made in the USA

From: apakabar@saltmine.radix.net
Date: Wed Oct 24 2001 - 17:13:05 EDT


X-URL: http://www.time.com/time/asia/news/magazine/0,9754,180563,00.html

   OCTOBER 29, 2001, VOL.158 NO.17
   Terror Made in the U.S.A.
   Washington says it's at war with terroristsand the countries that
   harbor them. But what about groups that plan violence from America's
   own shores?
   BY KAY JOHNSON Garden Grove

   Ask Nguyen Huu Chanh about bombs and, for a second, a smile flickers
   across his face. In fact, bombings are one of the favorite topicsand
   hobbiesof this self-styled commander in chief of the Government of
   Free Vietnam. He readily describes the bombs his supporters threw at
   the Vietnamese embassies in Bangkok and Phnom Penh, and the one they
   claim to have planted in Hanoi's airport. Chanh's favorite subject,
   however, is the destruction yet to come. The next attack will be "a
   very important target" inside Vietnam itself, he says. "Our bombs use
   an electronic system, a new design," he boasts. "And I control the
   code."
   
   Government of Free Vietnam Cambodian Freedom Fighters
   [INLINE] LED BY: Green-card holder Nguyen Huu Chanh, 51
   HEADQUARTERS: Garden Grove, California
   FORMED: 1995
   MEMBERS: Group claims to have trained up to 100,000 supporters at
   secret bases along Vietnam's border
   AIMS: To topple Vietnam's ruling Communist Party [INLINE] LED BY:
   Cambodian- American accountant Chhun Yasith, 45
   HEADQUARTERS: Long Beach, California
   FORMED: 1998
   MEMBERS: Group claims to have 500 in America and up to 20,000
   supporters in Cambodia
   AIMS: To overthrow Cambodian Prime Minister Hun Sen, whom it calls a
   dictator

   Chanh, 51, is Vietnam's most-wanted terrorist, a globe-trotting
   rabble-rouser sought by police in his homeland and in the Philippines,
   where three of his associates were recently arrested with bombmaking
   materials. He may not be in the same league as Osama bin Laden, but
   his Free Vietnam movement, which has waged a low-level three-year war
   against the communist government of Vietnam, is suspected in half a
   dozen attacks on Vietnamese targets in Europe and Asia. What's most
   striking about Chanh is where he operates: from a suburban office
   complex in Garden Grove, California. Chanh immigrated to the U.S. in
   1982 and, despite George W. Bush's war on terrorism, he feels no need
   to hide in his adopted country.
   
   But Chanh's California dreaming and Free-Vietnam scheming haven't gone
   completely unnoticed. Earlier this month, U.S. federal agents arrested
   Free Vietnam operative Vo Van Duc, 41, for involvement in a failed
   June attempt to blow up the Vietnamese embassy in Bangkok with two
   fertilizer bombs. Duc was charged in Los Angeles last week with
   conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction abroad and he could
   face life in prison. He could also be extradited to Thailand, where
   three of his accused accomplices in the attack are already in custody.
   Chanh says Duc was acting on his own. But in August, he openly bragged
   to TIME of having planned several past incidents, including one foiled
   in 1999, when authorities in southern Vietnam arrested 38 people with
   explosives and plans to blow up national monuments.
   
   A REBEL GROUP'S RAP SHEET
   The Free Vietnam organization has admitted to or been blamed for
   several attacks:
   1999 Vietnamese police arrest 38 members and seize 37 kg of explosives
   in connection with plot to bomb statues of communist hero Ho Chi Minh
   and disrupt national festivals
   AUGUST 2000 Free Vietnam believed to be behind fire in
   Vietnameseembassy compound in London
   APRIL 2001 Homemade bomb explodes at Vietnamese embassy in Phnom Penh,
   injuring a guard. Free Vietnam says it was behind attack
   JUNE 2001 Three members arrested for allegedly planting two bombs at
   Vietnamese embassy in Bangkok
   SEPTEMBER 2001 Philippine police charge three suspected members for
   allegedly plotting to bomb Vietnamese embassy in Manila

   Hanoi officially welcomed Duc's arrest, but said it's not enough.
   Vietnam wants the U.S. to go a step further and shut down Chanh's
   group as part of its declared war on international terrorism. "The
   U.S. and all governments should have a consistent attitude to
   terrorist activities," Vietnam's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Phan
   Thuy Thanh says pointedly.
   
   As TIME reported earlier this year, Free Vietnam isn't the only group
   of exiles accused of exporting terror from U.S. shores. In Long Beach,
   California, a storefront accountancy office doubles as the
   headquarters of the Cambodian Freedom Fighters, where Cambodian-born
   Chhun Yasith is busy plotting to overthrow his home country's
   government. On the walls are maps with arrows and circles marking
   battle plans, and they're not just pipe dreams. Eight people were
   killed last November when CFF forces armed with B-40 rockets attacked
   Phnom Penh. Government forces repelled the attack. In June, 30 alleged
   rebels, including two Cambodian-born U.S. citizens, were given prison
   sentences ranging from three years to life for that assault. Last week
   28 more went on trial. Yet, Yasith isn't discouraged and says his next
   coup attempt is coming soon. "We're going to take the whole country
   this time," he insists. A naturalized U.S. citizen, Yasith seems an
   unlikely guerrilla: he wears gold rings and, when not planning coups,
   he prepares neighbors' tax returns. Yet Cambodia takes the CFF very
   seriously and is demanding that U.S. authorities arrest Yasithor at
   least make him stop. "The U.S. asks for help from everyone regarding
   terrorism," complains Cambodian government spokesman Khieu Kanharith.
   "But so far it has a two-track policy."
   
   Why has the U.S. tolerated these groups for so long? The federal
   Neutrality Act forbids conspiring to overthrow a friendly government,
   and Washington has diplomatic relations with both Vietnam and
   Cambodia; Chanh and Yasith could face three years in prison. But
   diplomats say that Vietnam and Cambodia haven't offered Washington
   proof that they are involved in terror acts. Their own admissions
   could be dismissed as mere boasting.
   
   The cold war may be over for most people, but the exiles say they
   still have "advisers" within the U.S. government. Yasith even claims
   to have had meetings inside the Pentagon. The State Department hotly
   denies that claimand any link with the exile groups. U.S. Ambassador
   to Cambodia Kent Wiedemann describes Yasith as "delusional" and says
   the FBI is actively gathering evidence against the CFF.
   
   So far, though, neither of the troublesome exiles say they're feeling
   heat. Yasith spends his nights making calls to Thailand and Cambodia,
   marshaling his "secret army," confident that U.S. authorities are
   winking and looking the other way. "They've never given me a red
   light," Yasith says. "That means there's a green light." But
   everyone's world changed on Sept. 11and the trouble with green lights
   is they can always turn red.