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Interviews and documents show...
US orchestrated Suharto's 1965-66 slaughter in Indonesia
Part 1:
New evidence on how the October 1 coup was triggered
By Mike Head
19 July 1999
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this version to print
Damning new evidence has come to light pointing to the extent
of the involvement of the United States government, closely supported
by the Australian and British administrations, in the military
coup staged in Indonesia by General Suharto on October 1, 1965
and the subsequent massacre of up to one million workers, peasants,
students and political activists.
Last week, the Sydney Morning Herald published a three-part
series that included interviews with former Indonesian political
prisoners and extracts from documents obtained from US and Australian
archives. The material shows that the Western powers urged the
Indonesian military commanders to seize upon false claims of a
coup attempt instigated by the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI),
in order to carry out one of the greatest civilian massacres of
the 20th century and establish a military dictatorship.
By most estimates, between 500,000 and a million PKI members
and supporters, as well as people of ethnic Chinese origin, were
murdered, and tens of thousands were detained in prisons and concentration
camps, without any visible resistance. The documents show that
throughout late 1965 and early 1966 US and Australian officials
approvingly reported to their respective governments that army
units and Muslim groups were working hand-in-hand to shoot, hack
or club to death at least 1,500 suspected PKI sympathisers per
day, sometimes parading their heads on sticks.
This enthusiasm in the Western embassies for the bloodbath
reflected deep strategic and political interests. In the decade
before the coup, the major powers had come into increasing conflict
with the unstable nationalist regime of Indonesian President Sukarno.
In late 1957 and again in 1964-65 he had barely contained mass
movements of workers and peasants, whose strikes and occupations
threatened first Dutch and then US and British banks, companies
and plantations. By 1965 Sukarno was precariously balancing between
the military commanders, the Muslim organisations and the PKI,
which had some three million members and supporters, making it
the third largest Communist Party in the world, after China and
the Soviet Union.
The US had cut off foreign aid to Sukarno while building up
relations with sections of the military. From the mid-1950s it
began training and equipping Indonesian officers and troops, in
preparation for a move to topple or sideline Sukarno. The first
coup attempt came in November 1956 when Indonesian army Deputy
Chief of Staff Colonel Zulkifli Lubis sought to take control of
Jakarta and overthrow the government. Regional military takeovers
followed the next month in Central and North Sumatra. Throughout
1957 and 1958 the CIA inspired a series of secessionist and right-wing
revolts in the oil-rich regions of Sumatra and Sulawesi, where
Caltex and other US oil firms had large investments. Then between
1959 and 1965, the US supplied $64 million in military aid to
the Indonesian generals.
A huge amount was at stake for the US and its allies. Indonesia
had immense natural resources, including some of the largest oil
and rubber operations in the world, a teeming population and its
3,000 islands sat astride the sea routes from Asia to Europe.
The US and the other capitalist powers regarded the archipelago
as an absolutely crucial prize in the war against the anti-imperialist
struggles that erupted across Asia after World War II. The 1949
victory of Mao Zedong's forces in China had been followed by that
of Ho Chi Minh's in northern Vietnam. Insurgencies arose in Indochina,
Malaya, Thailand and the Philippines from the late 1940s.
In the months prior to the Indonesian coup, the US administration
of Democratic Party President Lyndon Johnson had dramatically
escalated its intervention in Vietnam, sending in hundreds of
thousands of troops and beginning its saturation bombing of the
north. And the British and Australian governments were engaged
in military conflict with Sukarno's regime over Indonesia's opposition
to the British-backed formation of Malaysia, which encompassed
key portions of the large mainly Indonesian island of Borneo.
The September 30 affair
The first part of the Sydney Morning Herald's series
is substantially based on an interview with former Sergeant Major
Bungkus and earlier statements by former Lieutenant Colonel Abdul
Latief. Both were jailed in 1965 for their involvement in a supposed
military putsch instigated by the PKI on September 30, 1965. They
were only released from prison in March this yearapparently
the only survivors of the participants in the September 30 affair.
Hundreds of others were tortured and executed.
Their testimony completely undermines the official version
of Suharto's coupthat he and his fellow generals were responding
to a takeover bid instigated by the PKI through its supporters
in the military. By this official accountpresented in "documentary"
form annually on all Indonesian TV stations until last yearPKI-inspired
officers rounded up six of the country's highest-ranking generals
on the night of September 30 and brutally killed them, leaving
their bodies horribly mutilated. The plot was only thwarted, the
authorised story insists, and the nation saved from the "evil"
of communism, when General Suharto heroically intervened and took
control of Jakarta the next day.
