On September 16, the US
Central Intelligence Agency released what historians and conspiracy theorists
have long been waiting for – the agency’s top secret Presidential daily
briefings covering the administrations of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
– almost the entire decade of the 1960s, the tumultuous period that included
the growth of the American presence in Vietnam from a handful of advisors to
more than 500,000 combat troops as well as a flock of other conflicts as the
United States and the Communist bloc squared off at each other.
Many of those stories
have been told – in the Pentagon Papers on Vietnam, for instance. But one of
the things that has been awaited for decades is the depth of the American
presence in Indonesia, which culminated in the so-called September 30 movement,
when figures allied with the Communists supposedly sought to take over the
government of President Sukarno by killing a handful of generals and ended up
eventually being murdered by the thousands. In Indonesia, the event has been
turned into a national passion play featuring the martyred generals, the evil
Communists and the eventual Savior, then-Lt. General Suharto, who went on to
rule the country for 30 years. The murderous anti-communist purges, mainly
directed against Chinese Indonesians, that followed the “coup” attempt still are rarely discussed publicly.
(Note from Kerry.
I arrived in Indonesia posted to the Australian Embassy just after Bapak Suharto mengguling Soekarno. Indonesian then was a 'basket case' and the rakyat came to enjoy great progess under the New Order, albeit with vested interests rising quickly to the top in wealth and power however, no one can deny that Indonesia is a much better place because of the Suharto Era}
Advance notice of the
release of the documents caused some concern in US quarters in Jakarta because
of the possibility that embarrassing revelations could blight the planned
October trip of President Joko Widodo to the United States to meet President
Barack Obama. Joko’s patron, Megawati Sukarnoputri, is a daughter of Sukarno
and jealously guards his legacy as the country’s founding leader.
In 1990, for instance,
the Washington Post reported that Robert J. Martens, a former member of the US
Embassy’s political section, said he had given the military detailed lists of
Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) leaders including the names of thousands of
provincial, city and other members of local mass organizations that ended up in
the hands of death squads. Hundreds of thousands of people eventually died in
nationwide revenge purges directed by the military and Muslim religious
organizations.
No smoking memo
But there is little in
the files to confirm that, or to add credence to long-standing rumors that it
was Suharto and other rightists who may have fomented the alleged coup attempt
and blamed the Communists for it. Despite the CIA’s contention that it was
releasing extremely sensitive information, there are large areas in the
documents that are blocked out.
Indonesian suspicions
of US intentions have substantial basis. As early as 1958, the CIA’s supposedly
secret air force, Civil Air Transport, was already operating in Indonesia,
flying missions in twin-engine B-26 light bombers from a base in North
Sulawesi, attempting to support rebels trying to bring down the charismatic
Sukarno, a major figure in the non-aligned movement whose government was
loosely allied with the PKI, then the second largest Communist party in the
world.
That CIA effort ended
when a B-26 flown by an American named Allen Pope was shot down on a bombing
and strafing run, and Pope was captured. The CIA aborted the mission. By the
end of 1958, the Indonesian military invaded the CIA-backed strongholds in
Sumatra and defeated the rebels. That was the end of that.
What about the lists?
While the documents
don’t speak to the suspicion that the CIA gave lists of Sukarno’s allies to the
army with orders to eliminate them, the release does provide a useful look at
what was going on on a daily basis as the bloodletting unfolded – although
strangely enough, there is no mention, during the crucial two months of October
and November, of the thousands of people being murdered.
In August 1965, as
tensions rose, it was clear that Sukarno had little sympathy for the Americans.
The CIA reported that the Indonesian army was training officers and men from
the Laotian neutralist government as well as Tanzanian soldiers, “hoping to
enlist them in Sukarno’s struggle against the west.”
US consulates in
Surabaya and Medan were under almost constant pressure, with a mob of 2,500
leftists blocking all entries to the US consulate in Surabaya on September 2.
The CIA called the action “probably the opening phase of the expected left-wing
campaign to force the consulate’s closure.”
Action against the
Americans, the CIA charged, was orchestrated by Foreign Minister Subandrio, who
would be cashiered by the military under Suharto once it gained the upper hand
and was imprisoned for 29 years, finally being freed in 1995.
From the documents,
the US embassy appears largely to be a spectator as the drama unfolded, although
Indonesia, then as now, was seen as strategically important.
