On a sweltering day in September 1966, at Phnom Penh’s Olympic Stadium, more than 100,000 people waited in anticipation. General Charles de Gaulle, leader of France, stood before the crowd, not as a conqueror but as a witness to history’s turning tide.

He spoke with conviction, decrying the savage spiral of war tearing through Vietnam just beyond Cambodia’s border. “No military solution can bring peace,” de Gaulle declared. His words carried the weight of Europe’s own bitter lessons—wars that left scars, victories that felt hollow.
De Gaulle honored Cambodia’s path of neutrality, carved out by Prince Sihanouk against enormous odds. In a world slicing itself along Cold War lines, he voiced respect for a people determined to chart their own course. The French leader urged great nations to listen, not dictate; to honor the right of every land to live free—France itself had learned this in Algeria, where departure proved nobler than domination.
His speech reverberated far beyond Phnom Penh. To some, it was a gesture of solidarity, a shield for a vulnerable nation; to others, an affront to the ambitions and certainties of empires. While the world’s powerful turned away, for a heartbeat in that Cambodian stadium, hope for a peaceful future burned bright and unbowed.
The full text in French of the speech is available on www.charles-de-gaulle.org, here. A partial English translation of the Phnom Penh speech can be found on its dedicated Wikipedia page.


















