4.2.12 WC: 191694 action, but its major bodies refused even to condemn the genocide until after the killing was completed and at least 1.8 million people lay dead. The General Assembly, for instance, did not mention Cambodia in a single resolution until November 1979—nearly a year after the genocide’s end. Even then the resolution was framed in terms of sovereignty and did not mention specific human rights violations, let alone genocide.’ Only in 1980, nearly five years after the atrocities began, did the UNCHR finally pass a resolution condemning the genocide. The hard left was similarly uninterested in the Cambodian genocide. While millions were being murdered, many leftists dismissed the atrocities as western propaganda. Activists Gareth Porter and George Hilderbrnd wrote, “Cambodia is only the latest victim of the enforcement of an ideology that demands that social revolutions be portrayed as negatively as possible, rather than as a response to real human needs....” According to the pair, what “was portrayed as [the Khmer Rouge’s] destructive backward-looking policy motivated by doctrinaire hatred was actually a rationally conceived strategy for dealing with the problems that faced postwar Cambodia.” Noam Chomsky also dismissed the genocide, writing that “if Cambodian terror did not exist, the Western propaganda systems would have had to invent it, and in certain respects they did.” He unabashedly wrote that blaming solely the Khmer Rouge for deaths from malnutrition and disease was as “if some Nazi apologists were to condemn the allies for postwar deaths from starvation and disease in DP camps.” Instead of focusing on the savage mass murder of more than a million civilians in Southeast Asia, the global community chose instead to use its limited time and resources to try to delegitimize Israel. Just a few months after the Cambodian atrocities began, the General Assembly adopted the most infamous resolution in its history, resolution 3379, declaring that “Zionism