“The power play
against anti-communist army leaders this morning has been followed by a
countercoup attempt,” the CIA said on October 1. “The situation is thoroughly
confused and the outcome is very much in doubt. Sukarno’s role if any in
today’s activities is still one of the major unanswered questions. Both sides
claim they are loyal to the President and both say they are protecting him.
[blank section] Six generals including army commander Yani were apparently
kidnaped by the original plotters. At least two of these officers are said to
have been killed and others, including Yani and Defense Minister Nasution, were
wounded.”
Suharto made his first
appearance on October 2, leading the countercoup a few hours later, taking over
Jakarta radio. At that point the section is blanked out. As the month unfolded,
it started to come clear that Suharto was growing in power. He won over the
army’s largest division, the navy, marines and police to his side although the
air force continued to support the original plotters.
On October 5, the CIA
said, “Events are moving closer to a showdown between the Indonesian Army and
the Communists, but the ability of army leaders to continue pressing the issue
remains in doubt in the face of Sukarno’s efforts to hold them back [blanked
out].”
By mid-October, “The
Communist party, for its part, appears to be going underground. Some Communists
have expressed complete loss of hope unless Sukarno uses his political magic to
salvage the party. Sukarno himself continues his efforts to reassert his
authority and seems intent on restoring the former political alignment.”
The army clearly had
become a force looking for vengeance. “From all indications, the army’s
leadership still very much wants to have it out with the Communists and is
becoming more wary of Sukarno himself. [blanked out] defense minister general
Nasution, the most prominent member of the ‘brain trust’ to escape
assassination, appeared in public yesterday and may now be playing a more
active part in army political strategy. Nasution did not attend today’s cabinet
meeting.”
Confusion on the ground
On October 7, the CIA
reported, “both Sukarno and deputy prime minister Subandrio are attempting to
blame the CIA for the 30 September affair. Subandrio, in addition, alluded to
the recent communist party statement that it was not involved in the plot. The
army wanted to suppress the statement. Subandrio may well have been the party’s
channel for surfacing it.”
After a week, “The
army remains firmly in the saddle and by all appearances is determined to
suppress the Communists. Most of the Communists have gone underground, and the
army realizes it has so far scarcely scratched the surface of the
well-entrenched and apparently well-armed Communist apparatus. Sweeps to round
up hidden arms are continuing. They have turned up numbers of weapons in the
past few days [blanked out].”
By October 14, “There
are now two governments in Indonesia. One is headed by Sukarno and the other by
the generals. The generals do not control Sukarno but neither are they under
his control. In fact, the two elements seem to need one another, if only to avoid
an all-out civil war…”
By mid-October,
General Sukendro, the only survivor of the army brain trust after the September
30 murders, told an American official that “the big question is whether the
army can continue to batter the Communists in the face of Sukarno’s
objections.” The situation began to turn ominous when a university controlled
by local Chinese residents was attacked by a mob and destroyed. “Although the
university was pro-Peking, the attack seems to have been as much anti-Chinese
as anti-Communist.”
On October 29, “US
officials have concluded that because of Communist militancy a new period of
violence is likely. They feel, however, that the balance is on the army side
and there is a real chance for an effective move back from the verge of full
Communist control.”
The man who would
emerge as the head of the country made his first full appearance on November 4.
“Army chief of staff Suharto is assuming an increasingly important role in
national affairs. A military source has told the embassy that Suharto, not
defense minister Nasution, is giving the day to day orders and is dealing
directly with Sukarno. The embassy believes that Suharto may emerge eventually
as the Indonesian ‘strong man.’”
Army takes over
By November 16, it was
clear that the army was now fully in charge. “Sukarno has given in to army
pressure and authorized a purge in the government. This came out in the form of
a presidential order today calling for the ouster of all government personnel
involved in the 30 September movement… This latest move represents a
considerable psychological gain for the military leaders. While they already
had been engaged in a cleanup of the government, this is the first time that
they were able to get Sukarno’s formal approval.”
By December 4, the
Chinese government was “said to have cut off credits and pulled out of several
projects.” The PKI was soon outlawed, the massacres were underway.
The country would
spend the next half century fully in the US camp.
I arrived in Indonesia posted to the Australian Embassy just after Bapak Suharto mengguling Soekarno. Indonesian then was a 'basket case' and the rakyat came to enjoy great progess under the New Order, albeit with vested interests rising quickly to the top in wealth and power however, no one can deny that Indonesia is a much better place because of the Suharto Era
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