October 1, 2010

Today is the 45th anniversary of the CIA Coup in Indonesia

On October 1, 1965, the CIA overthrew Indonesia's President Sukarno. But there is more to it than that. It's another story of 20th century mass murder; a major war crime by the U.S. government. Professors John Roosa and Joseph Nevins wrote a very informative article about the event in November 2005 called "40 Years Later: The Mass Killings in Indonesia." Professor Peter Dale Scott also wrote an amazing article about who engineered and participated in the coup, why it was done, and how it was presented to the global public. He wrote it in 1984, and it's called "The United States and the Overthrow of Sukarno, 1965-1967." An excerpt:
The whole story of that ill-understood period would transcend even the fullest possible written analysis. Much of what happened can never be documented; and of the documentation that survives, much is both controversial and unverifiable. The slaughter of Sukarno's left-wing allies was a product of widespread paranoia as well as of conspiratorial policy, and represents a tragedy beyond the intentions of any single group or coalition. Nor is it suggested that in 1965 the only provocations and violence came from the right-wing Indonesian military, their contacts in the United States, or (also important, but barely touched on here) their mutual contacts in British, German and Japanese intelligence.

And yet, after all this has been said, the complex and ambiguous story of the Indonesian bloodbath is also in essence simpler and easier to believe than the public version inspired by President Suharto and U.S. government sources. Their problematic claim is that in the so-called Gestapu (Gerakan September Tigahpuluh) coup attempt of September 30, 1965 (when six senior army generals were murdered), the left attacked the right, leading to a restoration of power, and punitive purge of the left, by the center.1 This article argues instead that, by inducing, or at a minimum helping to induce, the Gestapu "coup," the right in the Indonesian Army eliminated its rivals at the army's center, thus paving the way to a long-planned elimination of the civilian left, and eventually to the establishment of a military dictatorship.2 Gestapu, in other words, was only the first phase of a three-phase right-wing coup -- one which had been both publicly encouraged and secretly assisted by U.S. spokesmen and officials.3

CIA Indonesia 1965


Bill Moyers:
The Secret Government - CIA Operations - Part 1


Part 2:


Part 3:


Part 4:


Part 5