146
                              
                                                                                                                                                          
82. William Manchester, The Arms of Krupp, p. 131.
83. William Manchester, The Arms of Krupp, pp. 125-137, 143-148.  Geoffrey Barraclough,
The Origins of Modern Germany, p. 422.
84. William Shawcross, The Quality of Mercy: Cambodia, Holocaust and Modern
Conscience, Simon and Schuster, 1984, pp. 18, 20, 21, 26, 27, 32, 40-43, 51, 52.
85. William Shawcross, The Quality of Mercy: Cambodia, Holocaust and Modern
Conscience, p. 110.
86. William Shawcross, The Quality of Mercy: Cambodia, Holocaust and Modern
Conscience, p. 53.
87. Don't console yourself with the pleasant thought that Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge
have melted away.  As of 1991, they were still lurking on the sidelines, unpunished,
waiting for another crack at control in Cambodia.  In the years since they'd been ousted
by the Vietnamese, the followers of Pol Pot had continued to control refugee camps on
the Thai border.  There, they kept tens of thousands of camp residents as their virtual
prisoners.  Though international relief agencies provided the food and medicine that kept
these camps alive, the Khmer Rouge often refused to allow relief agency officials in for
inspection.  With good reason.  The Khmer Rouge used the camp inmates as virtual slave
labor and shot or punished any refugees under their control who whimpered a word of
objection.  Meanwhile, the Khmer Rouge continued to hold a seat at the United Nations,
operated a governmental cabinet manned by the same figures who had run the Cambo-
dian holocaust, and waited for the Vietnamese to withdraw their troops.  After the pullout,
the Khmer Rouge intended to step back in to power.  What's more, they anticipated that
they would have the support of  China, the United States and most of the Southeast
Asian countries when they did so.  ("The Second Coming of Pol Pot: Fears of a Return To
The Killing Fields," from Hong Kong's Asiaweek, reprinted in World Press Review,
October, 1988, pp. 25-28;  Keith Richburg, "Back to Vietnam," Foreign Affairs, Fall, 1991,
pp. 111-132.)
88. Douglass H. Morse, Behavioral Mechanisms In Ecology, p. 78.
89. Douglass H. Morse, Behavioral Mechanisms In Ecology, p. 87.
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