-Caveat Lector-

National Security Archive Update, July 27, 2001

* - UPDATE  -

CIA STALLING STATE DEPARTMENT HISTORIES

ARCHIVE POSTS ONE OF TWO DISPUTED VOLUMES ON WEB

STATE HISTORIANS CONCLUDE U.S. PASSED NAMES OF COMMUNISTS  TO INDONESIAN
ARMY,
WHICH KILLED AT LEAST 105,000 IN 1965-66

For immediate release, 27 July 2001
For more information:  Archive director Tom Blanton, 994-7000

http://www.nsarchive.org/NSAEBB/NSAEBB52

WASHINGTON, D.C., 27 July – George Washington University's National
Security
Archive today posted on the Web (http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv) one of two
State Department documentary histories whose release the U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency is stalling, even though the documents included in the
volumes were officially declassified in 1998 and 1999, according to public
State Department records.  The two disputed State Department volumes cover
Indonesia-Malaysia-Philippines in the years 1964-68 and
Greece-Turkey-Cyprus
in the same period.

The CIA, as well as action officers at the State Department, have prevented
the official release of either volume, already printed and bound by the
Government Printing Office.  The National Security Archive obtained the
Indonesia volume posted today when the GPO, apparently by mistake, shipped
copies to various GPO bookstores; but the Greece volume is still locked up
in
GPO warehouses.

The Indonesia volume includes significant new documentation on the
Indonesian
Army’s campaign against the Indonesia Communist Party (PKI) in 1965-66,
which
brought to power the dictator Suharto.  (Ironically, Suharto’s successor,
ex-President Wahid, is on his way to Baltimore this week for medical
treatment, and has been replaced by his vice-president, who is the daughter
of
the man Suharto overthrew.)  For example, U.S. Embassy reporting on
November
13, 1965 passed on information from the police that “from 50 to 100 PKI
members were being killed every night in East and Central Java….”; and the
Embassy admitted in an April 15, 1966 airgram to Washington that “We
frankly
do not know whether the real figure [of PKI killed] is closer to 100,000 or
1,000,000 but believe it wiser to err on the side of the lower estimates,
especially when questioned by the press.”  On page 339, the volume seems to
endorse the figure of 105,000 killed that was proposed in 1970 by foreign
service officer Richard Cabot Howland in a classified CIA publication.

On another highly controversial issue – that of U.S. involvement in the
killings – the volume includes an “Editorial Note” on page 387 describing
Ambassador Marshall Green’s August 10, 1966 airgram to Washington reporting
that an Embassy-prepared list of top Communist leaders with Embassy
attribution removed “is apparently being used by Indonesian security
authorities who seem to lack even the simplest overt information on PKI
leadership at the time….” On December 2, 1965, Green endorsed a 50 million
rupiah covert payment to the Kap-Gestapu movement leading the repression;
but
the December 30 CIA response to State is withheld in full (pp. 379-380).

The CIA’s intervention in the State Department publication is only the
latest
in a series of such controversies, dating back to 1990 when the CIA
censored
a
State volume on Iran in the early 1950s to leave out any reference to the
CIA-backed coup that overthrew Mossadegh in 1953.  The chair of the State
Department historical advisory committee resigned in protest, producing an
outcry among academics and journalists (see “History Bleached at State,”
New
York Times editorial, May 16, 1990, p. A26:  “At the very moment that
Moscow
is coming clean on Stalin’s massacre of Polish officers, Washington is
putting
out history in the old Soviet mode.”).  Congress then passed a law in 1991
requiring the State Department volumes to include covert operations as well
as
overt diplomacy, so as to provide an accurate historical picture of U.S.
foreign policy, 30 years after the events.


The documents are available at the following URL:

http://www.nsarchive.org/NSAEBB/NSAEBB52

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