According to the statements given by Bungkus and Latief, the
alleged "PKI coup" was an internal military power struggle,
engineered by Suharto as a pretext to destroy the PKI.
Bungkus, as a member of the Indonesian presidential guard,
was ordered on the night of September 30 to participate in one
of seven teams dispatched to kill or capture senior generals.
At a briefing, Bungkus and other NCOs were told by their commanding
officer, Lieutenant Dul Arief, that seven top generals had set
up a Dewan Jenderal or Council of Generals, and were
planning to stage a coup against the then president, Sukarno.
By September 1965, the situation in Indonesia was extremely
tense. Rumours abounded that the army was going to once more move
against Sukarno and the PKI through the establishment of such
a Council of Generals.
Yet, the operation against the generals on September 30 had
two obvious flaws. In the first place, the squad sent to the home
of the Indonesian Defence Minister General A. H. Nasutionthe
officer with the closest links to the US Embassy and the CIAsomehow
failed its assignment, allowing Nasution to escape. Secondly,
no-one was sent to deal with General Suharto, then the commander
of the Army Strategic Reserve. On October 1, Suharto, backed by
Nasution, was able to quickly mobilise the necessary units to
take control of Jakarta and then extend his rule across the country.
Bungkus was only a junior figure in the events but he insists
that the officers from whom he took his instructions were not
linked to the PKI. And he and other members of the presidential
guard who took part in the assassinations were simply following
orders. In his view, Suharto carefully orchestrated the September
30 affair as a means of moving against the entire left-wing movement
in Indonesia.
This is corroborated by Latief, who revealed a number of critical
facts upon his release from prison. He said that he had personally
reported the coup plan to Suharto before the killings. Pak
Harto [Suharto] knew for sure that on September 30, the seven
generals were to be brought to Bung Karno [Sukarno], Latief
said.
Latief said he went to the military hospital where Suharto
was with his ill baby Tommy, to alert him to the intended move
against the seven generals, but Suharto took no action. I
think it is clear Pak Harto used the opportunity of the arrest
of the generals to blame the PKI and reach power.
Latief also referred to a document proving British and American
involvement in a plot by the seven generals to effectively seize
power from Sukarno. The plan to arrest the generals was
related to the existence of a Council of Generals' which
was first revealed through the leaking of a British Embassy document,
which said the council was to supervise Sukarno's policies. The
document, a letter from the British Ambassador, Sir Andrew Gilchrist,
also revealed the British were working with the CIA.
Unanswered questions remain about the events of September 30-October
1. It is not certain whether Suharto merely allowed the murder
of the generals, or helped organise them. The involvement of the
CIA and the British in Suharto's actions requires further investigation.
Noticeably, none of the archives dealing with the lead up to the
coup have yet been opened. But the speed with which Suharto moved
on October 1 supports the conclusion that, acting in concert with
the US agencies, he engineered the whole operation to eliminate
his rivals and provide a pretext for moving against Sukarno and
the PKI.
Finally, it is highly unlikely that the PKI planned to overthrow
Sukarno's government, in which the party participated as coalition
partners with the military and Muslim leaders. In line with the
Stalinist doctrine of maintaining an alliance with Sukarno and
the national capitalist class, the PKI leaders had repeatedly
helped quell the struggles of workers and peasants. Under the
two-stage theory, they had insisted that socialism
would only arise peacefully and gradually after a prolonged capitalist
stage of development in Indonesia. Even as signs grew of preparations
for a generals' coup, they had urged their followers to have faith
in the so-called pro-people's aspect of the military apparatus.
[See Lessons
of the 1965 Indonesian Coup]
Moreover, there was no mobilisation of the vast membership
of the PKI and its associated trade unions, student organisations,
women's movements and peasant organisations. In the subsequent
holocaust there was no sign of PKI-led resistance. In fact, even
as the death squads were set loose, the surviving PKI leaders
and their patrons in Moscow and Beijing urged PKI followers to
offer no opposition but to continue to subordinate themselves
to Sukarno, who collaborated with Suharto and was retained as
titular president until 1967.
The new evidence of direct US, British and Australian involvement
in triggering and exploiting the 1965-66 events provides a critical
lesson in the so-called democratic and humanitarian concerns of
the major capitalist powers. They stand ready to orchestrate and
sanction mass killings and repression to pursue their economic
and strategic requirements in Indonesia and elsewhere.
See Also:
Part 2: Washington called for military
government
[20 July 1999]
Part 3: New light on Australia's active
involvement
[21 July 1999]
US officials
provided Indonesian military with death lists
[20 May 1998]
Former
US Ambassador Marshall Green dead at 82
A key participant in Indonesian massacre
[26 June 1998]
Lessons of the
1965 Indonesian coup
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