| Far Eastern Economic Review 1997 Nate Thayer |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| Brother number zero: Pol Pot caused the deaths of more than a million Cambodians. But when he turned on his longtime military commander Ta Mok, that was one Cambodian too many. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Chaos in the north.(Cambodian coup leads to disruption)(Cover Story) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Contract help. (Mongolia's Democratic Union coalition victory) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Day of reckoning: Pol Pot breaks an 18-year silence to confront his past. In defending his murderous rule, he sheds new light on the dark secrets of the Khmer Rouge. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Democracy delivers: Mongolians take to freedom with gusto and gumption. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Forbidden city: New strongman Ta Mok reaches out of isolation. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Forward steppes: the former Soviet satellite has enthusiastically embraced democracy and free markets, even though its economy is reeling from the impact of reforms. (Mongolia) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Harrowing tales: Hun Sen's forces torture and kill former allies. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Help wanted. (Cambodian resistance forces) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Law of the gun.(problems facing Cambodia (includes related notes))(Cover Story) | Business, international | Michael Vatikiotis, Nate Thayer, Nayan Chanda |
| My education: How Saloth Sar became Pol Pot. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Next generation: Khmer Rouge put on a new face. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Nomad's land: herdsmen confront new economic order. (Mongolia) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Pain before gain.(Mongolia's economic prospects) | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| Pol Pot unmasked: he was obsessed with secrecy and total control. | Business, international | Nate Thayer |
| The deal that died: negotiators thought they'd succeeded in ending the Khmer Rouge's long guerrilla war. | Business, international | nate Thayer |
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